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Database: Buttonwood Agreement: Difference between revisions

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Date: Signed 1792
Date: Signed 1792


The [[Buttonwood Agreement]] is the precursor to the [[New York]] Stock Exchange. It was signed in 1792 under a Buttonwood tree on [[Wall Street|Wall St.]] - hence the name. Lucky it wasn't a Monkey Puzzle Tree - that would not be a dignified name at all.
The [[Buttonwood Agreement]] is the precursor to the {{Wiki|New York Stock Exchange}}. It was signed in 1792 under a {{Wiki|Platanus occidentalis|Buttonwood tree}} on [[Wall Street|Wall St.]]—hence the name. Lucky it wasn't a Monkey Puzzle Tree—that would not be a dignified name at all.


The agreement itself is fairly simple - 24 local merchants agreed that they would trade only with one another, and that they would take a 0.25% commission on whatever they traded.
The agreement itself is fairly simple—24 local [[merchant]]s agreed that they would trade only with one another, and that they would take a 0.25% commission on whatever they traded.


And in case [[Desmond Miles|you]]'re thinking 1792 is too early for there to be stocks to trade, it wasn't - the first war bonds were released by [[Alexander Hamilton]], in 1790, two years before, so you're wrong, and should probably keep your opinion to yourself.
And in case [[Desmond Miles|you]]'re thinking 1792 is too early for there to be stocks to trade, it wasn't—the first war bonds were released by [[Alexander Hamilton]], in 1790, two years before, so you're wrong, and should probably keep your opinion to yourself.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Buttonwood Agreement}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Buttonwood Agreement}}
[[Category:Database: Events]]
[[Category:Database: Events]]
[[Category:Animus 3.0 database entries]]
[[Category:Animus 3.0 database entries]]
[[fr:Accord de Buttonwood]]
[[fr:Accord de Buttonwood]]

Revision as of 18:33, 30 December 2022

Date: Signed 1792

The Buttonwood Agreement is the precursor to the New York Stock Exchange. It was signed in 1792 under a Buttonwood tree on Wall St.—hence the name. Lucky it wasn't a Monkey Puzzle Tree—that would not be a dignified name at all.

The agreement itself is fairly simple—24 local merchants agreed that they would trade only with one another, and that they would take a 0.25% commission on whatever they traded.

And in case you're thinking 1792 is too early for there to be stocks to trade, it wasn't—the first war bonds were released by Alexander Hamilton, in 1790, two years before, so you're wrong, and should probably keep your opinion to yourself. fr:Accord de Buttonwood