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- Pan Motor Company 1918 (St Cloud, MN auto) - securities mail fraud scandal
Pan Motor Company 1918 (St Cloud, MN auto) - securities mail fraud scandal
Pan Motor Company 1918 (St Cloud, MN auto) - securities mail fraud scandal
Product Description
Pan Motor Company stock certificate 1918
Very rare and desirable cert. Great auto and scandal piece with a great triple vignette of the company's car, hood ornament. and company logo. Issued and not cancelled. Dated 1818. Very light staining throughout from storage. Hand signed by Sam Pandolfo (founder) as president.
In 1918, the first Pan Automobile rolled off the assembly line in St. Cloud, Minnesota. It was the beginning of the short and controversial existence of the Pan Motor Company. By the end of 1919, its president Samuel (Sam) Connor Pandolfo (1874-1960) was fined $4,000 and sentenced to ten years in prison for mail fraud. Car production had stopped and the St. Cloud community lost its bid to become a premier auto-manufacturing city.
Sam Pandolfo was first a teacher, then an insurance salesman, and finally an automobile entrepreneur. Pandolfo's extensive travels as an insurance salesman inspired him to dream up a new car design, one that suited a traveler. His new automobile would have fold-down seats for sleeping, a compartment for tools and extra gasoline, clearance for bumpy country roads, and a place for food and drink. It was a tall order but one that Pandolfo was sure he could meet.
Beginning in 1916, Pandolfo took to the road to sell stock for his car company. From New Mexico to Chicago, the $10 stocks sold easily. There were 9,000 stockholders by 1917. In March of 1917, St. Cloud became the official site for the new Pan Motor Company. On the Fourth of July of 1917, Sam Pandolfo threw the picnic of all picnics. With an immense crowd in attendance, the Pan Automobile prototype premiered.
Only 735 cars were produced and stockholders were not getting any dividends. The Associated Advertising Clubs of Minneapolis lodged a complaint against the Pan Motor Company. They claimed Pandolfo spent more money on promotion than his Minnesota charter permitted.
On February 1, 1919, a Chicago Federal Grand Jury indicted Sam Pandolfo and all of the company's officers on seven counts of mail fraud and one count of attempted mail fraud. The judge in the case, Kenesaw Mountain Landis (1920 baseball commissioner during the Black Sox baseball scandal), was not sympathetic. The counts against the officers of the company were dropped but Pandolfo was convicted and served three years in Leavenworth Prison. The Pan Motor Company struggled as it produced car parts for other companies and metal products under their own name until finally closing in 1922.
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