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SEQUENCE:19064844
CREATED:20260701T001500Z
DESCRIPTION:As America approaches its 250th anniversary, we must confront a truth too 
 often left outside the frame of our national story: the foundations of 
 American finance were shaped not only in Philadelphia and New York, the 
 Caribbean and Historic Folsom, California the economic logic of that world 
 was built on enslaved Pan African labor.\n\nTwo figures illuminate this 
 hemispheric reality:  Alexander Hamilton, whose youth on St. Croix formed 
 the intellectual basis of the U.S. Treasury, and Honorable William 
 Alexander Leidesdorff Jr., our African Cuban and Danish Jewish pioneer who 
 carried Atlantic commercial knowledge into the City of San Francisco, 
 establishing Yerba Buena Cove’s civic infrastructure as the “African 
 Founding Father of California.”\n\nHamilton’s formative years in 
 Christiansted, St. Croix, in the Danish West Indies placed him inside one 
 of the most sophisticated financial systems of the 18th‑century Atlantic. 
  At Nicholas Cruger’s mercantile firm, he learned to manage ledgers, 
 cargo manifests, and credit accounts tied directly to plantation output. In 
 both the Danish West Indies and New Amsterdam, enslaved Pan‑African 
 people were treated as capital assets whose forced labor produced sugar, 
 rum, and cotton, commodities that underwrote European and American bond 
 markets and generational wealth.\n\nHamilton’s daily work involved 
 calculating the value of enslaved labor, assessing maritime risk, and 
 managing multi‑currency credit flows linking St. Croix to New York, 
 London, and Copenhagen. This Caribbean education shaped the institutions 
 Hamilton later built: the U.S. Customs Service, the Sinking Fund 
 Commission, and the Treasury bond system.  America’s financial 
 architecture did not emerge from abstraction; it emerged from a Caribbean 
 commercial model that relied on slave‑collateralized capital.  As America 
 250 approaches, acknowledging this reality is not an act of condemnation it 
 is an act of historical honesty that moves us toward restorative 
 justice.\n\nThe Caribbean world also shaped another foundational figure: 
 William Alexander Leidesdorff Jr. His father, a Danish Jewish merchant, 
 operated within the same Atlantic networks that connected Copenhagen, St. 
 Croix, and New Amsterdam. These networks specialized in maritime insurance, 
 commodity finance, and bond underwriting, all tied to the productivity of 
 enslaved labor. \n\nLeidesdorff’s African Cuban mother added another 
 dimension, linking him to the deep history of African diaspora movement 
 carried westward by the Canary and North Equatorial Currents.  In both free 
 and enslaved eras, these ancient ocean currents during the Age of Sail 
 offered a unique form of mobility and a very different notion of both 
 slavery and freedom.\n\nAs a young maritime captain, Leidesdorff entered 
 the Gulf Coast commercial system, where he eventually encountered the Negro 
 Seamen Acts at the Port of New Orleans.  These targeted laws were designed 
 to restrict the mobility of free Black sailors.  These racial regulations 
 shaped his decision to clear his good name, solidify his reputation, and 
 relocate to Mexican Alta California. On the other side of the 
 world,\n\nLeidesdorff helped build San Francisco and served as the first 
 elected City Treasurer, U.S. Vice Consul to Mexico.  He built the San 
 Francisco City Hotel and Civic Center, developed of the Port of San 
 Francisco at Yerba Buena Cove, and owner of the 35,521‑acre Rancho Rio de 
 Los Americanos apart of today’s City of Rancho Cordova and all of 
 Historic Sutter Street.\n\nAs the initial City Treasurer of San Francisco, 
 Leidesdorff transformed commercial knowledge into California agricultural 
 export innovation.  His steam vessel on our California State Seal shares a 
 vision of early transportation linking the Port of San Francisco to 
 Sutter’s Fort Embarcadero to create the first inland‑to‑coastal 
 commercial corridor, enabling agricultural exports, timber transport, and 
 the earliest commodity supply chains at the dawn of the 1848 Gold 
 Rush.\n\nOur Greater Sacramento Valley and American River Basin became our 
 Golden Harvest Gateway, where Afro‑Caribbean maritime expertise and 
 Danish‑Jewish commercial heritage helped shape the economic foundations 
 of the State of California along today's William Alexander Leidesdorff 
 Memorial Highway, the cattle round-up near Leidesdorff Plaza is 
 special.\n\nHamilton and Leidesdorff, intersect at today’s Millennium 
 Monument near the historic Port of Christiansted, St. Croix and reveal that 
 America’s financial and civic origins are hemispheric. Their intertwined 
 stories remind us that the nation’s economic foundations stretch from 
 Pan‑African currents to Caribbean ledgers, New York banks, New Orleans 
 wharves, San Francisco’s cosmopolitan emergence, and the agricultural 
 horizons of our California Gold Rush.\n\nToday, as America marks 250 years, 
 it is time to tell the whole story, here in California. \n\nEstablished in 
 1844, along Historic Rancho Rio de Los Americanos, a new Golden AI 
 Ecosystem rises along the William Alexander Leidesdorff Memorial Highway, 
 guided in honor to the intellectual legacy of Dr. David Blackwell.  
 Together, we have an amazing opportunity and obligation to do our part to 
 form a more perfect union, in the tradition of world class excellence.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/06/30/18887107.php
SUMMARY:Leidesdorff Plaza Diamond Jubilee, 2026 Folsom Cattle Drive - Historic Leidesdorff Ranch
LOCATION:Leidesdorff Plaza - RT Historic Folsom Station \nHistoric Sutter 
 Street\nFolsom, California 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/06/30/18887107.php
DTSTART:20260702T030000Z
DTEND:20260702T040000Z
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