Czecho Slovak Commercial Corp.
Czecho Slovak Commercial Corporation of America was an American importer of products from Czechoslovakia. The company was founded in 1917.[1] In October 1922, the company changed its name to Penn Commercial Corporation of America, Inc.[2]
Directors, executives, and employees
Founding incorporators
- Anthony S. Ambrose (1867–1941),[3] president and director
- Ivan Bielek (1886–1943),[4] vice-president and director (signatory party to the Pittsburgh Agreement)
- Clement Ihrisky (1876–1940)
- Michael J. Bosak, Jr. (1894–1979)
Employoee
- Robert Juzek (1894–1975), secretary in 1920
Addresses
- 1920: 59 Pearl Street, New York City
- 1922: 151 Fifth Avenue, New York City
References
- ↑ Trade Catalogues of the Winterthur Museum, Part II, compiled by Eleanor McD. Thompson (1991) OCLC 79677433 and 24646855
- ↑ Czecho-Slovak Firm Changes Name, The Music Trades, October 28, 1922, pg. 37, col. 1
- ↑ History of Bridgeport and Vicinity, Volume 2, edited by George Curtis Waldo (Jr.) (1888–1956), S. J. Clarke Publishing Company (1917), pg. 254 OCLC 48612822
- ↑ History of Pittsburgh and Environs American Historical Society (1922), pg. 331 OCLC 1040253
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