Interesting how they went belly up just around the time many of the trusts were at full maturity.
The one I have shows Pacific National Bank in San Francisco as the issuer. They are apparently still in business.
he put his head down on the desk
San Francisco Police Department Park Station bombing happened on 1970-02-16.
After the Giants moved to San Francisco from New York, the Polo Grounds was demolished and is now the site of some apartment towers.
The San Francisco Riot of 1877 was a two day mob event waged against Chinese immigrants in San Francisco, California by the city's majority white population from the evening of July 23 through the night of July 24, 1877. The ethnic violence which swept Chinatown resulted in four deaths and the destruction of more than $100,000 worth of property belonging to the city's Chinese immigrant population.
The Zong was a slave ship that was used by a Liverpool slave trading operation. The owners took out an insurance policy on the slaves as cargo. When there was not enough potable water for everyone, a massacre began. Some of the slaves were thrown overboard and some were kept. The owners then tried to cash in the insurance policy on the lost cargo but were refused.
Damage Incorporated happened in 1997.
Warfare Incorporated happened in 2003.
What happened to Highline Industries, Inc
Francisco's Fight happened in 1781.
The Summer of Love happened in San Francisco in 1967, when thousands of hippies met there.
what happened to Life Insurance company of Georgia
Old San Francisco happened in 1906.
You might think this a hypothetical, but it's not: big hurricanes, tornadoes, forest fires and other natural disasters cause insurance companies to be hit with thousands of claims at the same time. In Hurricane Katrina, 1833 people died and a lot of them were insured. Insurance companies invest premiums paid to them in various kinds of securities, and use the earnings from those securities to pay claims. An insurer that's been around for many years, like The Hartford, has a massive investment portfolio. They can sell some of those securities if a Katrina or an Andrew happens. It's conceivable that a really huge disaster could wipe out a well-established insurance company (and likely one will wipe out an insurer that's on shakier ground) but the longest lasting insurance companies employ people who work very hard to reduce the company's risk. AFTER the disaster is a different story: in a lot of cases, an insurance company will stop selling insurance in a state where a huge casualty happened. This happened in Florida after Hurricane Andrew.
The San Francisco earthquake
Battle of San Francisco happened on 1879-11-19.
Trying to get insurance to cover an accident that has already happened is Insurance Fraud, which is a Felony.
It was taken over by aegon insurance