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

  1. Anthony S. Ambrose (1867–1941),[3] president and director
  2. Ivan Bielek (1886–1943),[4] vice-president and director (signatory party to the Pittsburgh Agreement)
  3. Clement Ihrisky (1876–1940)
  4. Michael J. Bosak, Jr. (1894–1979)

Employoee

  1. Robert Juzek (1894–1975), secretary in 1920

Addresses

  • 1920: 59 Pearl Street, New York City
  • 1922: 151 Fifth Avenue, New York City
gollark: And finally (not finally, but I can't think of more right now) the Investigatory Powers Bill.
gollark: Also, the (postponed until the end of time right now, IIRC) adult content age verification thing.
gollark: They're also at the forefront of the "eNcRyPtIoN bAd" insanity.
gollark: There was that thing a while ago when Amber Rudd, Home Secretary at the time (I think), said that they needed to "get people who understand the necessary hashtags" talking.
gollark: Our politicians are not known for their technical competence.

References

  1. Trade Catalogues of the Winterthur Museum, Part II, compiled by Eleanor McD. Thompson (1991) OCLC 79677433, 24646855
  2. Czecho-Slovak Firm Changes Name, The Music Trades, October 28, 1922, pg. 37, col. 1
  3. 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
  4. History of Pittsburgh and Environs American Historical Society (1922), pg. 331 OCLC 1040253
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