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= Pie Insurance = |
= Pie Insurance = |
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Pie Insurance is an American commercial insurance company headquartered in Denver, CO, and Washington, DC. Pie offers workers’ compensation insurance to small businesses in 36 states and the District of Columbia. Pie Insurance sells insurance policies directly to small businesses and also partners with local, regional, and national insurance agencies. |
Pie Insurance is an American commercial insurance company headquartered in [[Denver|Denver, CO]], and [[Washington, D.C.|Washington, DC]]. Pie offers [[Workers' compensation|workers’ compensation insurance]] to small businesses in 36 states and the District of Columbia. Pie Insurance sells insurance policies directly to small businesses and also partners with local, regional, and national insurance agencies. |
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The company leverages “data and analytics in its effort to offer SMBs a way to get insurance digitally and more affordably”<sup>[1]</sup>. |
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== History == |
== History == |
Revision as of 15:28, 15 October 2022
Pie Insurance
Pie Insurance is an American commercial insurance company headquartered in Denver, CO, and Washington, DC. Pie offers workers’ compensation insurance to small businesses in 36 states and the District of Columbia. Pie Insurance sells insurance policies directly to small businesses and also partners with local, regional, and national insurance agencies.
The company leverages “data and analytics in its effort to offer SMBs a way to get insurance digitally and more affordably”[1].
History
Pie Insurance was founded in 2017 by John Swigart, former Chief Marketing Officer of Esurance, and Dax Craig, former Chief Executive Officer of Valen Analytics.
In October 2017, the company raised $4.3 million in seed funding led by Sirius Group, Moxley holdings (now called Echelon Capital), and Elefund.
In March 2018, Pie began selling workers’ compensation insurance policies in Illinois, Georgia, Tennessee and Arizona. In June 2018, the company began selling in Colorado, Louisiana Arizona, Georgia, Illinois, Tennessee, and Texas. Later in June 2018, Pie began selling in North Carolina. In October 2018, Pie expanded into California. In December 2018, Pie began selling policies in New Jersey. In January 2019, Pie expanded into five additional states: New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Nebraska[1] and in April 2019, Pie expanded to Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Washington, DC.[2] In June 2019, Pie expanded into Delaware, Indiana, Nevada, South Carolina, and Virginia.[3] In July 2019, Pie expanded to Mississippi, New Hampshire, Utah, and West Virginia,[4] Pie added Rhode Island and Vermont in October 2019.[5] In February 2020, Pie extended its service to Alaska and Missouri,[6] and in October 2020, the company expanded to Florida and Wisconsin.[7]
In August 2018, Pie Insurance announced it raised $11 million in a Series A funding round led by Greycroft, which included participation from Aspect Ventures, as well as existing investors Sirius Group, Moxley Holdings (now called Echelon Capital), and Elefund.[8]
In March 2019, Pie Insurance announced the completion of a $45 million Series B funding round. Participating investors included SVB Capital, Sirius Group, Greycroft, Moxley Holdings (now called Echelon Capital), Aspect Ventures, and Elefund.[9] In May 2019, the company secured a $127 million Series B extension round of funding with $27 million allocated for continued growth and expansion. The remaining $100 million was allocated to the creation of Pie Carrier Holdings, a company that purchases licensed insurance companies. Gallatin Point Capital participated in the round in addition to existing investors.[10] In August 2021, Pie Carrier Holdings received regulatory approval from the Illinois Department of Insurance to acquire its first insurance company, Western Select Insurance Co. from a subsidiary of Premia Holdings Ltd.[11]
In August 2020, Pie Insurance launched its Partner Portal to make it easier for partner agents to submit their clients for workers’ compensation coverage and track their status in real time.[12]
In October 2020, Pie reached $100 million in cumulative written premium and surpassed $100 million in annualized run rate premium. In May 2021, the company shared it hit $185 million in annualized run rate premium.
In March 2021, Pie Insurance raised a $118 million Series C funding round co-led by Allianz X—the investment arm of German financial services giant Allianz—and Acrew Capital. To date, Pie has raised more than $300 million in venture capital funding.
New York Festivals' International Television & Film Awards (2013, 2010, 2008, 2004, 2002, 2001) [citation needed]
CINE Golden Eagle Award (2012, 2010, 2009, 2006, 2002)[citation needed]
National Emmy Award – Historical Programming (2001): Nominated for “Holocaust: Alumni Profile / 1970: Paul Sparrow: Championing the First Amendment (ucsc.edu)The Untold Story”[citation needed]
Alabama | ||
---|---|---|
Marker Name | Location | Notes |
Freedom Riders National Monument | Gurnee Avenue, Anniston | Site of 1961 Freedom Riders' bus burning |
16th Street Baptist Church | 1530 6th Avenue North, Birmingham | UNESCO World Heritage site |
Bethel Baptist Church | 3233 29th Avenue North, Birmingham | |
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BRCI) | 520 16th Street North, Birmingham | |
Kelly Ingram Park | 5th Avenue N & 16th Street, Birmingham | Sculptures depicting the Birmingham civil rights struggle |
Old Courthouse Museum | 31 North Alabama Avenue, Monroeville | Setting for Harper Lee’s "To Kill a Mockingbird" |
Alabama State Capitol | 600 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery | |
City of St. Jude | 2048 West Fairview Avenue, Montgomery | |
Civil Rights Memorial Center | 400 Washington Avenue, Montgomery | |
Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church | 454 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery | |
Dexter Parsonage Museum | 309 South Jackson Street, Montgomery | Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and family residence from 1954-1960 |
First Baptist Church | 347 North Ripley Street, Montgomery | |
Frank M. Johnson Jr. Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse | 1 Church Street, Montgomery | |
Freedom Rides Museum | 210 South Court Street, Montgomery | |
Holt Street Baptist Church | 1870 South Court Street, Montgomery | |
Rosa Parks Museum | 252 Montgomery Street, Montgomery | |
Legacy Museum | 115 Coosa St, Montgomery | |
National Memorial for Peace and Justice | 417 Caroline St, Montgomery | |
Scottsboro Boys Museum | 428 West Willow Street, Scottsboro | |
Brown Chapel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church | 410 Martin Luther King Street, Selma | |
Edmund Pettus Bridge | Edmund Pettus Bridge, Selma | |
Lowndes Interpretive Center | U.S. 80, Hayneville | Houses various exhibits on historical Civil Rights events |
National Voting Rights Museum and Institute | 6 U.S. 80 Business, Selma | |
Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail | Hayneville | |
Foster Auditorium | 6th Avenue, Tuscaloosa | |
Butler Chapel AME Zion Church | 1002 North Church Street, Tuskegee | |
Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site | 1616 Chappie James Avenue, Tuskegee | |
Tuskegee University | 1200 West Montgomery Road, Tuskegee | |
Arkansas | ||
Arkansas Civil Rights Heritage Trail | 300 West Markham Street, Little Rock | Project launched by the Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity |
Clinton Presidential Center | 1200 President Clinton Avenue, Little Rock | |
Daisy Bates House | 1207 West 28th Street, Little Rock | |
Little Rock Central High School | 1500 South Park Street, Little Rock | |
Little Rock Nine Memorial | 500 Woodlane Street, Little Rock | Features bronze sculptures of nine Little Rock Central High School students |
Mosaic Templars Cultural Center | 501 West 9th Street, Little Rock | |
Delaware | ||
Howard High School of Technology | 401 East 12th Street, Wilmington | National Historic Landmark |
District of Columbia | ||
Howard University | 2400 6th Street Northwest | Self-guided walking tour of three historical landmark buildings |
John Philip Sousa Middle School | 3650 Ely Place Southeast | |
Lincoln Memorial | 2 Lincoln Memorial Circle Northwest | |
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial | 1964 Independence Avenue Southwest | |
National Museum of African American History and Culture | 1400 Constitution Avenue Northwest | |
Supreme Court of the United States | 1 First Street Northeast | |
Florida | ||
Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Memorial Park & Museum | 2180 Freedom Avenue, Mims | |
Gideon v. Wainwright Historical Marker | 300 East 4th Street, Panama City | Located outside the Bay County Courthouse |
Newtown African American Heritage Trail | 525 Kumquat Ct, Sarasota | Includes 15 historical markers |
National Historic Preservation District | St. Augustine | Self-guided and guided tours of more than 30 historical landmarks |
Jackie Robinson Training Complex | 3901 26th Street, Vero Beach | |
Georgia | ||
Albany Civil Rights Movement Museum | 326 West Whitney Avenue, Albany | Located at the Old Mount Zion Baptist Church |
Shiloh Baptist Church | 325 West Whitney Avenue, Albany | Site of 1961 Martin Luther King, Jr. speech |
APEX Museum | 135 Auburn Avenue Northeast, Atlanta | |
Center for Civil and Human Rights | 100 Ivan Allen Jr Blvd NW, Atlanta | |
Ebenezer Baptist Church | 407 Auburn Avenue Northeast, Atlanta | |
Elbert P. Tuttle United States Court of Appeals Building | 56 Forsyth Street Northwest, Atlanta | |
Martin Luther King Jr. Birth Home | 501 Auburn Avenue Northeast, Atlanta | |
Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park | 450 Auburn Avenue Northeast, Atlanta | |
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum | 441 Freedom Parkway Northeast, Atlanta | |
King Center | 449 Auburn Avenue Northeast, Atlanta | |
Dorchester Academy Boys’ Dormitory | 8787 East Oglethorpe Highway, Midway | |
Kansas | ||
Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site | 1515 Southeast Monroe Street, Topeka | |
Sumner Elementary School | 330 Southwest Western Avenue | |
Kentucky | ||
Lincoln Hall (Berea College) | 104 South Main Street, Berea | |
Louisville Downtown Civil Rights Trail | 301 South 4th Street, Louisville | Self-guided tour that includes 22 landmarks |
Muhammad Ali Center | 144 N 6th St, Louisville | |
Alice Allison Dunnigan Statue at the SEEK Museum | 515 E 6th St, Russellville | |
Whitney M. Young Jr. Birthplace | 8460 Shelbyville Rd, Simpsonville | |
Louisiana | ||
Louisiana Military Maneuvers Museum/Camp Beauregard | 623 G St, Pineville | |
Louisiana State Capitol | 900 North Street, Baton Rouge | |
Louisiana’s Old State Capitol | 100 North Blvd, Baton Rouge | |
S.H. Kress Department Store | 445 3rd Street, Baton Rouge | Site March 28, 1960 student lunch counter sit-in |
Southern University and A&M College | 801 Harding Blvd, Baton Rouge | |
Bogalusa to Baton Rouge March Marker | 800 N 3rd St, Baton Rouge | Site of the longest Civil Rights March started on August 10, 1967 |
Robert "Bob" Hicks House | 924 Robert "Bob" Hicks Street, Bogalusa | |
Pillars of Progress Memorial | Rex Street & E St Mary Blvd, Lafayette | Located on the University of Louisiana at Lafayette campus |
5th Circuit Court of Appeals | 600 Camp Street, New Orleans | |
Canal Street | 1005 Canal Street, New Orleans | |
Dooky Chase’s Restaurant | 2301 Orleans Avenue, New Orleans | Frequent meeting location for 1960's Civil Rights leaders |
McDonogh 19 Elementary School | 5909 St Claude Ave, New Orleans | |
New Zion Baptist Church | 2319 Third Street, New Orleans | Southern Christian Leadership Conference founded here in 1957 |
Tremé Neighborhood | Tremé- Lafitte, New Orleans | |
William Frantz Elementary School | 3811 North Galvez Street, New Orleans | |
Mississippi | ||
Canton Freedom House Civil Rights Museum | 838 George Washington Avenue, Canton | Congress of Racial Equality headquarters, bombed during the 1960's |
Emmett Till Historic Intrepid Center | 33 Thomas Street, Glendora | Museum dedticated to the life and death of Emmett Till |
Medgar Evers Home Museum | 2332 Margaret W Alexander Dr, Jackson | |
Mississippi Civil Rights Museum | 222 North Street, Jackson | |
Tougaloo College | 500 West County Line Road, Jackson | |
Bryant’s Grocery & Meat Market | Money Road, Greenwood | Site where a white shopkeeper accused Emmett Till of flirting with her |
Lyceum – The Circle Historic District | 304 University Cir, University of MS | |
Fannie Lou Hamer Memorial Statue | 726 Byron Street, Ruleville | |
Emmett Till Interpretive Center | 120 North Court Street, Sumner | Former courthouse of Emmett Till's trial |
Tallahatchie County Courthouse | North Court Street, Sumner | |
Missouri | ||
Harry S. Truman Presidential Library & Museum | 500 Highway 24, Independence | |
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum | 1616 E 18th St, Kansas City | |
Old Courthouse | 11 North 4th Street, St. Louis | |
Shelley House | 4600 Labadie Avenue, St. Louis | |
North Carolina | ||
Hayti Heritage Center | 804 Old Fayetteville Street, Durham | Educational center dedicated to African-American heritage |
International Civil Rights Center & Museum | 134 South Elm Street, Greensboro | Located in former Woolworth's building |
ebruary One Monument | 202 University Circle, Greensboro | |
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Gardens | 1500 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Raleigh | First U.S. public park devoted to Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement |
Estey Hall at Shaw University | 118 E South St, Raleigh | |
South Carolina | ||
Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church | 110 Calhoun St., Charleston | |
Modjeska Monteith Simkins House | 2025 Marion Street, Columbia | |
South Carolina State House | 1100 Gervais Street, Columbia | |
Springfield Baptist Church | 600 East McBee Avenue, Greenville | |
Benjamin E. Mays House Museum | 237 North Hospital Street, Greenwood | |
Orangeburg Massacre | 300 College Street, Orangeburg | |
McCrory’s Five & Dine | 135 East Main Street, Rock Hill | Site of Feb. 12, 1960 student lunch counter protest |
Penn Center | 16 Penn Center Circle West, St Helena Is | |
Liberty Hill AME Church | 2310 Liberty Hill Road, Summerton | Location of early Civil Rights meetings that influenced public school desegregation court rulings |
Tennessee | ||
Clinton 12 Statue | 101 School Street, Clinton | Statues located at Green McAdoo Cultural Center |
Beale Street Historic District | Beale St, Memphis | |
Clayborn Temple & I AM MAN Plaza | 294 Hernando Street, Memphis | Site of 1968 sanitation workers strike against poor working conditions |
Mason Temple Church of God in Christ | 930 Mason Street, Memphis | Site of Dr. Martin Luther King speech supporting sanitation worker strike |
National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel | 450 Mulberry Street, Memphis | |
Stax Museum of American Soul Music | 926 E McLemore Ave, Memphis | |
WDIA Radio Station | 112 Union Ave, Memphis | |
Civil Rights Room at the Nashville Public Library | 615 Church Street, Nashville | Offers access to the library's Civil Rights Collection |
Clark Memorial United Methodist Church | 1014 14th Avenue North, Nashville | 1950s/60s meeting location for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference |
Davidson County Courthouse and Witness Walls | 1 Public Square Nashville | |
Fifth Avenue Woolworth Building | 221 5th Ave N, Nashville | Location of initial lunch counter sit-ins of Nashville's 1960s Civil Rights Movement |
Fisk University | 1000 17th Avenue North, Nashville | |
Griggs Hall at American Baptist College | 1800 Baptist World Center Drive, Nashville | |
National Museum of African American Music | 510 Broadway, Nashville | |
Virginia | ||
Danville Museum of Fine Arts and History | 975 Main St, Danville | |
Robert Russa Moton High School and Museum | 900 Griffin Boulevard, Farmville | |
Virginia Civil Rights Memorial | Capitol Square, Richmond | |
West Virginia | ||
Elizabeth Harden Gilmore House | 514 Leon Sullivan Way, Charleston | |
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park | 171 Shoreline Drive, Harpers Ferry | |
Memphis Tennessee Garrison House | 1701 10th Avenue, Huntington |