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Braden Copper Company

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Braden Copper Company
Company typePrivate
IndustryMining
Founded1904
Defunct1967
FateNationalized by Chilean government
HeadquartersNew York City, New York, U.S.
Key people
Barton Sewell, William Braden
ProductsCopper
ParentKennecott Corporation

Braden Copper Company was an American company that controlled the El Teniente copper mine in Chile until 1967 when its copper holdings were nationalized.

History

Braden Copper Company was founded on 18 June 1904 by E.W. Nash, Barton Sewell, William Braden and other mining partners. Braden visited the mine during the winter of 1903-1904. Using capital of $625,000, the company purchased the mine and developed a mill at Sewell, Chile. Production started on 1 June 1906.[2] Barton Sewell never visited Chile and was limited to participating in the business as an upper executive at the companies central offices in New York City.

After E.W. Nash died in 1905, Braden turned to John Hays Hammond and Guggenex, owned by the Guggenheim brothers, for financing. Braden Mines Company was formed on 10 July 1909. In June 1910, the Guggenheims took control of the mine and provided financing which turned the oxcart road into a railway, built a three-thousand ton mill and hydroelectric plants. Kennecott Copper Corporation acquired 99 percent of Braden Copper Mines Company in 1915.[2]: 106–108, 146 

In 1935, the Braden Copper Company signed the World Copper Agreement along with the rest of the world's principle mining companies. In 1945, the company constructed the Braden Copper Stadium in the city of Rancagua, now called Estadio El Teniente. This stadium would be seat of the 1962 FIFA World Cup.

In accordance with the Chilean nationalization of copper, by 1967 the Chilean government had acquired 51 percent of the stock in the Braden Copper Company. By 1971, the company was completely nationalized.

See also

References

  1. ^ Chile Today and Tomorrow: Lilian Elwyn Elliott: 9781115243865: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 1115243861.
  2. ^ a b Charles Caldwell Hawley (2014). A Kennecott Story. The University of Utah Press. pp. 103–105.