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Search Treasury’s unclaimed property database

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Ulysses S. Grant and Dwight D. Eisenhower are not just past commanders-in-chief, they are also Pennsylvanians who have unclaimed property waiting for them at the Pennsylvania Treasury, State Treasurer Rob McCord said today as part of an ongoing effort to reunite property with the rightful owners.

“To mark Presidents Day, we spotlight individuals in our unclaimed property database who share historic names – like Woodrow Wilson of Red Lion or Joseph Obama of Pittsburgh – but all Pennsylvanians have a one-in-10 chance to become ‘claimant-in-chief’ and find property at www.patreasury.gov,” Treasurer McCord said. “The search process is free and easy, and with the average claim valued around $1,200, it is well worth a moment of your time to look up your name.”

Treasurer McCord encouraged Pennsylvanians who recognize a name on this list to call Treasury’s Return Team at 1-800-222-2046. Anyone can search for unclaimed property and initiate a claim online via Treasury’s database at www.patreasury.gov.

A number of presidential names appear in Treasury’s unclaimed property database, including:

George Washington, Wilkes-Barre

John Adams, Edwardsville

Thomas Jefferson, Uniontown

James Madison, Philadelphia

James Monroe, Tioga

Andrew Jackson, Homestead

John Tyler, Scranton

James Polk, Philadelphia

Zachary Taylor, Centre Hall 

Franklin Pierce, Philadelphia

James Buchanan, Shenandoah

Andrew Johnson, Womelsdorf

Ulysses S. Grant, Harrisburg

James Garfield, Tobyhanna

Grover Cleveland, Chester

Benjamin Harrison, York

William McKinley, New Castle

Theodore Roosevelt, Bryn Mawr

Woodrow Wilson, Red Lion

Warren G. Harding, Athens

Herbert Hoover, Avoca

Franklin Roosevelt, Philadelphia

Harry Truman, Brookville

Dwight D. Eisenhower, Jr., Drums

John F. Kennedy, Oil City

Lyndon Johnson, Horsham

Richard M. Nixon, Saltsburg 

Gerald R. Ford. Media

Ronald Reagan, Glenshaw

William J. Clinton, Natrona Heights 

George Bush, Ranshaw

Joseph Obama, Pittsburgh

Treasurer McCord noted Treasury’s database contains the names of many businesses and organizations that are owed unclaimed property, such as the President Volunteer Fire Company in Oil City.

Generally speaking, unclaimed property is any financial asset that has been left with a business or government agency without activity or contact for at least one year. Common forms of property reported to Treasury each year include abandoned bank accounts, forgotten stocks, uncashed checks, and contents of safe deposit boxes. 

Since January 2009, the McCord Treasury has collected more than $858 million in property, returned more than $419 million to rightful owners, and generated about $439 million for the state’s General Fund through the Unclaimed Property Program.  Overall, there is $1.9 billion in Treasury’s online unclaimed property database available to claim.  

To learn more about Pennsylvania’s Unclaimed Property Program or to search for property, visit www.patreasury.gov or call 1-800-222-2046.


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