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A History of Raising Capital in the U.S.: From Buttonwood to Series A

Raising capital is at the heart of building great companies. Today, founders often talk about “Seed rounds” or “Series A,” while others navigate SEC regulations like Reg CF or Reg D. But how did U.S. companies raise capital before all this?

Let’s take a journey through history—from Wall Street’s early days to the modern startup era—to understand how capital raising evolved.

1700s–1800s: The Birth of Public Markets

Early 1900s: Rise of Institutional Power

⚖️ 1930s: Crash, Crisis, and the Birth of the SEC

1940s–1960s: Venture Capital is Born

1970s–1990s: VC Gets Organized — Series A is Born

Still today, there is no legal definition of “Series A” — it’s a market convention, not a regulation.

2000s–Today: Startups Go Further, Faster

Key Takeaways

Era Capital Strategy Tools Used
1700s–1800s Public subscriptions, IPOs Shares, early exchanges
1900s–1929 Private wealth, banks Loans, stock
1930s–1940s Regulated offerings SEC rules begin
1950s–1970s Early VC Convertible notes, equity
1980s–2000s Formal venture rounds Series A–D, LPs, VCs
2010s–Now Hybrid models Reg CF, Reg A+, SAFEs, Series naming

Final Word

While the concept of “Series A” is only a few decades old, the need to raise capital has driven innovation for centuries.

At MYDENTALWIG, we embrace modern fundraising with historic perspective. That’s why we started with Reg CF, moved to Reg D, and continue inviting all types of investors—not just the few—to build something lasting.

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