NELSON L. EBERSOLE
 

GRI, CRS, CREA
Licensed, Bonded Auctioneer (AU-001307-L)
State Certified General Appraiser (GA-000427-L)
Real Estate Broker (RB-035029-A)

Education

  • Graduate of The Real Estate Institute - GRI.  Class I, Class II, Class III
  • Completed courses of Instruction: 5 PAR courses in Real Estate, Appraisal, Real Estate Investment, Real Estate Law, Commercial Real Estate, Property Management, Real Estate Fundamentals
  • 1975 Graduate of Reisch Auction College, Mason City Iowa.
  • Formerly a Real Estate Instructor at Lebanon Valley College.
  • Formerly Licensed by the State of Pennsylvania as a Real Estate Instructor


Experience

Licensed Sales Agent 1971, Licensed Real Estate Broker in 1976.  Appraisal experience began in 1976 which includes: Residential, Commercial, Industrial, Farms and Land, Land Condemnation proceedings, expert court testimony on appraisal cases.  Former secretary of Hostetter Homes, Inc., home building company.  Former secretary of School Lane Meadows, Inc. which is a land development corporation developing over 100 home-sites in South Lebanon Twp.  Owner of Suburban Realty, which is very active in the marketplace handling 150 to 200 transactions annually.  Between the years 1990 to 2000, Suburban Realty settled over $100 million dollars worth of Real Estate.  Owner, Nelson L. Ebersole, Auction Co. which sells at public auction, over 3 million dollars worth of real estate each year.  President of the Lebanon Co. Board of Realtors in 1986.  Former Chairman of the Annville Township Board of Commissioners, Commissioner of Highways.  Former member of PA Real Estate Exchangers.  Member of the National Assoc. of Realtors & the PA Association of Realtors.  Certified Residential Specialist (CRS)

Representative Clients

Lebanon Valley Farmers Bank - Trust Group, Jonestown Bank & Trust Co., First National Bank of Fredericksburg, Martin Marietta Corp., Dept. of Military Affairs, Texas Eastern Transmissios Corp, Waypoint Bank, M&T Bank, Mid Penn Bank, Local Municipalities and Attorneys, and many other lending institutions, businessmen, and the local public.