UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                   FORM N-CSR

              CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT
                              INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act File Number 811-179

Name of registrant as specified in charter: Central Securities Corporation

Address of principal executive offices:
630 Fifth Avenue
Suite 820
New York, New York  10111

Name and address of agent for service:
Central Securities Corporation, Wilmot H. Kidd, President
630 Fifth Avenue
Suite 820
New York, New York  10111

Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 212-698-2020

Date of fiscal year end: December 31, 2007

Date of reporting period: December 31, 2007

Item 1. Reports to Stockholders.



================================================================================

                         CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION


                                   ----------


                          SEVENTY-NINTH ANNUAL REPORT

                                      2007

================================================================================




                               SIGNS OF THE TIMES

      "Think  about  what is  happening  in Asia  today,  centered  on China but
followed by India. At a growth rate of per capita living  standards of six and a
half  percent  which is less than the  average  of the last ten years for China,
living  standards don't double in a single human life span, they don't rise five
fold in a human life span,  they rise 100 fold within a single  human life span.
They rise more than living  standards  have increased in the United States since
my country gained  independence in 1776. This is not an isolated event affecting
a few  people,  in a niche in the world,  this is an event  affecting a third or
more of  humanity,  if one takes into  account  China and India and looks to the
remainder of Asia.

      "Living standards rising as much as a 100 fold in a single human life span
in places where a third of humanity  resides,  this is an economic event, in the
last  millennium  that  exceeds  very  substantially  the  impact of either  the
Renaissance  or the Industrial  revolution.  I would dare to suggest to you that
when  historians  record the history of our time, 300 years from now, the end of
the Cold War,  that fifty year  struggle  will be at most a third  story in that
history.  All that is  happening  in the Middle  East,  with all that the region
needs,  will be the second story. What happens in Asia, the changes in the lives
of so many people,  so quickly and its  ramifications for the global system will
be the most important story when the history of our times is written." (Lawrence
Summers,  Charles W. Eliot University Professor,  Harvard University,  Welcoming
Dinner Address, Beijing Friendship Hotel, January 14, 2007)

                                   ----------

      "The  collapse of communism in Europe was a key event in the creation of a
more growth-oriented  global economy. In one fell swoop, 240 million working-age
people in the former USSR and its  satellites  were  catapulted  into the global
traded  goods  system.  China  had  already  embarked  on  steps  toward  a more
market-oriented  economy,  but this  accelerated  in the 1990s.  Meanwhile,  the
dramatic  growth  in  China  encouraged  India  to  start  retreating  from  its
heavy-handed  state  control of the  economy.  In total,  the global labor force
potentially  involved in the market system doubled by the inclusion of all these
`new' entrants.  If each country's labor force is weighted by its  export-to-GDP
ratio, the IMF calculates that the effective labor supply involved in the global
trading  system has doubled in the past 20 years."  (Martin H. Barnes,  The Bank
Credit Analyst, May 2007)

                                   ----------

      "As I see it,  the  role  that  quants  play  in the  financial  world  is
analogous to the role that batfish play in keeping coral reefs tidy.  Batfish do
not  construct  the reef,  but they are  essential to its health.  Quants do not
create  the  structure  on which  the  markets  depend,  but they  maintain  the
conditions which make financial markets function."

      "By scrutinizing  financial data, quants spot arbitrage  opportunities and
alert their firms to act before those opportunities disappear."

      "Most of the time, they have no idea what, if anything, is produced by the
companies  with whose stocks they deal.  Their  mission is to blindly keep those
stocks moving,  not to pass judgment on a stock's value,  either to the buyer or
society.  Thus,  I find it  completely  appropriate  that  quants now prefer the
euphemism `financial  engineer.' They are certainly not `financial  architects.'
Nor are they  responsible for the mess in which the financial world finds itself
at the moment. Quants may have greased the rails, but others were supposed to be
manning the brakes." (Daniel Stroock, MIT TechReview, November 2007)


                                      [2]


                               SIGNS OF THE TIMES

      "Last week the Congressional Budget Office joined the IRS in releasing tax
numbers for 2005,  and part of the news is that the richest 1% paid about 39% of
all income  taxes that year.  The  richest 5% paid a tad less than 60%,  and the
richest 10% paid 70%. These tax shares are all up substantially  since 1990, and
even somewhat since 2000. Meanwhile, Americans with an income below the median -
half of all households - paid a mere 3% of all income taxes in 2005. The richest
1.3 million  tax-filers - those  Americans  with adjusted  gross incomes of more
than $365,000 in 2005 - paid more than all of the 66 million American tax filers
below the median  income.  Ten times more.  (Wall Street  Journal,  December 17,
2007)

            ------------------------------------------------------

                              The Rich Pay More

              Shares of income earned by all taxpayers compared
                  to share of income taxes paid in the U.S.

                                               Share of total
                                            -------------------
                Richest 1%                  Income   Taxes Paid
                1990................          14%       25%
                2000................          21%       37%
                2005................          21%       39%
                Richest 5%
                1990................          27%       44%
                2000................          35%       56%
                2005................          36%       60%

             Source: Treasury Department, October 2007.

            ------------------------------------------------------

                                   ----------

      "In 1986,  President Ronald Reagan in tandem with the Democratic House and
Republican  Senate reformed and simplified the tax code,  reducing the number of
brackets,  closing  loopholes and lowering  individual and corporate  rates. The
U.S.  moved from a country with  above-average  corporate  tax rates to one with
below-average  rates.  The  Reagan  tax  reforms  set the  stage for 20 years of
remarkable  economic  performance in the U. S. and around the world, what Ronald
Reagan called the `American Miracle.'

      "Twenty  years later,  after much of the world has followed our lead,  the
U.S. is once again a high  corporate tax country.  We now have, on average,  the
second-highest  statutory  corporate tax rate (including state corporate taxes),
39%,  compared  with  an  average  rate  of  31%  for  our  top  competitors-the
democratic,  market-oriented  nations  that form the  Organisation  of  Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD)." (Henry M. Paulson, Jr. Wall Street Journal,
July 19, 2007)

                                   ----------

      "A record  eight  million  Americans  moved from one state to another last
year.  Where is everyone  going,  and why?  The answer has little to do with the
climate: California has arguably the nicest climate of any state in the nation -
yet in this decade more  Americans  have left the Golden  State than entered it.
Migration  patterns  instead  reveal  which  states  have the most  dynamic  and
desirable  economies,  and which are  `has-been'  states.  The  winners  in this
contest  for the most  valuable  resource  on the  globe - human  capital  - are
generally the states with the lowest tax, spending and regulatory  burdens.  The
biggest losers are almost all congregated in the Northeast and Midwest.  (Arthur
Laffer and Stephen Moore, Wall Street Journal, December 10, 2007)

                                   ----------

      "Because of lax lending  standards in the past few years,  many homeowners
never amassed much equity in their homes. Sizable down payments became a rarity,
as many buyers  borrowed  close to 100% of the purchase price through a blend of
first mortgages and home-equity  lines of credit.  Others kept refinancing their
mortgages as property  prices  climbed,  taking on bigger loans and draining the
equity value of their homes.

      "As a result,  there is a new class of  homeowners  in name only.  Because
these people  never put up much of their own money,  they don't act like owners,
committed to their  property for the long haul.  They behave more like  renters,
ducking  out of an  onerous  lease in the  midst of a  housing  slump."  (George
Anders, Wall Street Journal, December 19, 2007)


                                      [3]


                         CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION:

   (Organized on October 1, 1929 as an investment company, registered as such
    with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the provisions of the
                        Investment Company Act of 1940.)

                            TEN YEAR HISTORICAL DATA



                                                          Per Share of Common Stock
                                            ---------------------------------------------------
                Total        Convertible      Net            Net                                   Net realized      Unrealized
                 net         Preference      asset       investment         Divi-    Distribu-      investment      appreciation
Year           assets         Stock(A)       value        income(B)       dends(C)   tions(C)          gain        of investments
----           ------         --------       -----        ---------       --------   --------      ------------    --------------
                                                                                            
1997       $434,423,053     $9,040,850      $29.97                                                                  $273,760,444
1998        476,463,575      8,986,125       31.43         $.29            $.29       $1.65        $22,908,091       301,750,135
1999        590,655,679           --         35.05          .26             .26        2.34         43,205,449       394,282,360
2000        596,289,086           --         32.94          .32             .32        4.03         65,921,671       363,263,634
2001        539,839,060           --         28.54          .18             .22        1.58*        13,662,612       304,887,640
2002        361,942,568           --         18.72          .14             .14        1.11         22,869,274       119,501,484
2003        478,959,218           --         24.32          .09             .11        1.29         24,761,313       229,388,141
2004        529,468,675           --         26.44          .11             .11        1.21         25,103,157       271,710,179
2005        573,979,905           --         27.65          .28             .28        1.72         31,669,417       302,381,671
2006        617,167,026           --         30.05          .36             .58        1.64         36,468,013       351,924,627
2007        644,822,724           --         30.15          .38             .52        1.88         42,124,417       356,551,394

----------

A  -  At liquidation preference.

B  -  Excluding gains or losses realized on sale of investments and the dividend
      requirement on the Convertible  Preference Stock which was redeemed August
      1, 1999.

C  -  Computed  on  the  basis  of  the  Corporation's  status  as a  "regulated
      investment  company" for Federal  income tax purposes.  Dividends are from
      ordinary income. Distributions are from long-term investment gains.

*     Includes a  non-taxable  return of capital  of $.55.

      The Common Stock is listed on the American Stock Exchange under the symbol
CET. On December 31, 2007 the market  quotations  were:  $26.06 low, $26.96 high
and $26.84 last sale.

      Central's results to December 31, 2007 versus the S&P 500:

                                       Central's     Central's     Standard &
Average Annual Total Return           NAV Return   Market Return   Poor's 500
---------------------------           ----------   -------------   ----------
One Year...........................     9.4%            9.9%          5.5%
Five Year..........................    18.8%           19.3%         12.8%
Ten Year...........................     9.6%            7.8%          5.9%
Fifteen Year.......................    14.8%           15.4%         10.5%
Twenty Year........................    14.7%           16.2%         11.8%



                                      [4]


To the Stockholders of

      CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION:

      Financial   statements  for  the  year  2007,  as  reported  upon  by  our
independent  registered public accounting firm, and other pertinent  information
are submitted herewith.

      Comparative net assets are as follows:



                                                                 December 31,        December 31,
                                                                     2007                2006
                                                                 ------------        ------------
                                                                                
Net assets.................................................      $644,822,724         $617,167,026
Net assets per share of Common Stock.......................             30.15                30.05
    Shares of Common Stock outstanding.....................        21,385,882           20,538,195


    Comparative operating results are as follows:
                                                                   Year 2007           Year 2006
                                                                 ------------        ------------
                                                                                 
Net investment income......................................       $ 7,817,245          $ 7,269,692
    Per share of Common Stock..............................               .38*                 .36*
Net realized gain on sale of investments...................        42,124,417           36,468,013
Increase in net unrealized appreciation
  of investments...........................................         4,626,767           49,542,956
Increase in net assets resulting from operations...........        54,568,429           93,280,661


----------
*     Per-share   data  are  based  on  the  average  number  of  Common  shares
      outstanding during the year.

      The Corporation made two distributions to holders of Common Stock in 2007,
a cash  dividend of $.20 per share paid on June 22 and an optional  distribution
of $2.20  per share in cash,  or one  share of  Common  Stock for each 12 shares
held, paid on December 27. For Federal income tax purposes, of the $2.40 paid in
2007, $.52 represents  ordinary income and $1.88  represents  long-term  capital
gains.  Separate tax notices have been mailed to  stockholders.  With respect to
state and local taxes,  the character of  distributions  may vary.  Stockholders
should consult with their tax advisors on this matter.

      In the optional  distribution paid in December,  the holders of 50% of the
outstanding  shares of Common Stock elected  stock,  and they  received  847,687
Common shares.

      During 2007 the  Corporation  did not  repurchase any shares of its Common
Stock.  The  Corporation  may from time to time  purchase  Common  Stock in such
amounts and at such prices as the Board of Directors  may deem  advisable in the
best  interests of  stockholders.  Purchases  may be made on the American  Stock
Exchange or in private transactions directly with stockholders.


                                      [5]


      Central's net asset value, adjusted for the reinvestment of distributions,
increased by 9.4% last year.  The S&P 500 and Russell 2000, an index composed of
smaller   companies,   returned   5.5%  and  a  negative   1.6%,   respectively.
Interestingly,  the Russell had  outperformed  the S&P for seven of the previous
eight years. Last year, however,  market uncertainty had a greater impact on the
prices of smaller companies, which are presumed to be more vulnerable to slowing
economic  growth than larger ones.  Plymouth Rock,  Murphy Oil, Bank of New York
Mellon,  Intel, Berry Petroleum and Roper Industries were the major contributors
to Central's  gain.  Capital One Financial,  Convergys and Geomet  detracted the
most.

      Our trading  activity as measured by turnover  increased  from 18% to 20%.
Over the year eight  investments  were added and fourteen  sold. The largest new
investments  were  Coherent,  Devon  Energy,  Radisys  and  A.S.V.  The  largest
eliminations were Neoware, Chevron, Ceridian, Hewitt Associates and SLM Corp. We
ended the year with thirty-three holdings. The ten largest, shown on page eight,
accounted for 63% of Central's net assets.

      Plymouth Rock did not repeat its record  earnings  performance  of 2006 in
2007.  Since this letter  precedes its annual report,  audited  results for last
year are not yet  available.  (The Plymouth Rock annual report will be placed on
the company's website at www.prac.com in early April.) The $54 million earned in
2006, it may be remembered,  was boosted by a $10 million  reduction of reserves
from  prior  years  and  Plymouth  Rock  Assurance   Corp.,   along  with  other
Massachusetts  insurers,  experienced  an  unexpected  rise in its loss ratio in
2007.  Management  has taken  aggressive  action to address  the issue.  The New
Jersey  subsidiaries,  Palisades and High Point, are both benefiting from recent
acquisitions.  These  companies,  it should be noted,  are management  companies
which derive their income from servicing fees as opposed to underwriting.

      Complicating the future in Massachusetts,  the state insurance  department
is in the  process  of  implementing  regulatory  changes  designed  to  conform
Massachusetts  regulation  with  that of other  states  in  order to bring  more
insurance  providers into the state,  much as occurred in New Jersey a few years
ago.  It is unclear  how the market  will  develop,  but we hope the  experience
Plymouth Rock gained in NJ will help as it contends with the changes.

      It has been 25 years since Central made its initial investment in Plymouth
Rock.  Since  then the  company  has grown to the point  where  last year it had
approximately $1 billion in written and managed  premiums.  Central has received
dividends over the last 10 years of more than $15 million.  Based on the current
valuation our  investment has increased at an annual rate of 20% for the 25 year
period.  Looking  forward,  when I reflect on Central's  investment  in Plymouth
Rock, the team Jim Stone has assembled and the leadership he is able to provide,
I think the company should continue to be able to provide  attractive  long-term
shareholder  returns.  Much of the company's growth has come from  acquisitions,
and  opportunities  may arise in the coming years if companies  not committed to
the increasingly complex auto business decide to exit.

      Plymouth  Rock is not  publicly  traded  and its  value is  determined  by
Central's  Board of  Directors  based on an  independent  appraisal  obtained by
Plymouth  Rock.  We evaluate the  appraisal,  considering,  among other  things,
management,  corporate  governance,  valuations  of comparable  publicly  traded
companies,  the company and industry outlooks,  marketability and recent private
transactions.  We currently apply a liquidity discount of 32.5%,  resulting in a
value of $2120 per share.


                                      [6]


      In last year's  annual  report we noted that the market  seemed to have an
abundance of confidence.  That changed  abruptly this past summer when it became
apparent  that many so called  "structured"  securities  backed by mortgages and
other loans had lost much of their  value.  Confidence  evaporated  quickly as a
number of large American and European  financial  institutions  announced  write
offs which strained their capital bases.  To remedy the situation they have been
trooping  "hat in hand" to the Middle East and East Asia to raise  capital  from
wealthy sovereign investment funds. Fortunately, capital has been available, but
it has been costly for  shareholders.  In a larger sense,  as pointed out by the
historian  Niall Ferguson,  economic power is shifting.  In the past such shifts
have had political implications as well as financial ones. Against this backdrop
the stock market was mixed last year. For example,  bank stocks declined by more
than 28%. In contrast,  energy stocks  increased by 31% as investors  focused on
demand  from China and hedged  against the weak  dollar.  Looking  forward,  the
Federal  Reserve is faced with the problem of stabilizing the banking system and
mitigating an economic slowdown while avoiding inflation in the process. Success
in this endeavor will require deft management on the part of the regulators.

      It is our belief that there is no one  "correct" way to invest and Central
uses a number of  investment  strategies.  Our  investing  activities,  however,
continue to be based on a few basic  principles:  we pay  attention  to price in
relation to assets,  earnings,  and  intrinsic  or  franchise  value.  We take a
long-term  view,  looking out three to five years.  Many investors are forced to
have a shorter time horizon, and we believe the ability to take a long-term view
has  been  an  advantage  for  Central  shareholders.   We  try  to  avoid  over
diversification.  Our long-standing  practice has been to keep about one half of
our assets  invested in a small  number of  companies.  We often  invest in less
liquid  securities  or go  contrary  to general  opinion on the theory that such
situations are not as efficiently priced.  Finally,  integrity is important.  We
want  to own  companies  whose  managements  are  working  in the  shareholder's
interest.

      It is our goal to provide  shareholders  with  results that will be judged
superior in the long run. We continue to believe that under reasonably favorable
economic conditions our investment approach will provide satisfactory results.

      Shareholder inquiries are welcome.

                                             CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION

                                                Wilmot H. Kidd, President

630 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10111
January 22, 2008


                                      [7]


                            TEN LARGEST INVESTMENTS

                                December 31, 2007
                                   (unaudited)



                                                                              % of Net   Year First
                                                          Cost       Value      Assets    Acquired
                                                          ----       -----      ------    --------
                                                            (millions)
                                                                                 
The Plymouth Rock Company, Inc......................     $ 2.2      $148.4      23.0%        1982
Murphy Oil Corporation..............................       2.6        44.5       6.9         1974
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation.............      15.5        40.3       6.2         1993
Agilent Technologies, Inc...........................      22.5        34.6       5.4         2005
Brady Corporation...................................       2.5        30.7       4.8         1984
Convergys Corporation...............................      25.1        28.2       4.4         1998
Intel Corporation...................................       0.4        24.0       3.7         1986
Roper Industries, Inc...............................       7.2        21.9       3.4         2003
Dover Corporation...................................      13.0        18.4       2.9         2003
Devon Energy Corporation............................      14.9        17.8       2.8         2007


                           PRINCIPAL PORTFOLIO CHANGES

                         October 1 to December 31, 2007
                   (Common Stock unless specified otherwise)
                                  (unaudited)



                                                                         Number of Shares
                                                         -----------------------------------------------
                                                                                              Held
                                                         Purchased           Sold      December 31, 2007
                                                         ---------           ----      -----------------
                                                                                    
A.S.V., Inc.........................................      120,000                            800,000
Carlisle Companies Inc..............................       10,000                            150,000
Coherent, Inc.......................................      600,000                            700,000
Covidien Ltd........................................                        100,000               --
Flextronics Ltd.....................................      630,000(a)                         630,000
GeoMet, Inc.........................................      850,000                          1,850,000
IMS Health, Inc.....................................                         80,000               --
McMoRan Exploration Corporation.....................       45,000                            600,000
Meritage Homes Corporation..........................                         90,000               --
Murphy Oil Corporation..............................                         25,000          525,000
Roper Industries, Inc...............................                         60,000          350,000
Tyco Electronics Ltd................................                         90,000               --
Verigy Ltd..........................................                         60,000               --
Vical Inc...........................................       35,100                            170,000
Walgreen Co.........................................      200,000                            200,000


----------
(a)   550,600  shares  received in exchange  for  1,800,000  shares of Solectron
      Corporation.


                                      [8]


                         DIVERSIFICATION OF INVESTMENTS

                                December 31, 2007
                                   (unaudited)



                                                                                        Percent of
                                                                                        Net Assets
                                                                                        December 31
                                                                                      --------------
                                        Issues         Cost             Value         2007      2006
                                        ------         ----             -----         ----      ----
Common Stocks:
                                                                                 
   Insurance...........................   3        $ 3,633,747      $149,947,000      23.3%     21.8%
   Electronics.........................   8         79,307,574       130,984,576      20.3      16.8
   Energy..............................   6         54,002,897       106,792,150      16.6      12.5
   Manufacturing.......................   6         45,437,863        91,649,304      14.2      14.0
   Banking and Finance.................   2         20,552,122        56,318,561       8.7       9.3
   Information Technology..............   2         31,307,626        45,438,368       7.1      12.6
   Other...............................   6         20,227,100        29,890,364       4.6       9.4
Short-Term Investments.................   3         33,713,125        33,713,125       5.2       3.5


                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS



                                                                2007           2006           2005           2004          2003
                                                                ----           ----           ----           ----          ----
                                                                                                          
Per Share Operating Performance:
Net asset value, beginning of year ......................    $  30.05       $  27.65       $  26.44       $  24.32       $  18.72
Net investment income* ..................................         .38            .36            .28            .11            .09
Net realized and unrealized gain on securities* .........        2.12           4.26           2.93           3.33           6.91
                                                             --------       --------       --------       --------       --------
      Total from investment operations ..................        2.50           4.62           3.21           3.44           7.00
Less:
Dividends from net investment income ....................         .37            .36            .28            .11            .11
Distributions from capital gains ........................        2.03           1.86           1.72           1.21           1.29
                                                             --------       --------       --------       --------       --------
      Total distributions ...............................        2.40           2.22           2.00           1.32           1.40
                                                             --------       --------       --------       --------       --------
Net asset value, end of year ............................    $  30.15       $  30.05       $  27.65       $  26.44       $  24.32
                                                             ========       ========       ========       ========       ========
Per share market value, end of year .....................    $  26.84       $  26.65       $  23.80       $  22.85       $  20.89
Total return based on market(%) .........................        9.86          21.31          14.04          16.16          36.22
Total return based on NAV(%) ............................        9.35          18.55          13.75          15.40          39.32
Ratios/Supplemental Data:
Net assets, end of year(000) ............................    $644,823       $617,167       $573,980       $529,469       $478,959
Ratio of expenses to average net assets(%).. ............         .59            .53            .54            .55            .56
Ratio of net investment income to average
  net assets(%) .........................................        1.21           1.23           1.02            .41            .42
Portfolio turnover rate(%) ..............................       19.58          17.55          15.83          16.72          12.90


----------
*     Based on the average number of shares outstanding during the year.

                See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [9]

                            STATEMENT OF INVESTMENTS

                                December 31, 2007

                           PORTFOLIO SECURITIES 94.8%
                   STOCKS (COMMON UNLESS SPECIFIED OTHERWISE)

    Prin. Amt.
    or Shares                                                           Value
    ---------                                                           -----
              Banking and Finance 8.7%
     825,475   The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation........      $ 40,250,161
     340,000   Capital One Financial Corporation..............        16,068,400
                                                                    ------------
                                                                      56,318,561
                                                                    ------------
              Chemicals 1.2%
     150,000   Rohm and Haas Company..........................         7,960,500
                                                                    ------------
              Communications 0.9%
   1,005,000   Arbinet-thexchange, Inc. (a)...................         6,080,250
                                                                    ------------
              Electronics 20.3%
     942,400   Agilent Technologies, Inc. (a).................        34,623,776
     430,000   Analog Devices, Inc............................        13,631,000
     700,000   Coherent, Inc. (a).............................        17,549,000
     630,000   Flextronics International Ltd. (a).............         7,597,800
     900,000   Intel Corporation..............................        23,994,000
     350,000   Motorola, Inc..................................         5,614,000
   1,000,000   Radisys Corporation (a)........................        13,400,000
   2,500,000   Sonus Networks, Inc. (a).......................        14,575,000
                                                                    ------------
                                                                     130,984,576
                                                                    ------------
              Energy 16.6%
     375,000   Berry Petroleum Company Class A................        16,668,750
     200,000   Devon Energy Corporation.......................        17,782,000
   1,850,000   GeoMet, Inc. (a)...............................         9,620,000
     600,000   McMoRan Exploration Co. (a)....................        7,854,000
     525,000   Murphy Oil Corporation.........................        44,541,000
     320,000   Nexen Inc......................................        10,326,400
                                                                    ------------
                                                                     106,792,150
                                                                    ------------
              Health Care 1.2%
     120,000   Abbott Laboratories............................         6,738,000
     170,000   Vical Inc. (a).................................           722,500
                                                                    ------------
                                                                       7,460,500
                                                                    ------------
              Information Technology Services 7.1%
   1,715,800   Convergys Corporation (a)......................        28,242,068
     990,000   The TriZetto Group, Inc. (a)...................        17,196,300
                                                                    ------------
                                                                      45,438,368
                                                                    ------------


                                      [10]


    Prin. Amt.
    or Shares                                                           Value
    ---------                                                           -----
              Insurance 23.3%
      10,000   Erie Indemnity Co. Class A.....................      $    518,900
      70,000   The Plymouth Rock Company, Inc.
                 Class A (b)(c)...............................       148,400,000
       2,000   White Mountains Insurance Group, Ltd...........         1,028,100
                                                                    ------------
                                                                     149,947,000
                                                                    ------------
              Manufacturing 14.2%
     800,000   A.S.V., Inc. (a)...............................        11,080,000
     875,600   Brady Corporation Class A......................        30,724,804
     150,000   Carlisle Companies Inc.........................         5,554,500
     400,000   Dover Corporation..............................        18,436,000
     350,000   Roper Industries, Inc..........................        21,889,000
     100,000   Tyco International Ltd.........................         3,965,000
                                                                    ------------
                                                                      91,649,304
                                                                    ------------
              Retailing 1.3%
      28,751   Aerogroup International, Inc. (a)(c)...........           773,114
     200,000   Walgreen Co....................................         7,616,000
                                                                    ------------
                                                                       8,389,114
                                                                    ------------
               Total Portfolio Securities
                 (cost $254,468,929)(d).......................       611,020,323

                               SHORT-TERM INVESTMENTS 5.2%

              Commercial Paper 1.4%
   3,374,000   American Express 4.31%, due 1/9/08.............         3,370,783
   5,533,000   General Electric Capital Corporation 4.17%,
                 due 1/16/08..................................         5,523,433
                                                                    ------------
                                                                       8,894,216
                                                                    ------------
              U.S. Treasury Bills 3.8%
  25,040,000  U.S. Treasury Bills 2.65% - 3.04%
                 due 1/3/08 - 5/18/08.........................        24,818,909
                                                                    ------------
                 Total Short-Term Investments
                   (cost $33,713,125)(d)......................        33,713,125
                                                                    ------------
                 Total Investments (100.0%)...................       644,733,448
              Cash, receivables and other assets
                 less liabilities (0.0%)......................            89,276
                                                                    ------------
              Net Assets (100%)...............................      $644,822,724
                                                                    ============
----------
(a)   Non-dividend paying.

(b)   Affiliate as defined in the Investment  Company Act of 1940.

(c)   Valued at estimated fair value.

(d)   Aggregate cost for Federal tax purposes is substantially the same.


                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [11]


                       STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES

                                December 31, 2007

ASSETS:
    Investments:
       General portfolio securities at market
         value (cost $252,268,943) (Note 1)........  $462,620,323
       Securities of affiliated company
         (cost $2,199,986) (Notes 1, 5 and 6)......   148,400,000
       Short-term investments (cost $33,713,125)...    33,713,125   $644,733,448
                                                     ------------
    Cash, receivables and other assets:
       Cash........................................        22,590
       Dividends and interest receivable...........        42,053
       Office equipment and leasehold
         improvements, net.........................       310,908
       Other assets................................        80,808        456,359
                                                     ------------   ------------
           Total Assets............................                  645,189,807
LIABILITIES:
    Accrued expenses and reserves..................       367,083
                                                     ------------
           Total Liabilities.......................                      367,083
                                                                    ------------
NET ASSETS.........................................                 $644,822,724
                                                                    ============
NET ASSETS are represented by:
    Common Stock $1 par value: authorized
      30,000,000 shares; issued 21,385,882
      (Note 2).....................................                 $ 21,385,882
    Surplus:
      Paid-in......................................  $265,306,327
      Undistributed net realized gain on sale
        of investments.............................     1,087,512
      Undistributed net investment income..........       491,609    266,885,448
                                                     ------------
    Net unrealized appreciation of investments.....                  356,551,394
                                                                    ------------
NET ASSETS.........................................                 $644,822,724
                                                                    ============
NET ASSET VALUE PER COMMON SHARE
    (21,385,882 shares outstanding)................                    $30.15
                                                                       ======

                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [12]


                             STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS

                      For the year ended December 31, 2007

INVESTMENT INCOME
Income:
    Dividends (net of foreign
       withholding taxes of $4,545).................. $ 9,200,619
    Interest.........................................   2,441,736    $11,642,355
                                                      -----------
Expenses:
    Investment research..............................   1,293,750
    Administration and operations....................     957,250
    Occupancy costs..................................     461,828
    Employees' retirement plans......................     165,400
    Franchise and miscellaneous taxes................     162,746
    Insurance........................................     150,141
    Directors' fees..................................     135,500
    Stationery, supplies, printing and postage.......     106,196
    Listing, software and sundry fees................     103,417
    Legal, auditing and tax fees.....................      94,501
    Travel and telephone.............................      58,546
    Custodian fees...................................      37,945
    Transfer agent and registrar fees and expenses...      28,794
    Publications and miscellaneous...................      69,096      3,825,110
                                                      -----------    -----------
Net investment income................................                  7,817,245

NET REALIZED AND UNREALIZED GAIN
  ON INVESTMENTS
Net realized gain from investment transactions.......  42,124,417
Net increase in unrealized appreciation
    of investments...................................   4,626,767
                                                      -----------
    Net gain on investments..........................                 46,751,184
                                                                     -----------
NET INCREASE IN NET ASSETS RESULTING FROM
  OPERATIONS.........................................                $54,568,429
                                                                     ===========

                 See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [13]


                       STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

                 For the years ended December 31, 2007 and 2006

                                                          2007          2006
                                                      ------------  ------------
FROM OPERATIONS:
    Net investment income...........................  $ 7,817,245   $ 7,269,692
    Net realized gain on investments................   42,124,417    36,468,013
    Net increase in unrealized
      appreciation of investments...................    4,626,767    49,542,956
                                                     ------------  ------------
      Increase in net assets resulting from
        operations..................................   54,568,429    93,280,661
                                                     ------------  ------------
DISTRIBUTIONS TO STOCKHOLDERS FROM:
    Net investment income...........................   (7,557,915)   (7,185,071)
    Net realized gain from investment transactions..  (41,733,753)  (36,564,651)
                                                     ------------  ------------
      Decrease in net assets from distributions.....  (49,291,668)  (43,749,722)
                                                     ------------  ------------
FROM CAPITAL SHARE TRANSACTIONS: (Note 2)
    Distribution to stockholders reinvested in
      Common Stock..................................   22,378,937    21,444,764
    Cost of shares of Common Stock repurchased......           --   (27,788,582)
                                                     ------------  ------------
      Increase (decrease) in net assets from
        capital share transactions..................   22,378,937    (6,343,818)
                                                     ------------  ------------
            Total increase in net assets............   27,655,698    43,187,121
NET ASSETS:
    Beginning of year...............................  617,167,026   573,979,905
                                                     ------------  ------------
    End of year (including undistributed
      net investment income of $491,609
      and $226,873, respectively)................... $644,822,724  $617,167,026
                                                     ============  ============


                See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [14]


                             STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS

                      For the year ended December 31, 2007

CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
    Net increase in net assets from operations.....                $ 54,568,429
    Adjustments to net increase in net assets
      from operations:
      Purchase of securities....................... ($117,657,301)
      Proceeds from securities sold................   148,405,422
      Net purchase of short-term investments.......   (12,240,069)
      Net realized gain from investments...........   (42,124,417)
      Increase in unrealized appreciation..........    (4,626,767)
      Depreciation and amortization................        81,110
      Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
        Decrease in dividends and interest
          receivable...............................        59,895
        Decrease in receivable for securities sold.       364,849
        Increase in office equipment and
          leasehold improvements...................        (6,356)
        Increase in other assets...................          (742)
        Increase in accrued expenses and reserves..        30,925
                                                    -------------
      Total adjustments............................                 (27,713,451)
                                                                   ------------
Net cash provided by operating activities..........                  26,854,978

Cash flows from financing activities:
    Dividends and distributions paid...............   (26,912,731)
                                                    -------------
Cash flows used in financing activities............                 (26,912,731)
                                                                   ------------
Net decrease in cash...............................                     (57,753)
Cash at beginning of year..........................                      80,343
                                                                   ------------
Cash at end of year................................                $     22,590
                                                                   ============


SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION:
Non-cash financing activities not included herein consist of:
  Reinvestment of dividends and distributions to stockholders....  $ 22,378,937

                See accompanying notes to financial statements.


                                      [15]


                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

      1. Significant  Accounting  Policies--Central  Securities Corporation (the
"Corporation")  is  registered  under the  Investment  Company  Act of 1940,  as
amended, as a non-diversified,  closed-end  management  investment company.  The
following  is a summary  of the  significant  accounting  policies  consistently
followed by the  Corporation  in the  preparation  of its financial  statements.
These policies are in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

      Security  Valuation--Securities  are  valued at the last or  closing  sale
        price or, if unavailable,  at the closing bid price.  Corporate discount
        notes and U.S.  Treasury  Bills  are  valued at  amortized  cost,  which
        approximates market value.  Securities for which no ready market exists,
        including  The Plymouth  Rock Company,  Inc.  Class A Common Stock,  are
        valued at estimated fair value by the Board of Directors.

      Federal  Income  Taxes--It  is  the  Corporation's   policy  to  meet  the
        requirements  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  applicable  to  regulated
        investment  companies and to distribute all of its taxable income to its
        stockholders. Therefore, no Federal income taxes have been accrued.

      Use of  Estimates--The  preparation of financial  statements in accordance
        with generally accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management to
        make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported.  Actual
        results may differ from those estimates.

      Other--Security  transactions  are accounted for as of the trade date, and
        cost  of  securities  sold is  determined  by  specific  identification.
        Dividend income and  distributions  to stockholders  are recorded on the
        ex-dividend date.  Interest income is accrued daily.  Certain prior year
        amounts   have  been   reclassified   to  conform   with   current  year
        presentation.

      New  Accounting   Pronouncements--In   September  2006,  the  FASB  issued
        Statement 157 ("SFAS 157"),  "Fair Value  Measurements".  This Statement
        defines fair value,  establishes a framework for measuring fair value in
        generally accepted  accounting  principles and expands disclosures about
        fair value measurements.  SFAS 157 will be effective at the beginning of
        the Corporation's  2008 fiscal year.  Management is currently  assessing
        the effect of this pronouncement on our financial statements. During the
        year  ended  December  31,  2007,  the  Corporation   adopted  Financial
        Accounting   Standards   Board   Interpretation   48,   "Accounting  for
        Uncertainty in Income Taxes" ("FIN 48").  Management has determined that
        the implementation of FIN 48 had no impact in the financial statements.

      2.  Common  Stock  and  Dividend  Distributions--The  Corporation  did not
repurchase  any  shares of its  Common  Stock in 2007.  It may from time to time
purchase  Common  Stock  in such  amounts  and at such  prices  as the  Board of
Directors  may  deem  advisable  in the  best  interests  of  the  stockholders.
Purchases  will  only be made at less than net asset  value per  share,  thereby
increasing  the net asset  value of shares held by the  remaining  stockholders.
Shares so acquired  may be held as treasury  stock and  available  for  optional
stock distributions, or may be retired.

      The Corporation made two distributions to holders of Common Stock in 2007,
a cash  dividend of $.20 per share paid on June 22 and an optional  distribution
of $2.20  per share in cash,  or one  share of  Common  Stock for each 12 shares
held,  paid on December  27. In the  optional  distribution,  282,664  shares of
Common Stock held as treasury shares by the Corporation  were  distributed,  and
565,023 common shares were issued.


                                      [16]


                   NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS -- Continued

      The tax character of dividends and distributions  paid during the year was
ordinary income,  $10,597,383 and long-term capital gain, $38,694,285;  for 2006
they were  $11,563,375 and $32,186,347,  respectively.  As of December 31, 2007,
for tax purposes,  undistributed  ordinary income was $563,215 and undistributed
long-term realized capital gain was $1,089,288.  Dividends and distributions are
determined  in  accordance  with  income tax  regulations  which may differ from
generally accepted accounting principles.  Financial statements are adjusted for
permanent book-tax differences;  however, such adjustments were not material for
the year ended December 31, 2007.

      3. Investment Transactions--The aggregate cost of securities purchased and
the  aggregate  proceeds of securities  sold during the year ended  December 31,
2007,  excluding  short-term  investments,  were  $117,657,301  and $148,405,422
respectively.

      As of December 31, 2007,  based on cost for Federal  income tax  purposes,
the aggregate gross unrealized  appreciation and depreciation for all securities
were $367,281,929 and $10,730,535, respectively.

      4. Operating  Expenses--The  aggregate  remuneration  paid during the year
ended  December 31, 2007 to officers and directors  amounted to  $2,230,500,  of
which $135,500 was paid as fees to directors who were not officers.  Benefits to
employees are provided through a profit sharing  retirement plan.  Contributions
to the plan are  made at the  discretion  of the  Board of  Directors,  and each
participant's  benefits  vest  after  three  years  of  employment.  The  amount
contributed for the year ended December 31, 2007 was $158,400.

      5.  Affiliates--During the year ended December 31, 2007, The Plymouth Rock
Company,  Inc. and Neoware Inc.  were  affiliates  as defined in the  Investment
Company Act of 1940.  The  Corporation  received  dividends of  $5,039,300  from
Plymouth Rock and earned a net realized gain of $5,202,192  from the sale of all
of its shares of Neoware  during the year ended  December 31,  2007.  Unrealized
appreciation related to affiliates increased by $14,274,469 for the year 2007 to
$146,200,014. The President of the Corporation is a director of Plymouth Rock.

      6.  Restricted  Securities--The  Corporation  from time to time invests in
securities  the  resale  of which is  restricted.  On  December  31,  2007  such
investments had an aggregate value of $149,173,114,  which was equal to 23.1% of
the Corporation's net assets.  Investments in restricted  securities at December
31, 2007, including acquisition dates and cost, were:



           Company                    Shares          Security           Date Acquired     Cost
-------------------------------       ------        -------------        -------------   ---------
                                                                             
Aerogroup International, Inc.         28,751        Common Stock            6/14/05     $   17,200
The Plymouth Rock Company, Inc.       60,000        Class A Stock          12/15/82      1,500,000
The Plymouth Rock Company, Inc.       10,000        Class A Stock           6/9/84         699,986


      The  Corporation  does not have the  right to demand  registration  of the
restricted securities.


      7.  Operating  Lease  Commitment--The  Corporation  has  entered  into  an
operating  lease for office space which  expires in 2014 and provides for future
minimum rental payments in the aggregate amount of  approximately  $2.4 million.
The lease agreement contains  escalation clauses relating to operating costs and
real property  taxes.  Future  minimum  rental  commitments  under the lease are
$314,241  per  year  through  2008,  $329,172  for 2009  and  $341,806  annually
thereafter.


                                      [17]


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                        REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED
                             PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

TO THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND STOCKHOLDERS OF
  CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION

      We have  audited the  accompanying  statement  of assets and  liabilities,
including the statement of investments,  of Central Securities  Corporation (the
"Corporation") as of December 31, 2007, and the related statements of operations
and cash flows for the year then ended,  the statements of changes in net assets
for each of the years in the  two-year  period  then  ended,  and the  financial
highlights  for each of the years in the  five-year  period  then  ended.  These
financial  statements  and financial  highlights are the  responsibility  of the
Corporation's  management.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements and financial highlights based on our audits.

      We conducted  our audits in  accordance  with the  standards of the Public
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that
we plan and perform the audit to obtain  reasonable  assurance about whether the
financial  statements  are free of  material  misstatement.  An  audit  includes
examining,  on a test basis,  evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in
the financial  statements  and financial  highlights.  Our  procedures  included
confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 2007 by correspondence  with
the custodian.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting  principles used
and significant estimates made by management,  as well as evaluating the overall
financial  statement  presentation.   We  believe  that  our  audits  provide  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

      In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred
to above present fairly,  in all material  respects,  the financial  position of
Central  Securities  Corporation  as of December 31, 2007 and the results of its
operations  and its cash flows for the year then  ended,  the changes in its net
assets  for  each of the  years  in the  two-year  period  then  ended,  and the
financial highlights for each of the years in the five-year period then ended in
conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

                                                    KPMG LLP

New York, NY
January 25, 2008

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                        Quarterly Portfolio Information

The Corporation files its complete  schedule of portfolio  holdings with the SEC
for the first quarter and the third quarter of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The
Corporation's   Form  N-Q  filings  are   available  on  the  SEC's  website  at
www.sec.gov.  Those  forms  may be  reviewed  and  copied  at the  SEC's  Public
Reference  Room in Washington  D.C.  Information  on the operation of the Public
Reference Room may be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330.



                                      [18]


                         BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

                                    Principal Occupations (last five years)
Independent Directors        Age    and Position with the Corporation (if any)
---------------------        ---    ------------------------------------------
SIMMS C. BROWNING            67     Retired since 2003; Vice President,
  Director since 2005               Neuberger Berman, LLC (asset management)
                                    prior thereto

DONALD G. CALDER             70     President, G.L. Ohrstrom & Co. Inc.
  Director since 1982               (private investment firm); Director of
                                    Brown-Forman Corporation, Carlisle Companies
                                    Incorporated and Roper Industries, Inc.
                                    (manufacturing companies), Chairman of
                                    Central Securities Corporation

JAY R. INGLIS                73     Vice President and General Counsel,
  Director since 1973               International Claims Management, Inc. since
                                    2006; Executive Vice President, National
                                    Marine Underwriters (insurance management
                                    company) prior thereto

DUDLEY D. JOHNSON            68     Chairman, Young & Franklin Inc. (private
  Director since 1984               manufacturing company)

C. CARTER WALKER, JR.        73     Private investor
  Director since 1974


Interested Director
-------------------
WILMOT H. KIDD               66     Investment and research--President,
  Director since 1972               Central Securities Corporation

                                    ----------

CHARLES N. EDGERTON          63     Vice President and Treasurer,
                                    Central Securities Corporation

WILLIAM E. SHEELINE          52     Vice President, Central Securities
                                    Corporation since 2007; President, Houqua
                                    Capital LLC from 2004-2006; Research
                                    Analyst, Train Babcock Advisors LLC from
                                    2003-2004; Vice Chairman, Knowlton Brothers
                                    prior thereto

MARLENE A. KRUMHOLZ          44     Secretary, Central Securities Corporation

The address of each Director and Officer is c/o Central Securities  Corporation,
630 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10111.

                                    ----------

                      Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures

      The policies and  procedures  used by the  Corporation to determine how to
vote proxies relating to portfolio securities and the Corporation's proxy voting
record for the  twelve-month  period  ended  June 30,  2007 are  available:  (1)
without charge,  upon request,  by calling us at our toll-free  telephone number
(1-866-593-2507),  (2) on the Corporation's website at www.centralsecurities.com
and (3) on the Securities and Exchange Commission's website at www.sec.gov.


                                      [19]


                               BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                           Donald G. Calder, Chairman
                                Simms C. Browning
                                  Jay R. Inglis
                                Dudley D. Johnson
                                 Wilmot H. Kidd
                              C. Carter Walker, Jr.


                                    OFFICERS

                            Wilmot H. Kidd, President
                Charles N. Edgerton, Vice President and Treasurer
                       William E. Sheeline, Vice President
                         Marlene A. Krumholz, Secretary


                                     OFFICE

                                630 Fifth Avenue
                               New York, NY 10111
                                  212-698-2020
                            866-593-2507 (toll-free)
                            www.centralsecurities.com


                          TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR

                        Computershare Trust Company, N.A.
                    P.O. Box 43069, Providence, RI 02940-3069
                                  800-756-8200
                              www.computershare.com


                                    CUSTODIAN

                                 UMB Bank, N.A.
                                 Kansas City, MO


                  INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

                                    KPMG LLP
                                  New York, NY


                                      [20]


Item 2. Code of Ethics. The Registrant has adopted a code of ethics that applies
to its principal executive officer and principal financial officer. This code of
ethics is filed as an attachment on this form.

Item 3. Audit Committee Financial Experts. The Board of Directors of the
Corporation has determined that none of the members of its Audit Committee (the
"Committee") meet the definition of "Audit Committee Financial Expert" as the
term has been defined by the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"). The
Board of Directors considered the possibility of adding a member that would
qualify as an Audit Committee Financial Expert, but has determined that the
Committee has sufficient expertise to perform its duties. In addition, the
Committee's charter authorizes the Committee to engage a financial expert should
it determine that such assistance is required.

Item 4. Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

                                                        2007         2006
                                                     ---------     ---------
        Audit fees ...........................       $51,500(1)    $45,500(1)
        Audit-related fees ...................             0             0
        Tax fees .............................        16,100(2)     15,400(2)
        All other fees .......................             0             0
                                                     -------       -------
        Total fees ...........................       $67,600       $60,900
                                                     =======       =======

        (1)   Includes fees for review of the semi-annual report to stockholders
              and audit of the annual report to stockholders.


        (2)   Includes fees for services performed with respect to tax
              compliance and tax planning.

Pursuant to its charter, the Audit Committee is responsible for recommending the
selection, approving compensation and overseeing the independence,
qualifications and performance of the independent accountants. The Audit
Committee's policy is to pre-approve all audit and permissible non-audit
services provided by the independent accountants. In assessing requests for
services by the independent accountants, the Audit Committee considers whether
such services are consistent with the auditor's independence; whether the
independent accountants are likely to provide the most effective and efficient
service based upon their familiarity with the Corporation; and whether the
service could enhance the Corporation's ability to manage or control risk or
improve audit quality. The Audit Committee may delegate pre-approval authority
to one or more of its members. Any pre-approvals by a member under this
delegation are to be reported to the Audit Committee at its next scheduled
meeting.

All of the audit and tax services provided by KPMG LLP in fiscal year 2007
(described in the footnotes to the table above) and related fees were approved
in advance by the Audit Committee.




Item 5. Audit Committee of Listed Registrants. The registrant has a
separately-designated standing audit committee. Its members are: Simms C.
Browning, Donald G. Calder, Jay R. Inglis, Dudley D. Johnson and C. Carter
Walker, Jr.

Item 6. Schedule of Investments. Schedule is included as a part of the report to
shareholders filed under Item 1 of this Form.


Item 7. Disclose Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures for Closed-End Management
Companies.

                         CENTRAL SECURITIES CORPORATION
                             PROXY VOTING GUIDELINES

Central Securities Corporation is involved in many matters of corporate
governance through the proxy voting process. We exercise our voting
responsibilities with the primary goal of maximizing the long-term value of our
investments. Our consideration of proxy issues is focused on the investment
implications of each proposal.

Our management evaluates and votes each proxy ballot that we receive. We do not
use a proxy voting service. Our Board of Directors has approved guidelines in
evaluating how to vote a particular proxy ballot. We recognize that a company's
management is entrusted with the day-to-day operations of the company, as well
as longer term strategic planning, subject to the oversight of the company's
board of directors. Our guidelines are based on the belief that a company's
shareholders have a responsibility to evaluate company performance and to
exercise the rights and duties pertaining to ownership.

When determining whether to invest in a particular company, one of the key
factors we consider is the ability and integrity of its management. As a result,
we believe that recommendations of management on any issue, particularly routine
issues, should be given substantial weight in determining how proxies should be
voted. Thus, on most issues, our votes are cast in accordance with the company's
recommendations. When we believe management's recommendation is not in the best
interests of our stockholders, we will vote against management's recommendation.

Due to the nature of our business and our size, it is unlikely that conflicts of
interest will arise in our voting of proxies of public companies. We do not
engage in investment banking nor do we have private advisory clients or any
other businesses. In the unlikely event that we determine that a conflict does
arise on a proxy voting issue, we will defer that proxy vote to our independent
directors.

We have listed the following, specific examples of voting decisions for the
types of proposals that are frequently presented. We generally vote according to
these guidelines.




We may, on occasion, vote otherwise when we believe it to be in the best
interest of our stockholders:

Election of Directors - We believe that good governance starts with an
independent board, unfettered by significant ties to management, in which all
members are elected annually. In addition, key board committees should be
entirely independent.

      o     We support the election of directors that result in a board made up
            of a majority of independent directors who do not appear to have
            been remiss in the performance of their oversight responsibilities.

      o     We will withhold votes for non-independent directors who serve on
            the audit, compensation or nominating committees of the board.

      o     We consider withholding votes for directors who missed more than
            one-fourth of the scheduled board meetings without good reason in
            the previous year.

      o     We generally oppose the establishment of classified boards of
            directors and will support proposals that directors stand for
            election annually.

      o     We generally oppose limits to the tenure of directors or
            requirements that candidates for directorships own large amounts of
            stock before being eligible for election.

Compensation - We believe that appropriately designed equity-based compensation
plans can be an effective way to align the interests of long-term shareholders
and the interests of management, employees, and directors. We are opposed to
plans that substantially dilute our ownership interest in the company, provide
participants with excessive awards, or have inherently objectionable structural
features without offsetting advantages to the company's stockholders.

We evaluate proposals related to compensation on a case-by case basis.

      o     We generally support stock option plans that are incentive based and
            not excessive.


      o     We generally oppose the ability to re-price options without
            compensating factors when the underlying stock has fallen in value.

      o     We support measures intended to increase the long-term stock
            ownership by executives including requiring stock acquired through
            option exercise to be held for a substantial period of time.

      o     We generally support stock purchase plans to increase company stock
            ownership by employees, provided that shares purchased under the
            plan are acquired for not less than 85% of their market value.

      o     We generally oppose change-in-control provisions in non-salary
            compensation plans, employment contracts, and severance agreements
            which benefit management and would be costly to shareholders if
            triggered.

Corporate Structure and Shareholder Rights - We generally oppose anti-takeover
measures and other proposals designed to limit the ability of shareholders to
act on possible transactions. We support proposals when management can
demonstrate that there are sound financial or business reasons.




      o     We generally support proposals to remove super-majority voting
            requirements and oppose amendments to bylaws which would require a
            super-majority of shareholder votes to pass or repeal certain
            provisions.

      o     We will evaluate proposals regarding shareholders rights plans
            ("poison pills") on a case-by-case basis considering issues such as
            the term of the arrangement and the level of review by independent
            directors.

      o     We will review proposals for changes in corporate structure such as
            changes in the state of incorporation or mergers individually. We
            generally oppose proposals where management does not offer an
            appropriate rationale.

      o     We generally support share repurchase programs.

      o     We generally support the general updating of or corrective
            amendments to corporate charters and by-laws.

      o     We generally oppose the elimination of the rights of shareholders to
            call special meetings.

Approval of Independent Auditors - We believe that the relationship between the
company and its auditors should be limited primarily to the audit engagement and
closely related activities that do not, in the aggregate, raise the appearance
of impaired independence.

      o     We generally support management's proposals regarding the approval
            of independent auditors.

      o     We evaluate on a case-by-case basis instances in which the audit
            firm appears to have a substantial non-audit relationship with the
            company or companies affiliated with it.

Social and Corporate Responsibility Issues - We believe that ordinary business
matters are primarily the responsibility of management and should be approved
solely by the corporation's board of directors. Proposals in this category,
initiated primarily by shareholders, typically request that the company disclose
or amend certain business practices. We generally vote with management on these
types of proposals, although we may make exceptions in certain instances where
we believe a proposal has substantial economic implications.

      o     We generally oppose shareholder proposals which apply restrictions
            related to social, political, or special interest issues which
            affect the ability of the company to do business or be competitive
            and which have significant financial impact.

      o     We generally oppose proposals which require that the company provide
            costly, duplicative, or redundant reports, or reports of a
            non-business nature.


Item 8. Portfolio Managers of Closed-End Management Investment Companies. Mr.
Wilmot H. Kidd is the President and portfolio manager of the Corporation and has
served in that capacity since 1973. He manages no other accounts and
accordingly, the Registrant is not aware of any material conflicts with his
management of the




Corporation's investments. Mr. Kidd's compensation consists primarily of a fixed
base salary and a bonus. His compensation is reviewed and approved by the Board
of Directors annually. His compensation may be adjusted from year to year based
on the Board of Directors perception of overall performance and his management
responsibilities. As of December 31, 2007, Mr. Kidd's investment in Central
Securities common stock exceeded $1 million.

Item 9. Purchases of Equity Securities by Closed-End Management Investment
Company and Affiliated Purchasers.



--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
                                                                                          (d) Maximum Number (or
                               (a) Total                        (c) Total Number of         Approximate Dollar
                               Number of       (b) Average       Shares (or Units)         Value) of Shares (or
                               Shares (or       Price Paid      Purchased as Part of      Units) that May Yet Be
                                 Units)         per Share       Publicly Announced         Purchased Under the
         Period                Purchased        (or Unit)        Plans or Programs           Plans or Programs
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
                                                                                      
Month #1 (July 1 through           0                NA                    NA                       NA
July 31)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Month #2 (August 1                 0                NA                    NA                       NA
through August 31)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Month #3 (September 1              0                NA                    NA                       NA
through September 30)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Month #4 (October 1                0                NA                    NA                       NA
through October 31)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Month #5 (November 1               0                NA                    NA                       NA
through November 30)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Month #6 (December 1               0                NA                    NA                       NA
through December 31)
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------
Total                              0                NA                    NA                       NA
--------------------------- ----------------- ---------------- ------------------------- ------------------------


Item 10. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders. There have been no
changes to the procedures by which shareholders may recommend nominees to the
registrant's board of directors since such procedures were last described in the
Corporation's proxy statement dated February 5, 2008.


Item 11. Controls and Procedures.

(a) The Principal Executive Officer and Principal Financial Officer of Central
Securities Corporation (the "Corporation") have concluded that the Corporation's
Disclosure Controls and Procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-2(c) under the
Investment Company Act of 1940) are effective based on their evaluation of the
Disclosure Controls and Procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing
date of this report.




(b) There have been no changes in the Corporation's internal control over
financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d)) under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered
by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to
materially affect, the Corporation's internal control over financial reporting.


Item 12. Exhibits. (a) Any code of ethics, or amendment thereto, that is the
subject of the disclosure required by Item 2, to the extent that the registrant
intends to satisfy the Item 2 requirements through filing of an exhibit.
Attached hereto.

(b) A separate certification for each principal executive officer and principal
financial officer of the registrant as required by Rule 30a-2 under the Act.
Attached hereto.

(c) Any written solicitation to purchase securities under Rule 23c-1 under the
Act sent or given during the period covered by the report by or on behalf of the
registrant to 10 or more persons. Not Applicable.




                                   SIGNATURES

      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

Central Securities Corporation


By: /s/ Wilmot H. Kidd
   --------------------
   Wilmot H. Kidd
   President

February 5, 2008
--------------------
Date

      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and
the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capabilities and on the
dates indicated.


By: /s/ Wilmot H. Kidd
   --------------------
   Wilmot H. Kidd
   President

February 5, 2008
----------------
Date


By: /s/ Charles N. Edgerton
   ------------------------
   Charles N. Edgerton
   Treasurer

February 5, 2008
----------------
Date