As,to the Character and Worth of "The Yoney uestionI." From POMEROY'S DEMOCRAT. THE MONEY QUESTION.-By W. A. BERKEY, Grand Rapids, Michigan. 384 pages. Price key mail, $1.50. There is more real useful information concerning inoney in this book than in any we ever before saw. Its chapters tell of the wealth and resources of the United States, and why our people do not enjoy general prosperity; money and its functions; banks and banking; banks of the old world; paper money and the banks of the United States, with history of them from the first; history of paper money; the national banking system, etc., etc. We wish that a copy of this really exhaustive and valuable book were in the home of every voter in the country. It is full of facts, figures, data, information and proof that legal tender paper money is equally valuable for all business purposes with gold or silver coin, duly stamped and issued as money. It gives the history of money, of banks, of panics, of fluctuations in market, and tells in the plainest, earnest way how the evils of panics and those national depressions made to enrich the few at the expense of the many, may be avoided. Mr. Berkey has done in this book as much for industry and the good of the people as Grant ever did for the army. He has written, as it seems, under inspiration, and has produced a book so full of sense, so forcible in its illustrations, so correct in its statements and conclusions, that it should be'a textbook in the home and memory of every man who wishes for success in life. -By all means send for it. Read it and then you will see why times are hard, and what the remedy to apply to prevent hard times in the future. F. A. SPRAGUE, EsQ., of Santa Paula, Cal., writes January 23, 1817:-"Your book is the weapon with which in a fight with bullionists oue honest mlan will put a thousand and two tell thousand to flight. Please send me six copies." Mn. A. M. COMISTOCK, of San Francisco, the author of "American Finance," writes:-" Your work is the most complete presentation of the subject in print. If it could be generally read it would inaugurate a' new dispensation in finance.") PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three prin cipal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount. Sent by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address W. A. BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. t .,- I -I i 11 , f TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF "THE MONEY QUESTION." From GENERAL BENJAMIN F. BUTLER. LOWELL, MASS., Aug. 9, 1876. Dear Sir:-I am very much obliged to you for a copy of your excellent book upon the money question. It brings together an array of facts and statistics which should be entirely convincing to every thinking man of the nation, of the inexpediency, nay, cruelty of forced resumption of specie payments. Again thanking you for the copy, which I shall keep beside me as a hand-book of dates and facts, I am, truly yours, BENJ. F. BUTLER. W. A. BERKEY, ESQ., Grand Rapids, Mich. HoN. THOMAS J. ])URANT, Washington, D.C., says:-"I desire to return you my thanks for your work on the Money Question. * * I have read it with great satisfaction and no less instruction. * * I think you have made an excellent book; it is full of valuable information which cannot so conveniently be found elsewhere. It explains in a clear manner the nature and functions of money, and points out how necessary to the maintenance of liberty and republican institutions it is that the United States government shall be constituted the sole source of the supply of the nation, issued directly to the people by their own agents." REv. A. GAGE, Lewiston, Me., says:-" I have read your book carefully, and am greatly instructed in regard to the money question. I have Kellogg, Price, Spaulding, Colwell, and all the political economists, but yours is a book for the people. They need to know just what you have furnished in a clear and forcible presentation. It should have a circulation of millions." IHON. W. B. ANDERSON, of Illinois, says:-" I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your valuable book on Money. I have carefully read and heartily approve of the same. It should be in the hands of every voter in the nation. All the people want is light on the financial question. You deserve the thanks of every laboring man." JOHN G. DREW, Elizabeth, N.J., says:-" Logically, rhetorically and conclusively, you are right. I thank you for this valuable contribution to our politico-economical literature." PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three principal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount. Sent by mail post paid on receipt of prico. Address W. A. BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF " THE MONEY QUESTION. MR. J. W. HOORNER, of Parkersburg, Pa., says:-"I find it a very valuable work, and one that should be read and studied by every lover of his country. I consider the money question palamcount to all others, and that the'money aristocracy'. of the present day is fraught with more evil to the country than ever the' slave aristocracy' was, and should be watched closer than the money gamblers. I feel a p)rofound interest in the circulation of your book." From RIoN. WN.ONRDELL PHILLIPS. BOSTON, August 1, 1876. Dear 8iS:-I have just finished a more careful reading of your "Money Question," and cannot resist the impulse to thank you again for the great service you have done the public. I am struck with the completeness of the information furnished. I miss no fact, date or argument, and congratulate you most heartily on your marked success in achieving what, from your preface, I judge was your purpose-though you there undervalue your own work. One rises from its perusal profoundly impressed with the vital importance of the subject, and well furnished with the means to advocate the true method of safety and prosperity. Yours Respectfully, WENDELL PHILLIPS. J. W. GREEN, ESQ., of Chillicothe, Mo., writes under date of December 4, l876:-"I find it deserves even more than a careful perusal. The vast amount of important information it contains makes it a work that should be well studied by all who desire to know how it is that business is so uncertain under the'best government in the world.' * * * A copy in the hands of all the thinking voters of this country would make financial oppression impossible, and insure prosperity." MR. P. J. RICE, of Oberlin, Ohio, says:-" I want to do what I can to promote the Greenback Question, which I regard as the genuine labor question, and I think your book is eminently adapted to further that cause." WOOD F. TOWNSEND, ESQ., attorney at law, Danville, Ill., says -"I have read your book. It is grand, and it is doing great good. I hope the State Central Committee will have it circulated largely." PRICE. —Per single copy paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three principal chapters in pamphlet form 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount, Ont by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address -... As,3ERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF'" THE MONEY QUESTION." From the CINCINN2ATI ENQUIRER. THE MONEY QUESTION: By WILLIAM A. BERKEY, Grand Rapids, Michigan. This work, which has just been published, is one of a much more comprehensive and profound character than its title would, perhaps, indicate, and merits more than a passing notice. * * But it is in the analysis of the devices of the credit system, or substitutes for money possessing an intrinsic value, that thie author renders the most valuable contributions to the literature of the day upon the engrossing subject of money. * * The doctrine that the public note, like other devices of the credit system, is virtually based on commnodities in the process of exchange is carried out to its logical results in every direction, and effectually disposes of such questions as, how much money we should have, how it should be put into circulation, etc. Although no pretense is made in regard to style, the work is compact in its character, and is written in remarkably pure English. Mr. Berkey has undoubtedly rendered the cause of honest money a great service, and inflicted a blow upon the Money Power that will be keenly felt. From FARM AND FACTORY, Lacrosse, Wis, "THE MONEY QUESTION" is the title of a book of nearly 400 pages, written by William A. Berkey, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, which should be in the hands of every man in the country. This book, more than any other extant, strips the money question of all mystery, and explains the relation of money to societary organization, in language that is easily comprehended. In short, this glorious book opens a new channel of thought to the working man. After reading and pondering its pages he feels himself a stronger and better man. The broad light of day begins to dawn upon his heretofore clouded mind. Ile realizes for the first time in his life that God did not create him a slave to money, but on the contrary designed that money should be his slave, and that his past ignorance of a question which is of such vital importance to him is all that has made it possible for money to have held him in bondage so long. We shall have occasion to quote frequently from this invaluable work in the future. PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three principal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount, Sent by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address . W. A. BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICE. TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH Ol " THE MONEY QUESTION." From the HoN. FRANCIS W. HUGHES. POTTSVILLE, PA., June 14, 1876. W. A. BERKEIY —D)e a Sir: -Your book on "The Money Question" I have perused with great satisfaction, It is a most timely presentation, in a methodical and attractive form, of facts and arguments upon a subject of greater moment at this time than any other to the American people. Why a country with such vast natural resoiuces as ours, and embracing a population with unequalled general education, energy and enterprise, should now have over two millions of people willing to work, and who depend for their daily bread upon their daily labor, in a state of enforced idleness, is abundantly explained in your book. The remedy is as clearly indicated as the cause of our trouble is shown. More than this, the road to prosperity and abundance for all is so clearly pointed out by your book that nothing short of willful blindness can prevent its readers from seeing it. I earnestly hope that this book will be read by every one desirous of discharging his duty as a citizen. He will certainly then be able to do it intelligently. With great respect, F. W. HUGHnES. IHo. S. F. CAzY, Cincinnati, says:-"Many thanks for your book on the MAoney Question. I am glad to own it. I had seen a copy and given it a cursory examination. It is full of' fine gold,' and I wish it was in the hands of all who are capable of comprehending the question of which it treats. Alas, how few such men can be found. In haste, Yours, &c., S. F. CARY. JAMIES HARVEY, ESQ., of Liverpool, England, author of "Paper Money-the Money of Civilization," writes:-" I have read your work on'The Money Question' with very great interest. It is excellent. * * You on your side of the water fight the battle nobly. In fact, for the great Western States, it is a question of life and death." MEssRs. ToDD, POLLOCK & GRANGEE, Wholesale Furniture Manufacturers of Burlington, Iowa, write:- * * "WVe have read your able work through carefully, and coinsider it one of the best works on the money question ever published. It ought to be put into the hands of every voter for careful consideration." PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50, Three principal chapters in pamphlet form, 50e. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount, Sent by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address We A. BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF " THE MONEY QUESTION." HON. MARIK D. WILBER, of Michigan, says:-" I awaited with earnest expectancy the production of your work entitled'The Money Question.' I hlave read the book. In its enunciation of correct financial principles-in its history, statistics, indisputable facts and reasoning, in support of those principles, it embodies all, and muore than I had anticipated. No student of political economy or financehence no enlightened American citizen, without regard to his views, should be without a copy, as a text book and for reference." Very truly yours, M. I). WILBERm. J. J. WVILDER, iEsQ., attorney at law of Vassalr, Michigan, writes:-"Please send me by express one-half dozen of your work on Finance. I have a copy, but have hard work to keep it; every body that sees it wants it." From the SEY,MOUR (IND.) WEEKLY TImEIS. W. A. BERKEY, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, has issued a book on the money question which should be in the hands of every voter long before he votes. If you want to know something about the working of banks, of "specie basis," and the beauties of "resumption," read that book. PETERI COOPER, of New York, says:-" I find it full of facts and excellent reading, that bears very usefully on the great issue before the people of this country to-day." GENERAL WILLIAM BRINDLE, of Pennsylvania, says:-" I have received a copy of your work entitled'The Money Question,' and take great pleasure in recommending it to the public as far superior to any publication on that subject of which I have any knowledge. The information which vour book contains on the subject of full legal tender or par paper money against bank currency, should be in the possession of all business men, and especially of those who assume to manage the affairs of state, and are ambitious of being considered statesmen. * * The system of money, so ably elucidated in your book, would enable Congress to produce the results I have indicated, and it affords me great pleasure, therefore, to recommend it to the American people, and tender you my thanks for the invaluable service which you have rendered the public in its preparation and publication." PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three principal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount, Sent by mail post paid on Ieceipt of price. Address W. A. BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. TESTIMONIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF " THE MOEY QUESTION." From the INDIANAPOLIS SUN. THE SUN takes pleasure in again recommending a work on Finance, by WVM. A. BERKEY, of Grand Rapids, Mich. We have carefully examined the work, and while not having time nor space to review it as it deserves, most heartily endorse it, and recommend all seekers after reliable information on the subject to procure a copy. WENDELL PHILLIPS says:-" Thanks for a copy of your 'Money Question.' As far as I have had time to examine, it seems thorough, full and accurate, and very suggestive. * * Whenl one asked me,' Where shall I find your side's argument fully and fairly presented?' I had no answer; I could only refer him to fugitive pamphlets hard to get and incomplete. You enable us to open our school a great boon-and open it well." The HoN. JOHN D. GREENE, of New Albany, Indiana, writes:- "'The Money Question' is good, first-rate-just the thing necessary to circulate among voters who have any common sense, and I believe we have a few here who have. I have advocated nearly every essential point in my thirtyseven speeches last fall, but not in such a masterly manner. I saw the points, but not so clearly as you have made them. In our Congressional District we have about 6,000 Democratic majority, but by a liberal distribution of your book we can no doubt elect a greenback man to Congress at the next election." MnR. JosIAHxi Ross, the well known manufacturer of wood working machinery, of Buffalo, N. Y., writes: "I think that it is the most complete elucidation of the money question that I have met with. It is a book of facts-undeniable facts —and should be on the table of every American eitizen's house, a text book esteemed by him next to his Bible." CHARLES BONSALL, ESQ., of Salem, Ohio, says:-" Your work is a splendid one, and should be read by every intelligent man and woman in tle nation. It is just what is particularly needed at this critical period in our history. It offers us the sure and certain remedy for tho cure of our sickness." PRICE.-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three principal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount. Sent by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address W. A. 1BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. TESTIMOINIALS AS TO THE CHARACTER AND WORTH OF "THES MONEY QlUESTION.? From the THREE RIVERS (MICH.) REPORTER. A BOOK FOR EVERYBODY.-We have before us a rare book, containing 384 pages, written by WM. A. BERKEY, of Grand Rapids, entitled "The Money Question." It surveys the whole field, commencing with a correct statement of the wealth and resources of the United States, and tells the reason plainly why the American people do not now enjoy general prosperity, and follows this up with a fine statement of money and its functions, banks and banking, both in the old world and in the new. And right here let us say that these two chapters alone are worth to any man or woman five times the cost of the work. The latter chapters are devoted to the National Banking System, Resumption of Specie Payment, and finally a monetary system founded upon sound principles. The work is complete, fresh, vigorous, truthful, plain, and every page should be studied by every man. And we say from the heart that a poor man even had better go without shoes or boots, or even a coat, if there be no other way to get hold of it. It is indeed a poor man's companion and guide, aye, even his salvation. MR. L. G. BRAGG, of the Union Nurseries, Kalamazoo, Michigan, writes:-" Money has been a question in which I have been somewhat interested, but never before stopped to inquire what money was. You have shown it up in a different light from that in which most people look upon it, and after reading carefully one would not have the same feelings toward that remarkable child (the rag baby) that he might perchance have had before." MR. H. A. RoBINSON, of Detroit, writes as follows:-" I regard your book as one of the ablest upon the finance question extant. During the past five years I have read pretty extensively upon the all absorbing subject of'currency,' and kindred questions: I am therefore tolerably well prepared to render a fair opinion upon the merits of your book as compared with most others upon the same topic." MR. C. W. AIKIN, of Decatur, Illinois, says:-" It is the best thing yet published on the subject. * * Every voter should read it." PRICE-Per single copy, paper cover, $1.00. Cloth cover, $1.50. Three prin.cipal chapters in pamphlet form, 50c. To clubs of 12 and over, 25 per cent. discount. Sent by mail post paid on receipt of price. Address W. A. ]BERKEY, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. WM. A. BERKEY, Preside7,t of Phwnix FuTribiture Co7npary, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. 0 THE MONEY QUESTION. MONETARY SYSTEM OF THE UNITED STATES. AN ANALYSIS OF THE SPECIE BASIS OR BANK CURRENCY SYSTEM., ANI) OF THE LEGAL TENDER PAPERI MONEY SYSTEM; TOGETHER WITH AN HISTORICAL Ac COUNT OF MONEY AS IT HAS BEEN INSTITUTED lN THE PRINCIPAL NATIONS OF EUROPE ANDI) IN THE UNITED STATES. BY WVILLIAM A. P)ER,KEY. (GRRAND RAPII)S, MICH.D W. W. HART, STEAM BOOK ANI-)- JOB PRINTER. 1876 THE LEGA-L TEN —DER PAPEL i -- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 187C6, by WILLIAM A. BERKEY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. i. PREFACE. IN appearing before the public in the character of,t writer, upon what is commonly supposed to be a very abstruse subject, a word of explanation seems to be nieces sary. For over a quartei of a century I have been actively engaged in business, as a manufacturer, and have naturally been led to enquire into the laws which govern the produc tion and distribution of wealth. It was a matter of perplexity to me why it was that a nation possessed of the wonderful natural resources and the enormous productive powers that are possessed by the American people, shotuld not enjoy general and uninterrupted prosperity; and, knowig- that vwealth is chiefly the product of labor, that the industrial classes of society are unable to retain anythiing like a fair proportion of the wealth produced by their labor. Thle farmer, usually considered the lmost illdependent of iaortals, is enigaged in a never-ending struggle to secure a i-meire co — petency; the same is true of the mnechanic, thle laborer, etc.; and the merchant, the manufacturer and others engaged in the production and distribution of wealth, aided by caplital, are oppressed with a consciousness that their capital maiy at any time take to itself wings and fly away, no matter how wisely or prudently they imay conduct their affairs. On the other hand, wealth is seen flowing in a constant streamII ilnto the laps of those who do not employ their capital in any wealtlh producing pursuit, but use it, in the shape of money, as an instrument to control property and labor. This ceitainly is sufficient to justify the suspicion that the unequal distribuf ion of the products of labor which is constantly going on in thle land, grieatly to the disadvanta,ge of society, is due to PREFACE. -,tle lmainner iii which lmoney is instituted; and the questions ,arise, in what respect is imoney improperly instituted, and what is tile remedy? If it had not been for the experien(e furnished during the Rebellioni, the great body of the Amierican people would {doubtless have continued to struggle oin, in entire ignorance of the fact that it is possible to establish a mionetary system on any other principles than those inculcated by the advo cates of the specie basis or bank currency systemn. Fortunately, however, it was then fully demonstrated that a system of ncnley, such as was suggested by Jefferson and othereminent founders of the republic, could be instituted upon entirely different principles; a system that would distribute the products of labor in entire harm]iony with the laws of trade, and far miore equitably than could possibly be done tlhroulgh the instrumelntality of bank currency. The masses indotubltedly realize the trutlh of this, but are at loss to give a reason for the faith that is in tlhem. This is not at all strange. The wealtlb, intelligence and ability of the nation, as well as the power of the press, are arrayed oi0 the side of the banks, precisely as the same elements were arrayed on the side of the United States Bank in the mnemiorable contest between that institution and tlhe people, under the patriotic leadership of General Jackson4. Even professors of political economy i are dragoonled into the saime iglnoble service, and comupelled to distort the principles of the science, to which thley profess to be devoted, for the purpose of deceiving the public. In pursuing my own investigations, I found, to amy surprise, that, except Kellogg's admirable work, written sonie years before the war, there was no book extant of a popular character, from lwhich aniiything like a clear understanding of the questions involved in the preselnt crisis could be obtailned; and thlat thie public. was etirely cenedepnt iv. PREFACE. iponl tlle fugitive wrlitings of the few earnest and able men, who have espoused the cause of the people, for information upon thle subject. It was ill view of these circumstances that this work was undertaken. I would have been glad, indeed, if some one, who was better prepared for the duty, had undertaken it; but as that did not seem probable, and, knowing the great want of such a work from my own experience, I determined that it should be written at all events, in order that the American people might have a fair opportitmity to decide intelligently upon this all important questionl. N\o claim is made to originality, nor has there been any effort made in regard to style. AIy sole aim has been to preseiit the facts and principles relating to the subject eonr'ectly, and in plain, snimple language; and, as will be observed, I have not hesitated to quote extensively whenever it could be done to advantage. In preparing the work for the press I have also availed myself of competent assistance, in order that the subject matter Imight be presented to the public as forcibly as possible. Special care has been taken to give credit to those whose ideas or language have been adopted, but I am much indebted to the fugitive writings above referred to, and I desire in a general way to express my acknowledgmenlts for the same, and especially to HionI. WV. D. Kelley, Gelneral Wm. Brindle, IHenry Carey Baird and E. 3I. Davis, of Philadelphia; Peter Cooper and Plinly Freemnan, of New York City; John G. Drew, of New Jersey; .and to the Cincinnati Enquirer, the Chicago Industrial Age maid the Indianapolis Sun. WvILLiAill A. BERKEY. ,GIAND RAPIDS, IICII., I ay O20th, 18,6. V. CONTENTS. Page CHIIAPTER I.-THE WEALTH AND IRESOURCES OF THlE UNITED STATES.-"-IHY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE DO NOT ENJOY GENERAL PROSPERITY. CHAPTER II.-IMONEY AND ITS FUNCTIONS. The Nlature of MAoney.............................. The Intrinsic Value of Money...................... The Uses of Money............................... Systemis of Money................................ The Power to MAake Money a Governimental Function.. How Paper Money issued by the Government Replre sents Value..................................... CHAPTER III.-BANxKs AND BANKIXG. CHAPTER IV.-BANKS OF THE OLD WOnLD. The Bank of Venice............................... The Bank of Genoa............................... The Bank 6f Ainsterdaiii........................... The Bank of Hamburg............................. The Bank of England............................. Thle Banks of Scotland............................ The French System of Finance..................... CHAPTER V.-PAPER MION:-EY A:ND BAXNKS OF THE UNITED STATES. Early Colonial Currency........................... Continental Money................................ State Banks of Issue............................... The First Bank of the United States................. The MIoney Panic of 1809.......................... The MIoney Panic of 1814.......................... The Second Bank of the United States............... The MIoney Panic of 1819.......................... The MIoney Panic of 1825.......................... The War with the United States Bank................ The IMoney Panic of 1837-1839-1841................ The Money Panic of 1857.......................... The Suspension of 1861............................ State Banks of Issue Supplanted by Nationial Banks... 9 25 26 30 37 48 53 70 75 80 80 87 87 88 88 97 100 109 109 112 117 119 124 125 126 127 133 13.3 150 153 154 158 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VI. - -IsTOnRY OF THE PAPER _MONEY ISSUED DURING THE IREBELLION. The First Loan Acts............................... Treasury Note bearing interest and not a Legal Telldeli'. Full Leal Tender Treasury Note, not bearing interest. Secretaly Chase's First Annual Report................ The First Legal Tender Bill........................ The Greenback................................... Telmporary Deposits in the Sub-Treasury............. Certificates of Indebtedness........................ The Second Legal Tender Act..................... The Second Annual Report of Secretary Chase....... The Third Legal Tender Act-$900,000,000 Lotan Act. The National Bank Bill...........................0 Public Debt Statement, 1863........................ Imount and kind of Paper Circulation, JulIe 30, 1864.. BIonds Exempted froml Taxation..................... Greenbacks Limited to $400,000,000................. Fessenden Appointed Secretary of the Treasury....... McCulloch Appointed Secretary of the Tleasury....... Debt and Circulation of the United States, 1865....... MIcCulloch's Contraction Policy..................... Amount Contracted, July, 1868..................... Act of Congrress Suspending Contraction of Greenbacks An Act to Strengthen the Public Credit............. Refunding the Public Debt......................... Public Debt Statement, November, 1875............. CHAPTER VII.-TIIE NATIONAL BA.NKING SYSTE_[. 244 Secretary Chase Recommends a NTational Banking Law. 244 National Bank Bill Reported in the Senate........... 245 The National Banking Law......................... 246 Of the Organization of National Banlks............... 247 The Profits of National Banks...................... 250 The Panic of 1873................................ 251 The Cost of Bank Currency........................ 263 Failures in the Country since 1863.................. 264 ELxtravagance-Over Production.................... 266 An Act to Resumne Specie Payments and,lake Banik ing Free to Bondholders.......................... 20 The Little Tariff Bill —an Act to Enable thle National Banks to Monopolize the Currency................ 271 viii. 161 164 II, 1 172 1,710, 175 199 203 203 204 .204 206 209 210 215 216 216 216 217 219 2 1,9 222 223 224 II) 3 0 231 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VIII. —RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. 273. How Interest on Goverinment Bonds is Paid.......... 274 The Specie Resumption Act........................ 279 The Aniouiit of Gold in the Country................. 281 Resumption Impossible............................ 282 The Consequences of Forced Resumption............. 289 The Experience of Great Britain in 1819-1823....... 290 The Consequences of Forced Resumption in the IUiite(d States......................................... 300, CHAPTER IX. -.A MONETArY SYSTEiX Fo('UNI)-I) UPON SOUNI) PRINCIPLES. 305; The RIteal Issue in the Ilmpending Crisis.............. 311 Au Analysis of the Specie Basis or Bank Currencny Sys tem of MVIoney.................................. 312 The Cost of the Credit System...................... 324 Commercial Crashes and Money Panics.............. 326 An Analysis of the Legal Tender Paper Money Systeiii. 330 WVhat is a Dollar?.............................333 Money of Account................................ 334 The Legal Tender Question....................... 341 How Much Money a Nation Should Have............ 344How Interest Should be RItegulated................... 349 The 3.65 Bond Plan............................... 352 How the Public Note is Put in Circulation........... 355 The National Debt................................ 356 Conclusion....................................... 359, APPENDIX. Horace Greeley's Famous Editorial on the 3.65 Bond Plan.......................................... 363: The Legal Tender Bill as it passed the House of Rel) resentatives, Feb. 6, 1862........................ 367 The Legal Tender Act of February 25, 1862.......... 370C Speech of the Hon. Thaddeus Stevens in the House of Representatives, December 19, 186 2............... 373 Table Showing the Mionthly Range of the Gold Pre mium since 1862............................. 381 The French Assignats.......................... 382 ix., CORRECTIONS. The table given on page 231 exhibiting the amount and character of the public debt, bearing interest, on the 30th day of November, 1875, is incomplete. By al oversight the currency bonds issued to the Pacific Railroads were omitted. The amount of the currency bonds outstanding at that date was $04,623,512, which, added to the amount given on page 231, would make the total public debt, bearing interest, November 30,1875, $1,758,874,812. On page 88 for "out," the last word oni the page, read " about." On page 17, in the seventh line from the bottom of the page, substitute "April" for "March." TrHE MONEY QUESTION. CHAPTERP, I.. TiIE WVEALTH ANI) PRESOURCES OF THIE UNITEI) STATES. WAHY TIIE AM[ERICAN PEOPLE V0 NOT ENJOY GENEPAL PROSPERITY. THE prosperity of a people depends chiefly on the use whi(h they are enabled to iakie of their natural resources. It firequently happeins tlhat nl.tios possessing great natural advatages fail, though wanIIlt of properly directed industry or defective la-s, to attain even a lreasonable degree of prosperity; and, oin the othler hand, that il.tiools p)ossessing but limited resources succeed, under w-ise laws and by means of well directed ener,y, in achieviing great wealtl. HIistory abounds in instances illustrating the trut]l of this statement. At the present timie Ireland an(d H-Iolland may be cited as cases in point. Ireland possesses a fertile soil, salubrious climate, fine hlarbors, iiolle rivers, and a population naturally brave, quick and capable of great lalbor; but her people, by reason of unequal laws and bad government, are chained to poverty and ignoran,tce. I-Iolland, a land reclaimed from the ocean and held only by sleepless vigilance, was originally destitute of even ordinary advantages; but under enlightenied laws, industry and art have accomplished the mnost marvelous results. "I-)elow the level of tle sea, and the smrface of adjacent rivers and canals, have been created 10 RESOURCES OF TIlE UNITED STATES. by human art, fat pastures teemning with flocks ald herds, rich artificial garden land, nourishingi the industrious and thriving population of innumerable cities, towns and vi1ages. The very coast is an artificial fortification a giist t]he (calln, the ancient and natural monarch of the couIIIti-. I'e lie is defied by leagues of artificial sea bnks-t-Lere- be- iiiles of granite masonry. Rivers and canals are IIad(e to r]llI inyillyi feet above the level of the country. Ar1i1es of indefatig;ale wind mills are perpetually pumipi"ng aniid dir.iiilia. Aiiister — dam and Rotterdamii, p)opulouls, opulent and( splend(id c(ities, rest on lpiles driven into thle iimud." Tihus, by wAell dite 4 industry, under wise laws, lia-ve the pe)ople of i-ollainid }t)ee3i enabled to achieve a wonderful victory over the forces of nature, and to clothe themselves witlh g(eli ral oser l ity. The people of the United Statt,?s.ic pecu.lialy r ialy il lll the bounties of nature. Tlhey )ossess a l:ld whose aiea' exceeds 4,000,000 of squae liles. AVitiiin its boundaries. are embraced every variety of soil and cliniate; iiiex-llllstil)le mines of iron, coal, copper, lead, zi1i(, gold and silver; ilamense forests; grand lakes and lnig'lty rivcrs. A betteridea of its great extent may be formed by comp)aring soie of the States of the Union with the kiii,gdomus of Europe. California, for example, ir equal in size to Eitgl aud, Scotland. Ireland, Wales, Belgium, Hollanid and Portu,al; and Texas is equal to Fran ce, Hollaind, Bel,giumn and Denumiark. The. mineral resources of thle country are allInost bey-ond coinputation. For example, it is estimaited tlhat coal enouglhI has already been discovered to supply a population of 1,000,000,000 for 60.000 years. Other minierals, comnparatively speakilig, are equally abundant. The gold pi-oduciig0 reg1i(on of the country covers an area of over 1,000,000 of square miiles. Prior to thle discovery of gold in California in 1849, the gold yield of the world did not exceed $820,000,000 a year; RESOURCES OF THE UNITED STATES. Now thie United States alone produce annually over $75,000,000 worth of bullion. The agricultural resources of the country are equally boundless. In almost every section the soil yields bounltifully, while in some regions, as in the great States of the West, its fertility is unsurpassed. The agricultural productions of that regionl alone have reached an almost fabulous amount. The great natural advantages possessed by the country have enabled its inanufacturing interests to miake great progress, in spit e of the ever changing and illy devised tariff laws, which, for the greater part of the time, have disfigured thle statute books of the nation. While agriculture and manufactures flourish side by side, in all parts of the counltry, ,greatly to the advantage of both, it happens that the peculiar facilities and advantages enjoyed by different sections of the country have caused their industries to vary greatly in character. Thus, the people of the Eastern States are devoted chiefly to manufactures and commerce; the people of the \Iiddle States, althoughl engaged largely in coinmmierce, manufactures and agriculture, are also occupied extensively in dealing in iron, coal, lumber, salt, petroleum, etc.; the people of the Western and South Western States, while possessed of large mineral and other interests, as yet find their chief profits in the vast agricultural resources which they enjoy; the people of the Southern States are engaged principally ill tlm production of the valuable staples conmmon to that section, such as cotton, rice, sugar, tobacco, etc.; and tle people of the Pacific States, besides their immense agricultural and commercial interests, find a wide field for employment in developing the rich mines of gold, silver, etc., wlicl have rendered that region famous throughout the world. 11 12 RESOURCES OF THE UNITED STATES. To glance briefly at a few details, the assessed value of the farms and stock in the United States in 1870 was nearly $11,000,000,000, and this sum did not cover one-half their actual value. The following statement, gathered from the Census Report of 1870, gives a partial view of the agricultural operations of the country during the preceding year: Farm products, inceluding additions to stock. $2,500,000,000 Farm wages, including value of board...... 31I0,000,000 Wheat........................... 288,000,000 bushels. Wheat........................... 288,000,000 bushels. Rye............................... 17,000,000 Indian Corn...................... 761,000,000 Oats............................. 282,000,000 Barley........................... 30,000,000 Buckwheat....................... 10,000,000 " Flax Seed........................ 1,700,000 " Clover Seed....................... 600,000 Grass "............................600,000 " Potatoes......................... 144,000,000 " " Sweet.................... 21,000,000 " Peas and Beans.....................5,500,000 " Cottoi.......................... 1,200,000,000 pounds. Flax............................. 27,000,000 " Hemp............................ 25,000,000 " Hlops............................ 25,000,000 Rice............................. 74,000,000 Wool............................ 100,000,000 Tobacco......................... 263,000,000 Butter............................ 500,000,000 Cheese........................... 23,000,000 H a y..............................27,000,000 tons. And the following statement presents a general view of the manufacturing interests of the country in 1870: Xumber of manufacturing establishments... 252,148 Number of operatives.................... 2,053,997 Capital invested..........................$2,118,000,000 Annual salaries paid...................... 776,000,000 ptaw material used....................... 2,488,000,000 Products................................ 4,232,000,000 RESOURCES OF THE UNITED STATES. In considering the resources and advantages of the couintaw, it is proper to notice the labor saving machinery, largely the result of American ingenuity, which now performs such an important part in all the departments of labor. In Great Britain the power of the machinery of that country is estimated as equal to that of 600,000,000 of men. In this country it probably does not reach that amount, but it is sufficiently large to add enormously to the productions of the country. In many sections one thousand acres of land can now be cultivated with no more cost than was formerly required to cultivate one hundred. The great and varied industries of the country are rendered vastly more useful and profitable by reason of thie channels. of communication, natural and artificial, which extend ill every possible direction. In addition to the many lakes and rivers, which traverse thle country, it is covered with a network of railroads from ocean to ocean, affording ample means of transportation to gather and distribute the products of the nation. From this outline of the wealth and resources of the United States, it is apparent that the American people are possessed of vast advantages, such as are hardly possessed by any other nation on the globe. It is estimated that the United States are capable of sustaining a population of upwards of 350,000,000, while the population of the country now scarcely exceeds 40,000,000. If enabled by wise laws and well directed industry to make a proper use of their advantages, the people of the United States ought to enjoy general and uninterrupted prosperity. And, as the governmnent of the United States is republican in form-based upon the theory that all power emanates from the people, the responsibility of any failure on their part to attain wealth and prosperity must rest with the people themselves. 13 NO GENERAL PROSPERITY. DO THE AMIERIC.-A PEOPLE ENJOY GENERAL PROSPERITY? Notwithstanding their boasted industry, intelligence and enterprise, and the vast resources which they possess, the people of the United States, as a nation, have failed, utterly and disgracefully, to attain anything like a reasonable degree of general prosperity. We shall not resort to any elaborately prepared statistics to establish the truth of the assertion, but will simply call attention to a few important facts, the consideration of which, we believe, cannot fail to produce conviction. TEN TIMES within the past sixty years has the country been visited by commercial crashes and money panics, accompanied or followed by general stagnation of business, ruin and bankruptcy. From. 1814 to 1861 the country suffered NIXE TIMES in this way, and o'Ily o).ce, from 1841 to 1857, did it escape a financial crash for a longer period thani tee, years. At the present time the country is suffering from the crash of 1873, or rather fromi the sal)e causes that produced that crash. These coimimeircial crashes have invariably paralyzed all forms of produc&tive industry, bankrupted business men, stripped the debtor class of their property, and occasioned want and distress aml ongst nearly all classes of people. When we look back over the past half century, we find that, as a matter of fact, the people at large have never had an opportunity, even betwveeni these seasons of financial disturbance, to enijoy lnol0e than a glimpse of prosperity. They have been kel)t busy, either struggling to avoid impending ruin, in view of a (ommercial crash, or laboring to rebuild their shattered fortunes, after the panic had subsided. And now, the CENTE:NIAL YEAR, 1876, soon to be celebrated with great pomp on the banks of the Schuylkill, under the auspices of.t great city -writhing under the heel of a corrupt R,inig, finds the people, in the 14 NO GENERAL PnROSPERITY. ,.aiidst of plenty, distressed, exhausted and poor. And lhow does thl-is lhal)penl? Ilas niature frowned uponl thle husband:man and refused to respond to his toil? Ilas the earth declined to yield up her precious stores? HIas the hand of 'the artisan or meclhanic lost its cunning, or the arm of the laborer its strengtlh? Not at all. The graileries of the 'Vest are bursting with the products of the soil; the valuable staples of the South are as ready as ever to respond to the -touchl of labor; the miineral wealth of the earth lies exposed ,-on every hand; the wheels of the workshop and the factory -are faithlful as ever; and the mechanic and laborer are not ,unly able and willing, but anxious to work. The cause of the whole trouble lies concealed in the simple wordMo~'EY. In civilized nations at the present day a circulating medium ,of exclhange, called lmoneyn, is as essential to the production .lled distrilulltion of -wealth in all its forms as railroads and wagonis are to its transportationI. In 1(C7 3 an epidemic ationg the ]-Iorses, for.a jfew weeks, seriously interfered with -trade aii trl.vel. W e (,ll tlie railroads and canuals of the ,country to sus]pend olperations for a single season, it is not -difficult to su'rlise tle alnoumit of disaster and distress that would ensue. And the,public migh,,t as well try to conduct -the affairs of life without rUilroads and wag,ons, or the farnier try to cultivate the soil witlout imiiplecments,'as for a n:atioii to attempt to dev elop its prod(lucing forces, or carry o1 slluccessfully the operations of trade, without an adequate amnount of miionev in tlhe channels of circulation. Tie business affairs of tlthe country during and after the late w-.ar increased largely. The wealth of the nation, in s)ite )f the 1rava,es of war, increased fromi $16,000,000,000 in 1560 to $30,000,000,000 in 1870. All the money and evidences of indebtedness of the government, which could be used as at circulating medimiuo of exchange, were actively ecmployed. The people, for the first tilme in their history, 15 NTO GENERAL PROSPEr]TY. had anl abundance of moniey ill circulationI and were eniabled to develop the resources of the country and add to its wealth ill a corresponding degree. The increased production ill every department of labor rendered the burdens of taxation light, and, at the same time, increased( tlhe reveiiues of the -overni-neiit to an enormnous extent. Tiie goovernuiyet, in consequence of its largely increased searevenue, was elnab)led,, at the clo.se of the war, to be-in the reduction of the pul)lic debt at a irtpid rate. The people, notwit]-istainding the )burlden of taxa+ion which hley -were colnpelle(d to bear, were, individually, ott off cebt. 1,ut Intteris b)eal to ch'ang'e rThe chamnels of trade became stt oanat or sluggiis]l })1siness beg't to larnguishi, factories mM workshops were obli,e(d to susI-end or reduice tlabor and wages, real estaitefell il A-1lueti, dn(l el)(foed idlen css be ga.lli to r0iow colunmoii; and, as in timies p1'i,:)r to tlt wa, thle clil:itx wats capl)ed by afinancial panic. The cause of this astoiiisiling ch~ ige ill the o(-)ndlitiO(i of the cotIit'y —froni activity and prosperity to inactivity tld dlistress —wAill be found in the followingA statement) takei from the books of the Treasury Department. by Jloii. iNloses A.;Ficld, whlich exhibits the contraction of the c ircii,,.in,g medit-um of the countiy- that took place froli September 1, 1865, to Decemiber 1, 1873: Amounit (,f iioncy cuncy, and circul atiie diui, Sep tembl)er 1, 1865, (exclusive of coiii:) United States Notes........................ $433,160,569 Fractional Currency....................... 26,344,742 National Bank Notes..................... 185,000,000 Compoiin(I Interest Legal-teiider Notes...... 217,024,160 Temporary i Loan Certificates, (10-d(-,)...... 107,148,713 Certificates of Illdebtedness................... 85,093,000 Treasury five per cent. leoal tenders...........32,536,991 Treasury Notes, past (Tlue, leoal-telidei-s, atni( not presented........................ 1..,503,020 State Bank Notes.........................78,867,575 Three year Tr'ieasiiiy Notes..................8 30,000,000 Total Sep)t. ], 1865....................$1,996,678,770 16 NO GENELAL PROSPLI>ITY.7 Circulating m1e(liuinm, exclusive of (coin, Decemiber 1, 1873. United States Notes...................... 8367,001,685 Fractional Currency...................... 48,000,000 Certificates of Indebtedness (bearing Interest) 678,000 National Bank Currency.................. 350,000,000 Total Decemiber 1, 1873............... $765,6 79,68.5 Contraction from Sept. I, 1865, to Dec. 1, 1873, (causing a money panic)......... $81,230,999,085 Fromi the foregoing statement it appears that the circulating medium of the coultry (or evidences of indebtedness of the government used as suc0i) was contracted over $1,200,000,000 in eight years. The greater part of this amount consisted of the Three year Treasury Notes ($830,000,000.) These notes were called in and bonds substituted in their stead prior to 1868. The crash of 1873 followed as an inevitable consequence. It won't do to say that it was the result of the war, or of extravagance, or of over production, or of anythilng of the kind. Crashes and money panics just like it occurred before the war, on an average, every ive years, and this crash did not occur until eight years after the war. The periodical money panies, w-hich occurred before the war, were the natural results of the specie basis system of money; and the panic of 1873 was caused by enforcing the policy of contraction, which was planned at the same time that the National Banking system was projected, in order that the specie basis system might be reestablished. The act of Congress of 3Iarch 12, 1866, authorizing a contraction of the currency, was adopted on the recolmmendation of Ilugh AMcCullochl, Secretary of the Treasury. It gave him unlimited control over the finances of the country, and he (lid not fail to use the power placed in his hands, to the fullest extent, in aiding the money power, with which lie was in league, to rob the country and 2 17 NO GENERAL PROSPERITY. the people. WThen McCulloci's infamous betrayal of the high trust reposed in him becomes fully understood, his name will be used as a by-word and reproach tlhroug(hout the nation. Apart from commercial crashes, or imoney panics, it is evident that there is somethilng radically wrong in the monetary system of the country-that there is some constantly operating cause, which tends "to fertilize the rich man's field by the sweat of tihe poor mian's brow." The masses toil, day after day and year after year, seeking to secure a competency and scarcely succeed in obtainingi a subsistence. The better classes may succeed in )building, up homes, but they are never secure in their possession, until they have amassed sufficient property to at least enable them to outlive a season of financial depression. The profits of labor flow in a steady stream into the hands of nonproducers, who are engaged in manipulating money. It is not difficult to discover the reason. Mloniey is essential to the development of the producing forces of the country, and to the distribution of its products. It is far more necessary that money should be abundant and cheap, than that there should be abundant and cheap means of transportation. The contrary, however, has been the general rule since the American people have constituted a nation. They unfortunately inherited the British system of balnks of issue, which clothes the moneyed classes with unlimited control over the circulating mediumn of a country. 3loncy should be the servant and not the master of wealth, and then it will flow in the channels of trade, in obedience to the natural laws of supply and demand; but the people have permnitted the power to furnish the circulating medium of the country to be filched from the nation and given over to individuals and corporations to be used as a monopoly. At present money 18 NO GENERALI PROSPERITY. has ceased to fill thie channels of tradel,'rid, refusing to perform its offices, has taklen refuge in the baniks in the commercial centers. Statesmen, like Senator Clhristiancvy, may tell the people "to go to work in any and every form of productive industries," and coimmanid it to return, and im agine ithat they are utteriin a great de.a l of wisdom, but where are thle productive ilndustries? If Senator C-hristiancy bad been in ]Ioses's place, thle Jews, possibly, would have 1)een at no loss how to "make bricks without straw;" but -ias such wisdom is not available in this country, it is to e)C regretted that lie did not tu'n up in E(gypt.L few tlousand( y-cars ag,o, instead of in the United States Senate it the present timie. It is of course niere niatter of speculatioii as to whlat w-ould be thle condition of the counitry now if gold and silver had been its circulating medium ill fact as w ell -s thicoir, or if a leg,al tender palper money had been adopted at ani early period, as urged by Franklil, JeffersolI, Cilboun ad -others. AVith nothiiug but gold and silver tie pr'ogi,ess of the country would undoubtedly have been slow, but the people generally would doubtless be better of tl:li they re now. WVith a legal tender pael)r monoey, in the liglit of late experience, it is more than I)irobable lt that e United States would to-day be the richl-est, nlost powerful and mLost prosperous nation on tl-he globe. Neither systemI of lmoney, however, -was adopted. Tlie goverunimc-iet allow-e( the circulating niedium to be taken out of its hands and erected into:t giganltic mionopoly in tlie hands of individuals and corpora tiolns. Tlhe gold and siler of the country were locked uj in bank vaults, as the prete(ldetl basis of bankl notes, and the people were comnpelled to pay an exorbitap-t price for a false, fluctuating:rmd unsa-fe currency, subject to the entire control of those who issued it.to 19 20NO GEXEPRAL PROSPER,ITY. Banks of issue have been a fruitful source of disaster, both in Great Britain and in the United States. By encouraging discounts and inflating their circulation they greatly stimnulate business of all kinds. As the process goes on, credit becomes inflated to an unlimited extent, until a turning point, beyond which inflation cannot go without bursting, is reached. Whilst thie process of inflating the currency and credit of thie country is going on, great activity prevails in all departments of industry, and everybody seems to be on the high road to wealth and prosperity. But it becomes necessary or desirable for the banks to put themselves in funds, and they begin to convert their discounted bills into money as rapidly as possible. They cease discounting and call in their loans. "If by such means they do not actually obtain specie, they redeem their notes, which might otherwise be presented for redemption in coin. Prices begin to fall. Merchants, deprived of their accustomed facility for borrowing, and with obligations coming round every day, upon which they are liable as principals or endorsers, are anxious to sell, while none of them want to buy. The pressure begins in the great marts of foreign trade, and extends from them to the dealers in the interior. The latter are crowded for payment by their distressed creditors, and crowd their debtors in turn. Property of all kinds depre(ciates and becomes difficult to sell, when every body wants to sell, and is anxious to restrict his purchases to the lowest practicable amount. Sales, nevertheless, are made upon credit, for the purpose of obtaining contracts to deliver money at a future day, which can be sold to usurers, who riot in their harvest. Collections are enforced by suits at law, and effected at the expense of a heavy toll to attorneys and Sheriffs' officers, out of the proceeds of forced sales. Persons whose property is adequate, even at the depreciated 20 NO GENEIPAL PROSPERITY. rates, to the paymient of their debts, become bankrupt from the failure of their debtors to pay promptly. When the doors of a banking house are closed in the afternoon, and a merchant's obligation is protested, his credit is gone, and he ceases the effort to maintain it by ruinous sacrifices. The failure of one increases the embarrassment of his creditors, and repeated failures spread general distrust. As one after another goes down, however, there is one less engaged in the scramble for money, and the survivors experience the same sort of relief as men in a crowd do when some of them faint and are carried out."* These financial crises invariably involve a general suspension of specie payments. The suspension is charged up to the people, who are told that they have been "producing too much," or "living too extravagantly;" and the banks are enabled to retain their reserve of gold and silver, to repeat the operation as soonII as the Shieriff's services are no longer required, and "confidence has been restored." The power which such a system confers upon those, to whom the right to furnish the circulating medium of the country has been delegated, is immenese. The price which the people are compelled to pay for their circulating medium of exchange is of itself sulfficieut to rob labor and industry of their profits. The wealth of the country increases, as statistics show, a little over three per cent. a year, and with money in circulation that costs from 6 to 25 per cent., it is not difficult to see how it is that the wealth of the country has a constant tendency to accumulate in the hands of the few. The profits of industry are eaten up by interest on the circulating medium of exchange-if not entirely, a commercial crash will take what is left. Hlow seldoTn do people, when handling money, think of the great difference which *Political Economw- by E. Peshine Smith. 21 -IXO GENERAL PROSPERITY. exists between a Un,ited Si ates legal tender note (greenback) and a National bank bill. The greenback represents the property of the people, on which it is a lien, and in the performance of its mission of usefulness, as it flies from hand to hand, feeding the hungry, cloth-ing the naked, miniistering, to the sick or distressed, or furthlering the operations of industry and trade, no kIeen eyed usurer marks its flight; it is not burdened with interest. But it is otherwise with the Nationlal bank bill. Whether serving the purposes of money in the channels of trade, or stowed away in the recesses of ai bank vault, it is perpetually drawing interest. That interest, althlougt paid by individuals, is a tax upon the community at large. No one can hope to escape his share of the tax by "keeping- out of bank." General laws in the economical world are as universal and constant in their effect as the law of gravitationi is in the hat iral world. The specie basis systeiu of monoey has existed in Great Britain for nearly two hundred years, and the result of its workings tlheie can be seen at a glance. The bulk of the wealth and property of the kiiingdom is held by a small and constantly decreasing, class, whlilst the miasses are steeped in poverty and ignoralice. During the waris with France, from 1797 to 1823, the people of Great Britain had an irredeemable paper currency. For t-wenty-five years, notwithstanding the drain of ai great war, they enjoyed unparalleled prosperits., by reason of the abundance of money in circulation. But the mioney power demanded a return to specie payments, and in 1819 anil act of Parliamient was passed decreeing a return to specie payments in 1823. Elnglanld possessed abundance of gold, had no foreign debt, the balance of trade was in her favor, and the difference between gold anld paper moiley was only tlhree per cenlt. Notwithstaaldiig all these favorable circumstances, the enforced retu'n to specie pay 22 N-O GEXNERAL PROSPERITY. ments prostratedl tle industries of thle king,lom, ruined the farming, imanufacturing and business interests, and plunged the entire nation into bankruptcy. The masses of Great Britain, whose labor and valor had just enabled the British government to prosecute to a successful termination one of the most gigantic wars of modern times, were hurled by an act of Parliament, at the instance of the money power of the kingdom, in the most heartless manner and without the slightest grounds of excuse, from a state of prosperity into the depths of ruin and poverty. At the demands of the same power the people of the United States are now being subjected to like treatment. With but little gold, scarcely $100,000,000, in the country, with the balance of trade against the nation, with a large public debt mostly held abroad, and with a difference between gold and pap)er money of over twelve per cent., enforced resumption of specie paynments has been decreed to take place in 1879. In the light of English experience under vastly miore favorable circum-stances, the people of the United States can look forward to notling else but continued and increasing prostrationI of all forms of industry, and, whenl the fatal hour for resumptioln arrives, a general crash, buryiing the entire nation in its ruins. The people of the United States are a forbearing and long suffering people, but it is scarcely possible that they would continue to submit in silence to the exactions of the money power, if they were fully apprised of the nature and extent of the rolb)ciyv to whicl-h they have been, and are still, subjected, by reasoi of a false and corrup,t monoetary systelm. The public debt of the Uinited States in 1865 was $2,682,593,026; on Septebcrl) 1, 1875, it was,2,127,393,836, showing a reduction of $555,1.99,190. B)sidcs t $is $555,199,190, the people ihave 1)aid in the 1tIst TEN YEAX.S, for interest on the 23 2N4 GENEINAL PROSPEPRITY. public debt, nlavy, war, civil seivice, p)einsions and Indians, $3,324,5 60,785, or il all the enoirmous stu-ii of $3,879,759, 975, which is one-lialf more than the original amount of the national dlebt, or a sumi greater than the national debt of Great Britain. This vast suim has been paid principally by the producing classes, for the bondlolder and money power generally bear no part of the expenses of government. It is high time that the burdens of taxation should be more equally distributed. This can be done only by the imposition of a graduated income tax, than which nothing can be more just. President Grant suggested in his last annual message that the Centennial year would be at fit time to inaLugurate reforms. We aTree with hhih. Let the people take a lesson fromn experience and reform thleir monetary system. As it is the year for the general elections, something, might also be done in the way of purifying the administration of public affairs. The Centeinnial year can thus be renderedl doubly memorable in the annals of thle countr'y. The celebrated Jtunius said: "The rutin or prosperity of a State depends so much on thle iadniinistration of the,governmnent, that to be acquainted with the merit of a ministry we need only ol)serve-c the condition of the people. If we see them obedient to the laws, prosperous in their industry, united at lio]no and respected ar)oad, we may reasonably presume tlhat their affairs are conducted by men of experience, ability and virtue. If on tlhe contrary we sce a universal spirit of distrust and dissatisfaction, a ia1)id decay of trade, dissensions in all parts of thle emnpiic, and a total loss of respect in the eyes of foreignl powers, we may pronounce, w-ithlout hesitation, that the Toverulainen t of that eountr'y is MEAK, DISTIACTED AND CORPPUPT." 24 CHAPTEPR IT. MIONEY AND ITS FUNCTIONS. IN a state of civilization money performs an important part in the production, distribution and accumulation of wealth; it is necessary, therefore, that it should be based on sound principles. A great deal of nonsense hias becn written about money and its "hidden power," partly througll ignorance and partly through design. So widely have political economists differed in regard to its nattlure and functions that it is not surplrising, that people have been willing to ascribe to it some mysterious power, or that they should have almost despaired of being able to comprehend thle principles on which it is founded and by which its movements are governed. And this delusion has been encouraged ill evey way possible by the moneyed anid governing classes, who are thus enabled to found systems of money on the false theory that money is the master and not the servant of labor and property. But the age is characterized by a spirit of progress, and old systems are rapidly yielding to new ones. The signs of the times indicate that the hoary tyranny of the monev power, which has exercised despotic sway for ages over the masses of mankind, will, sooner or later, be compelled to succumb to the influences of an enlightened public sentiiment. A distinguished( English] writer,* in commeinting on the imperfect, and ruidiimenta-ry condition of the science of political economy, say-s:'Th]-e steain engine, steam nlavigation, railways, mneclanical inventions, the electric telegraph, "Sir Johlii Barnard 1ylles. MO0NEY A ND ITS FU'U-NCTIONS. modern chemiistry, tave not appetre(d for llothing. A science of political economy will yet dawn that slall perform as well as proiiise-a science that will rahii the r'iches of natkure into the lal)s of the sta.i'vilngl poor. Men do not yet dream of the prosperity whih el is in store for all orders of the people." A largIe and increasi1ng number of leading thinkers, statesmen and philanthropists of the day are calling lpublic attention to the unequal and unjust distribution of the products of industry that is constantly going on through the agency of a false and corrupt monetary system, and their views have al'eady made a profound impression o01 the public mindi. The ignoralnt mnasses of Great Britain may be deluded into beliehving, as is taught by the dismal school of Einglish political econolnists, "that it is natural, and if natural, proper-thlough we may not see the reasonthat poverty and want and disease and misery should be next door neillghbois of wealtl and un)ounded prosperity;" but the intelligenit farmners, mechanics a.td laborers of the United States are not so easily convinced that the surplus wealtll, wbhichl their labor pro(luces anniually, should naturally be owned at the end of the year by thle financieiing and ionI-producing classes of the country. WVhcn people find themuselves being r.ol)b)ed, tlhey iare aipt to try to discover the offender and the inas by hiiieli it is a(cc(omplished. A very mod'erate nouniiit of investigation, w-e think, will satisfy :tlly candid mind that the thleoly, tlhat tlie' money power is. the robber, whl-ichl deprives labor of its just reward, and that t col'rrupt monetary systten is tl:e i ist]ilient lity,, 1)by means. of which the robbery is -)perlpetrited, is )based oli sound reasons. TI I,, XATU I OF IONE~Y. Monley, in its o-dil),ary significatio], is'.u) ageley of trade. Civilization has developed a great var'iety of wants and 9)6 THE NATURE OF MONEY. industries, and labor has come to be divided into innumierable forms, requiring a constant exchange of commodities. Individuals are dependent on their fellow men for every thing, except the particular product of their own labor. One class furnishes food, another the material for clothing, another builds houses, etc., etc., and each class is susceptible of innumerable subdivisions. When we come to individuals, each one has to give his labor, or the product of his labor, or the product of the labor of others, for that which he needs or desires. This exchange is effected through the agency of money. It is necessary, therefore, that money should possess a legal representative value. It must possess representative value to be the equivalent of the commodity or labor for which it is exchanged, and its representative value must be established by law, otherwise its acceptance by a creditor would be optional. As the value anld power of money depend on law, its institution ald regulation are duties which devolve upon the legislature or governing power of a nation. The adoption of money or a mediumn of exchange was undoubtedly one of the first steps in civilization. In a simple state of society, as in newly settled countries now, the exchange of commodities took place by means of barter, but the necessity of a medium of exchange becoming apparent, different representatives of value were adopted, according to the wants, tastes and possessions of the communities or nations concerned. Thus the Spartans adopted iron, the ancient Romans bars of copper and cattle, the North American Indian beads, and the East Indian and African shells. At an early age gold and silver came to be regarded as the imost suitable materials for the purposes of money for many reasons, amnoif,g others on account of their possessing large value in a small and compact form. Coins or tokens made 2 THE N ATURE OF MONEY. of these metals next appeared, but originally possessed no other power than that which they derived from the intrinsic value of the materials of which they were made, which was determined by weight, as is the case nowr, when used in commerce between different nations. Governmenits next assumed the right to make and regulate the value of money, in consequence of the necessity of establishing a common representative of value to be used in the payment of debts and taxes. As civilization progressed and wealth increased, requiring a more rapid and extensive exchange of commodities, it became necessary that the medium of exchange should be increased in the same proportion. It was impossible to obtain gold.-red silver in sufficient quantities to answer the purposes of money, and it would seemingly have been but the part of wisdom to have adopted new systems of money, but history gives but one or two instances whee anlythling of the kind was attempted. The scarcity of motley led to the use of credit, which now plays such an important part in the commerce of the world. Bills of exchange were invented, it is believed, by the Jews of Lombardy in the 7th century. In the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries the greater part of the commerce of Europe was accomplished at periodical markets or fairs. 3ierehlants and traders, or their brokers, would meet at these fairs with their accounts or bilctans (balaince) made out, and by transferring debts and credits from one to another, effect a settlement with the use of no more money than was required to settle balances. In many paits of Europe these fairs are still held, although they have lost most of their former importance. Various other devices to increase the cirlcul.lating medium of exchange have beenf re]sorte(d to by different nations, suii(h as'educing the amount of bulllion il th-eii coins from time to time, until now they contain but a fiaction of the value which their 28 THE NATURE OF MONEY. names originally called for. In the days of William, the Conqueror, the "pound" actually was a pound weight of silver, and a shilling was a twentieth part of a pound, but at the present time a pound of silver is coined into sixty-six shillings. The legal money of England has been regulated or altered in this way by the English government one hundred and eighty-four times. The specie basis system of Great Britain, which was adopted nearly two hundred years ago, owes its origin to the same cause-the necessity of increasing the medium of exchange. The effect of the system is to centralize wealth. In Great Britain it has enabled the aristocratic and moneyed classes to acquire enormous wealth, and has reduced the industrial classes to a condition of abject poverty. In the United States it has had the same tendency. The only people of former times, whlo seemed to fully understand the nature of money, were the Venetians. In the 12th century they adopted a system of money, based onl the wealth and credit of the people, which lasted over 600 years. Inscriptions on the books of a bank, established by the State, which were divisible to any desired amount and transferable on the books of the bank from one to another, formed the chief medium of exchange during the period named. These inscriptions of credit were not redeemable in coin, but, notwithstanding that, they commanded a high premium over gold and silver. The Venetians were enabled, principally through their enlightened system of money, to attain great prosperity, which they enjoyed for centuries, and commercial crashes and money panics were unknown amongst them. (See Chap. IV.) The French people manage their financial affairs with more wisdom than any other nation of the present day. When specie is scarce an irredeemable legal tender paper 29 THE NATURE OF MONEY. money is used in its stead. Great pains are taken by the French government to keep every section amply supplied with a circulating medium of exchange, in order to develop the producing forces of the country-a policy that has been crowned with marked success. The American people have had some experience in regard to the advantages of a legal tender paper money system since 1861, but the notes of the government (greenbacks) were issued in such a mutilated form, and the workings of the system have been so materially interfered with by the money power, by means of corrupt legislation, that as yet they have had no fair opportunity to judge of its real merits. From an early period, then, money came to derive its power, as an agent to represent, measure and exchange value, from public authority. Individuals and nations seek to exchange and accumulate property and commodities, and money is desirable only on account of the power, with which it is clothed by public authority, to command property or labor. It is not useful of itself, for it cannot be used as food, or clothing, or shelter. It must be parted with beforc any service or value can be obtained from it. In anl aecuimulated form, as capital, it can bring no income until it is put to use-parted with. It is, therefore, the immaterial principle or Spower to represent value that is the essence of money, and this it can only derive from law. "Money is then," in the language of Kellogg, "a legal existence, being constituted a national representative of property; consequently it is a public lien on all property for sale in the nation, a public medium for the exchange of products, and a tender in payment of debts." TIIE INTRINSIC YALUE OF M3ONEY. As money is a legal public medium of exchange, possessing representative valuq, it is not necessary that the material 30 'THE I-TRI —SIC VALUE OF Of0NEY. of which it is made should possess intrinsic or coimi.nercial value. To use again the language of the author last quoted, "The value of money perpetually (e])ends upon its power to represent value and not upon its material, because money never reaches a point at which it can be use(l as an article of actual value." The value of the materi:l can add nothing to its power as money; it can oIInl eler its ~value lmole certain, as when monet is issued( by: wea1k and irresponsible government, or by a nation possessing few or no products for which it can be exclangied. When issued( by a statble and responsible government, whose p)eol)le possess ample property and valuable products, its value colrresponds to tl:he value of the products of the country for wicli it can be exchanged. If money mnade of paper will procure the same property or commodities, as if made of a material possessing intrinsic value, like gold or silver, it possesses the same power in one inst:nce as in the otler. If A. has a tea dollar gold piece and B. has a ten dollalr legal tender note, and the gold piece and paper money w-ill eaclh purchase the same article of value, in Ipa)rting with thelm A. does not part with anyrthing more tlhan 1)., althougli- A's, money p)ossesses an intrinsic value - B(I'l]s does not. Anid is long as the gold piece is used as ioncy, it is nlot possible for any one to derive any more use or value from it, than that which belongs to it in its representative calpacity by virtue of law. Dr. Walker, a political econonmist of the bullionist school, in speaking of money as an instrument of exchlange, says: "Anythinig which by general consent, or in obedience to law, all receive in exchange will ainswer the purpose (of money.) So far as this fuinction is concerned, it is of no consequence whlether the article has value or not; safety and convenience arc the only considerations of importance. Money in this respect is simply a counter, token or universal ,equivalent." 31 TIHE INTRINSIC VALUE OF MONE-Y. The power of money, then, whether made of a material possessing value or not, depends on its ability to represent value. How a piece of paper, possessing little or no intrinsic value, can acquire the power to represent value, will be explained further on. In the imeantimje it will appear from a slight examination that it is a disadvantage to money to possess an intrinsic value, and that gold and silver, however suitable they may be to adjust balances between nations, are not the proper substances out of which to make the circulating medium of a nation. If money possesses an intrinsic, -is well as a representative value, it is then a commodity, as well as money, and is subject to two different and often antagonistic sets of laws. As money it seeks to perform the functions of money and to fill the channels of trade, while as a commodity it is compelled to obey the "uncontrollable laws of supply and demand." In coxmueree gold and silver are commodities and are taken in exchange for products, when they are preferable, in a business point of view, to other products or commodities, or in the settlement of balances, after an exchange of products has been made. They are thus liable to be taken at any time from the channels of circulation by the demands of commerce, and this can be done most readily when they are stored in bank vaults as the basis of bank notes. In this way the amount of the circulating nmeditum in a country is rendered dependent on the wants and whiims of other nations, and is, conlsequently, uncertain in amount and fluctuating in value. It may be safely asserted that there was scarcely ever a time in the history of the United States, when the specie basis system was in existence, that the Emperor of China could not have occasioned a coimmercial crash and money panic, by simply decreeing that the idols and images worshipped by his subjects should be made of gold. 32 THE INTtINSIC VALUE OF MONXEY. Gold andl silver mioney are objectionable on account of the inconvenience and risk which attend their use, and for many other reasons, but the chief objection to gold is its scarcity, wiich also renders it expensive. Thlere is not sufficient gold money in ci.culation to answer the wants of any one of the leadcling commercial nations of the world, and for all to seek to use it as an exclusive mrediurn of exchange is simpl)ly an absurdity. It is true the difficulty is remedied inll part in some countries by issuing paper notes based onl gold, but tlhese notes are not legal relresentatives of value, but mierely representatives of the credit of those who issue thelm, and constitute, as experience has proved, an unsafe and unreliable medium of exclhange, as will hereafter more fully appeai. As coilm)pared w-ithl the vast amount of money required to )pay intercst on debts, nabtional, state, municipal and corporate, and thle expenses of governments, and to carry on the transactions of hundreds of millions of people, the amount of gold in use as money is as a grain of sand to a mountain. And wvlen properly considered the intrinsic value of gold and silver is comp)aratively trifling. These metals owe their chief value to their use as moncey. If thlat use were discontinued to any considerable extent, their value would depreciate in a corresponding degree. Only recently Germany demonetized silver, and it depreciated so rapidly in value that it became a matter of importance to the German governinent to dispose of its supply at the earliest moment possible. In 1764 the British Board of Trade objected to the use of legal tender paper money in the colonies, doubtless because it rendered the people of the colonies indepenldcut of the money pow-er of Great Britain, on the ground that' every mediumin of exchl-ange should have an intrinsic value, whiche paper money has not." To this Dr. Franklin replied: 33 3 THE INTEINSIC VALUE OF MONEY. Otherwise a pound of gold would not be a real equivalent for even a bushel of wheat." [Franklin's Works: Duane's edition, 1809; volume 4.] Gold or silver, or both, however, are used for the purposes of money by nearly all nations, and hence it is that these metals have come to be used in the commerce of the -world, not as money, but as commodities, under the name of bullion, possessing an established and universally recognized value. Gold at the present time is a commonly accepted equivalent for all other commodities. It will be borne in mind, however, that this general recognition of the value of gold depends chiefly upon the fact that gold is a legal tender, when coined into money, in all nations where it is used. No law exists compelling citizens of different nations to receive from each other gold in paynent of debts, but people will always take that in payment of debts ,which they can in turn apply to the same purpose. It is incorrect, therefore, to speak of gold as the "money of the world." No such money has ever been established, nor can be until all nations adopt a uniform unit of value as well as of money. Different units of weight, length, value, etc., have grown up in different nations, in the same manner as different languages, manners and customs have grownom up, and it would be almost as easy to establish a universal language as to induce the various nations of the world to -adopt a common system of money. A person who takes $100 in gold, coined in the United States, to England, is obliged to sell his coin, just as he would sell a bale of cotton, in order to obtain money which will pass current in that country; and if he crosses over to France he is obliged to :sell English coin in the same way. And it may happen, and frequently has happened, that a person may be unable tto obtain money for gold or silver. During the financial 35 THE INTRINSIC VALUE OF MONEY. Otherwise a pound of gold would not be a real equivalent for even a bushel of wheat." [Franklin's Works: Duane's edition, 1809; volume 4.] Gold or silver, or both, however, are used for the purposes of money by nearly all nations, and hence it is that these metals have come to be used in the commerce of the world, not as money, but as commodities, under the name of bullion, possessing an established and universally recognized value. Gold at the present time is a commonly accepted equivalent for all other commodities. It will be borne in mind, however, that this general recognition of the vaglue of gold depends chiefly upon the fact that gold is a legal tender, when coined into money, in all nations where it is used. No law exists compelling citizens of different -nations to receive from each other gold in pa-mNient of debts, but people will always take that in payment of debts which they can in turn apply to the same purpose. It is incorrect, therefore, to speak of gold as the "money of the world." No such money has ever been established, nor can ,be until all nations adopt a uniform unit of value as well as of money. Different units of weight, lengthl, value, etc., /have grown up in different nations, in the same manner as ,different languages, manners and customs have growv up, and it would be almost as easy to establish a universal language as to induce the various rations of the world to ,adopt a common system of money. A person who takes $100 in gold, coined in the United States, to EIghind, is obliged to sell his coin, just as he would sell a bale of cotton, in order to obtain money which will pass current in that country; and if he crosses over to France he is obliged to sell English coin in the same'way. And it may happen, and frequently has happened, that a person may be unable tto obtain money for gold La-silver. During the financial 35 TTIlE IXTRINSIC VALUE OF MOXEY. crisis in England, in 1847, it was inilpossible to borrow a ~5 note on thousands of dollars worth of silver, because silver was not a legal tender for an amount over forty shillinigs, and was, therefore, practically useless for the purposes of money; and in Calcutta, where silver money is the legal tender of the country, during the stringency of 1864, it was impossible to borrow money on gold. It is well authenticated that, during that crisis, persons, with as much as $100,000 worth of gold in their possession, were obliged to allow their notes to go protest, because they could not borrow $10 in silver money on a bushel of gold. Another clap-trap name given to gold and silver, now in common use, is "honest money." AIoney is honiest or not honest according to the uses it performs and the maniner in which it performs theml. Gold or silver may perform the uses of money ill an honest imanner-it is then "honest money;" but it has been, and still is, the misfortune of these naturally honest metals to be made tlhe basis of all the rascally systems of money ever founded. And it may be well, too, to notice briefly another pet name vhich is much relied upon by the buLllionists to deceive and influence a large and intelligent class of people. In the menorable fight between the people, under the fearless and patriotic leadership of President Jackson, and the money power, represented by the iUn-ited States Bank, the term "hard money" became deservedly popular. Gold and silver coin were then the people's money-the " honest money" of thie country, as the greenback is now; and the gist of the controversy was then, precisely as it is in the pending struggle now, whether the people should retain the control of the circulating medium of the nation in their own hands, where it is placed by the Constitution of the United States, or should permit individuals arnd corporations to usurp 36 THE INTRINSIC VALUE OF MIONEY. the functions of the general government, and, ili its stead, make and regulate the mnediumn of exchange of the country. (See Chapter V.) If gold and silver were demonetized by the principal nations of the earth, they would owe their value as commodities to the use that could be made of them for other purposes, as for ornaments or in the arts; and as they could then be had for such purposes in abundance, their value would doubtless dilminish to but a fraction of what it is now. THE USES OF MOLNEY. The uses of money correspond to its powers or properties, viz: to represent value, to measure value, to accumulate value and to exchange value.* Actual or real value belongs to property or products, w'hich are necessary or desirable, and money is the legal mediumn by which it is represented, measured and exclhanged. Iin an accumulated form, as capital, it represents accumnulated p)roperty or labor, and is capable of ac(cumulating value in the same muanner that the property or labor which it represents could be used for that purpose. It measures value because it is the legal standard of value established by law, just as weilghts and measuies to determine the weighit, lelngth and bulk of articles are estabtablished; and if based on sound principles, it would prove as unvarying, as a standard of value, as are the standards of measurement of wei-ght and quantity. The value of property and products would then rise and fall in obedience to the laws of supply and demand, but the standard of value, money, would remain the same as previously determinied by the law which instituted it, provided thie law emanated from a responsible source. This may be illustrated in a ineasure -by the greenback now in use, though not with the same ,degree of force and certainty that it could be done, if the 'See Kelltgg. page 46. 37 THE USES OF IMONEY. greenback had not been mutilated and depreciated by law. The value of property and commodities is now measured by the greenback, because the value of the greenback corresponds to the idea of value carried in the min(ds of the people of the United States. The unit of value in the United States is the dollar, and this unit of value is fixed in the mind, just as the units of measurement expressed by a pound, a bushel, a yard or a degree, are fixed there, that is by use and custom. Partial legal tender paper money (the greenback) is now the money or medium of exchange of tile countriy, and corresponds to the idea of value fixed in the minds of the people. People th ink in greenbacks when estilmating value. If told that the price of a horse is $100, the amount or value is instantly referred to the greenback standard of measurement. The price of particular commodities, as well as the price of gold, lmay change daily without affecting the prices of other commodities, as measured by the greenback standard, which could not be the case if it were the greenback that fluctuated. Hence it may be inferred, among other things, that editors of newspapers, who quote greenbacks as worth so many cents on the dollar as compared witlh gold, are either grossly ignorant of the nature of money, or have become entangled in the toils of the money power. But it is of the uses of money in a less technical sense that we wish to speak. Mioney has come to be a vital element in production, in the operations of trade and in the business details of life. In a simple state of society, as in new countries even now, individuals and families are for the most part self-supporting. The farm supplies food and the material for clothing, and the spinningi, wheel and loomi are found in every household. But where the advantages of civilization anid a mediumn of exchange have once become common, a very different condition of affairs exists. The 38 THIE USES OF [MONEY. merchant, the tailor, thie carpenter, the shoemaker, the blacksmith, the doctor, etc., etc., have made their appearance, and individuals and families are no longier self-supporting, but wholly dependent upon each other. Money is then a necessity. Food, clothing, rent, fuel, light, taxes, insurance, railroad fares, etc., etc., require cash, and a general scarcity of money will occasion -rant and suffering, even in the midst of plenty. lIow dependent individuals are upon each other in a state of civilization, is thust set forth by Kellogg: "The necessity for the exchang.e of conmmodities is generally acknowledged. Few, however, even among thinking men, are aware how indispensable these exchanges are to the subsistence and comfort of the human family. Men are social beings, and mutually dependent. To appreciate this important truth, we must consider the inability of eachl man to provide for the numerous wants of his nature; and the ignorance and discomfort to which each would be exposed, were he not benefited by the labor of others. If every man could build his own house, furnish his own food and clothiig, and make all the instrumients and utensils that he needs to use: if the materials for all these things were placed upon every acre of land, and every man, woman and child, were endowed with sufficient skill and strength to produce them, there might be no need of an exchanige of commodities. But all men are, in mnany, in most thiugs, dependent on the labor of their fellow men. For exampnl)le, take the farmer, who is acknowledged to be the least dependent of men, and see for how many things evenl he is indebted to the labor of others. Itie must have implemlents for the cultivation of his farm, a plow, harrow, siov-el, hloe, sickle, cradle, scythes, a fan, or falnning mill, and a east ol wagon. The farmer is dependent on the mminer for the iron ore; on the collier to dig, the coal; on the fumXice worker to smelt the 39 0 TIE USES OF MONEY. iron; on the forger and the smlith to make him his iron and steel instruments. He is dependent on the wagon maker for his wagon; on the machinist for his fainning mill; on the carpenter for his house; on the nail maker for nails; on the glass manufacturer for glass; on the stone cutter and the mason for mason work; on the brick maker for bricks; on the cooper for barrels, tubs and pails; on the saw maker for a saw, and on the rolling mill to roll out the iron or steel for it; on the tip-plate worker for kitchen utensils; on the moulder and caster of iron for iron pots; on the miner of copper, and on the copper and brass founder for brass and copper kettles; on the puinp maker for a pump, etc., etc. HIe is dependent on the needle maker, the pin:maker, the button maker, the silk grower, thle tainner, the shoemaker, the hatter, the saddle and harness maker, the cabinet maker, and the type maker, type setter and printer. Not one of these artisans, in attending to his particular employment, produces his food and clothing; and all would be destitute of them, unless supplied with them by the labor of others. The farmer raises all of his food, except salt, tea, coffee, sugar, miolasses, spices and the like; these, and the ships to transport them, must be furnished by others. These wants call into employment ship carpenters, sailors, compass makers, surveyors, chart makers, etc. The farmer must raise wool, cottoni, liclap or flax, or else be d(lependenit on others for clothing. If the farmer, who is the least dependent of men, receives from others so imaily supplies, how is it with the hatter and shoemaker? The former makes an article to cover the head, the latter one to cover the feet; and all the additional supplies of both must be furnished by the labor of others. Artisans, too, depend upon each other for the different parts of their work; the cotton manufacturer must be assisted by others to carry forward his manu 40 0 THiE USES OF MONEY.. facture. AIany articles, such as watch springs, are useless unless they are combined with other parts. It is, then, of paramount importance that no obstacles be thrown in the way of a ready exchange of commodities. A certain quantity of one kind of produce is worth as much as a certain quantity of another kind; and all civilized nations have adopted some mgedium) by means of which all kinds of produce may be more easily exchanged than by direct barter. We hear it sometimes asserted that there is no need of a medium of exchange. But the articles of trade could not be divided and distributed to supply the numerous wants of a people without a representative of value through which the distribution could be made. For example, a man brings to market five hundred bushels of wheat. The purchaser tenders corn in payiment; and they agree that seven hundred and fifty bushels of corn are worth as much as five hundred bushels of wheat. The seller can use but a small portion of the corn, and finds a purchlaser, with whom he exchanges the surplus for hams. He disposes of the hams for hats and shoes. If he endeavor to divide the hats and shoes, and exchange them for the articles that he needs, he may spend two years before hlie can return to his farm to raise a second crop of wheat. Yet he is fairly dealt with. All those with whom he exchanges, give him, as nearly as possible, an equivalent of actual value for the actual value that they receive; and all the articles are such as all need. In fact, all trade is simply a barter of one useful thing for another. A person who produces more of an article than he needs for his own use, exchanges his surplus for the surplus articles of others. If the farmer had sold the wheat for money, the money would have been a tender for any other article that he wished to purchase." In the large operations of trade, as with foreign countries 41 TIIE USES OF MO0NEY. and between different sections of th-e counti,', v t sums of money are constantly required. The foreig,ii trade of the United States in ordinary tiues amiounts to nearly 81,000,000,000 a year, and thle trade betwveen the different sections of the country aimoniits to )robably five thi-es that sum. It is true that, in the trade with foreign nations and between different parts of the nation, the transfer anud re-tiransfer of inoney from one to the other is rendered unnecessary by the use of cheeks, drafts and bills of exclhange, except to settle balances; but in the production, transportation, repeated hlandlinig and distribution of thle commioditic:', represented by the vast suais referred to, the amtount of:money required is enormious. FIor example, in the mlovei ent of the crops of the W'esterii States alone iloiec caslh is reqiuired each year than can be had for thle purpose; and in the days of the specie basis systeni the WVesteI',n baks, as is well known, were in the habit at suli titaes of issuing their notes without any regard to legal linitations. Presidet Grant in his imessag,i(e of Deceeiber, 1 873, after the 1)aniic anid before lie had bT)eoine debauched by th-ie ioniey power, called the attention of Conress to thle fact in the followingin language "It is patent to thie miost casual observer that muchl nmore eurrency or nioniey is required to transact the legitlimate trade of tlie country during the fall and winter mIonths, when thle vast crops are being removed, than during the balance of the year. Titlh our present system, tlhe allount in the country renmailus the samie tlhrouiout tlhe entire year, resulting in an accumulation of all thle surplus capital of the country in a few centers, whenii not el::ployed in moviing crops, teiipted tlhere by the offer of interest on call loans. Inuterest being paid, this siupluls capit i must earn the interest p)aid witl a p)rofit. Belig su-bject to'call,' it can not be loaned, only in part a-t )best, to thle eircehant or man 42 T-IE USES )OF MNONEIY. ufacturer, for a fixed teii. TI-Ienice, 110no matter lhow muchl currency there mighi,t be in the couiitry, it wouldl be absorbed, prices keeping pace wvithl the volume, and panics, striingency and disasters would ever be recurring with the autumn. Elasticity in our 0111nioetary system, therefore, is the object to be attained first, and next to that, as far as possible, a prevention of the use of other people's money in stocks and other species of speculation." M!Ioney is also an important element of production. When the channels of circulation are supplied with money, the industries of the country are quick and active, and the entire nation becomes engaged in adding to its wealth. It has been well said that "A nation, whlether it consunmes its own products, or with them purchases from abroad, can have no more value tlhan it produces. The supreme policy of every nation, therefore, is to develop the producing forces of its own country. AVhat are they? The worlkinigmen, the land, the mines, thle machinery, the water power, etc."* Tlhe producing forces of a country can be developed only slowly and laboriously without tlhe aid of money.''he productive. soil, the iron, the coal, the timber, the water power, the. machinery, the labor, etc., may all be at hand, but until touched by the vitalizing current of money, as it circulates, in the channels of trade, they can give forth but a feeble spark of the life and power w-hich they possess. At an early day in the history of tlhe colonies tl-he inhabitants were subjected to great drawbacks for the want of a legal niediium of exclhange. Dr. Franklin, in 1764, stated to the Biitish Boaird of Trade thlat: "In 1723 Pennsylvania was totally strip))ed of its gold and silver. * * * The difficulties for want of cash were accordingly very great, the chief part of tlhe trade being carried on by the extremely $ir John Barnard Byles. 43 THIE USES OF MONEY. inconvenient method of barter, when, in 1723, paper money was first made there which gave new life to business, promoted greatly the settlement of new lands, whereby the province has so greatly increased in inhabitants that the export from thence thither [to England] is now more than ten fold what it then was." In 1755 VirYginia was badly in need of money or a niedium ,of exchange. A paper money bottomed on a specific tax wv-as issued, which afforded abundant relief, and, as we learn from Jefferson, never depreciated a farthing in value. But an more marked instance of the value of money as an element -of production is furnished by the experience of Pennsylvania during the present century. In 1841 the people of Pennsylvania were on tihe verge of bankrupltcy. The State was unable to pay interest on the public debt, or even pay the wages of laborers for work done on the public works. Corporations were bankrupt, and merchants were in nearly as bad,a situation. There was no money, and consequently trade and production were completely paralyzed. The State of Pennsylvania in this crisis issued $3,100,000 of what were called relief notes, bearing simply a promise that they would be received by the Treasury of the State in payment of all taxes and other obligations due to the State.'"These notes were taken greedily by the people. Banks inserted in the front of their books an agreement that the depositor ,should receive on check the samne kind of money hle deposited, and then took these notes. They discounted paper with them. The wheels of industry were set in motion by these notes, which promised nothing but that they would be received in payment of State taxes. The State paid her domestic creditors, and these hastened to pay theirs or to supply their wants by purchase. Crops, for which there had been no market, moved; the loom oncd the spindle were 44 TIlE USES OF MONEY. again heard; labor, lifted from despair, found work and wages, and with the great resources of Pennsylvania under full and free development, she was soon exporting more than she imported. Gold and silver flowed in upon her; and tihe broken banks resumed specie payments. We then did," says the lIon. WVilliam I). Kelley, of Pennsylvania, from whom we quote, "lwhat France does; we were wise enough then to know that it is labor, not coin, that maintains the public credit and gives prosperity to the people." But the people of the Uniited States have had ample proof, during the past few years, of the great advantages to be derived from an abundance of money. The activity in all forms of productive industry during and immediately after the war, which constituted an inexhaustible fountain of strength to the Federal Government, and which, in spite of the ravages of war, enabled the country to double its wealth in ten years, from 1860 to l870, was attributable entirely to the vast amount of money, or evidences of indebtedness of the government used as such, that then filled the channels of circulation. The condition of the country then, when money was plenty, and now, under the policy of contraction, which has withdrawn the circulating medium of exchange from the channels of trade, is thus eloquently portrayed by the distinguished statesman quoted above (Kelley), in a recent address to the citizens of Philadelphia: "You have seen a strong man, full of life, rise in the morning as a lion shakes the dew from his mane and go forward to the battle of life, full of vigor, full of hope, full of energy, full of enterprise. his brawny nether limnbs bear his stout body ably; his muscular arm and his cunning hand go glibly and gladly to their duties, performing their functions. But an accident happens, anl artery is cut; the blood does not ooze, but flows from him. T-ie surgeoni comes just in time 45 THE USES OF 3MONEY. to save his life.:Ie staunches thle wound and binds it up. But the man is another -being, he lies there pallid and shrunlken. His sturdy limbs will not even bear his wasted body. Hlis iauscles are flaccid, and his filgers have lost their skill. tIis energy is gone, and lie dreams not of enterprise. This is our condition to-day as a people. In 1865 and 1866 every maln in America who had the skill and the will to labor could earn wages to support his family and lay something by. All industries were quick and active. Production ran on. The American people waked up each new morning to feel that there were great duties before them; that there were eines to be opened, forges and furnaces to be erected to work the itron, the copper, the silver and the gold. New houses were built. Skill, energy, scielnce and genius were taxed to quicken and cheapen productive processes. Our wealth grew as it, or that of any other people, had never grown. WVe were moving, onward, when one Hu,gh lIcCutlloch tapped a great artery and let nearly all the blood flow fromi the body politic. Diseased, paralyzed, shrinking from day to day, what American has the energy to engage in developing a new mine? Peiinsylvanians,who of you are ready to construct a new forge or a, new furnace? Where are factories buildiing to-day? Your laborersmoody, sullen, in want-are begging the poor privilege of earning a day's food by an honest day's labor. Their homes are being stripped of everything they cherish. Go through the suburbs of your city, halt before the houses where of a Sunday afternoon you would, a few years ago, have found the family gathered about the melodeon or the cheap piano, singing the praises of Hilm who had given them their lines in these pleasant places. Ah! the house is silent now; the father is out of employment, the sons are in idleness, the daughters have no work; the melodeon or piano is gone. 46 THE USES OF MONEY. Aye, worse than that, the most cherished mementoes, though of little value measured in dollars and cents the cheap jewelry-the trinket that the young lover toiled in over hours that he might buy and see it grace the person of his sweetheart, the amulet he hung upon the neck of his bride -the silver cup that marked the birth or christening of their first born cherished by all, but they have gone to the pawnbroker or jeweler to bring them food. Courage gone, hope gone, despair crushing him to the earth, and destroying all the pride that made the American nmechlanic the boast and honor of his country, how many a man to-day, longing for honest work but powerless to obtain it, creeps and crawls from town to town, foot-sore, ragged, dusty, to beg from strangers rather than from those who know him and will remember it to be denounced as a'tramp' and commended to the custody of the police!" As the end and object of money are to exchange commodities and promote production, it should be increased in amount in proportion to the increase of population and trade. Bullionists assert the contrary, but they can furnish no sound reason or proof upon which to base their theory. They invariably rest their argument on the fact that nations have increased in wealth and population without adding to their monetary circulation, and most always cite Great Britain as a case in point. Properly considered the experience of Great Britain does not sustain their theory. How does Great Britain mailnage to conduct its large and iincreeasing business without a corresponding increase of money? The answer is by means of injlated bac,k c)red(it. On account of the want of a sufficient medium of exchange, the British people are compelled to use and pay for the credit of banks to an enormous extent. This is a heavy tax upon the industrial classes of that kingdom, and explains why the wealth 47 THE USES OF MIONEY. of the people is constantly flowing, into the hands of the few. We find the following statement used by Di-. Walker, a political economist of the bullionist school, to show how nicely tlhe people of Great Britain can get along with but a limited amount of mnoney. We submit that it shows much. more forcibly to what a desperate use of inflated credit that nation has been driven by a false monetary system. ie says: "As an illustration in point, Sir John Lubbock gave, in a paper read before the Statistical Society, in June, 1865, an analysis of ~19,000,000 paid into his banking house in a fewt days, as follows: Checks and bills.............. ~18,395,000, or 97 per cent. Bank of England notes...........408,000 Country notes................ 7 9,000 3 per c,IIt. Coin........................ 118,000 Fromi which statement it ap)pears that only thre.e per cent. were paid in the form of money, i. e., notes and coin together, of which a little noire than o~e-Acalf of one )per cent. tt(was in coi g." The bullioiiists pretend to be very much:afraid of the evil consequences of inflation; but when thle miask is torn off, it is apparent that they are only concerned abouit retainil,g the power to inflate in their own hands. SYSTEMS OF MONEY. Every nation has its own peculiar system of finance, the difference colnsisting nlore in details than in principles. The financial system of the United States is now composed of the Independent Treasury Bureau for the receipt, custody and disbursement of the revenues; of the Treasury proper, which maintains an issue of al)out $370,000,000 of Treasury notes (greenbacks), constituting tlheC legal tender medium of the country, and aboult 845,000,000 of fractional cuLrrelncy; of the National Banks, over 2,200 in number, with a circulation 48 SYSTEMS OF MONEY. of over $360,000,000; and a number of State Banks, established under State authority. The medium of exchange of the United States, it will be observed, is composed of Treasury notes (greenbacks) and bank notes. It is important to notice the difference between the Treasury note and the bank note, because they belong to two entirely different and distinct systems of money; and a clear perception of the difference is essential to a proper understanding of the money question and of the political issues, growing out of it, which now agitate the country. A bank note is a bill of credit, promising payment in lawful money on demand, issued by and resting on the credit of a private corporation established by law. Being payable or redeemable in money on demand, it represents money and circulates as such, and performs nearly all of its functions. Private corporations, therefore, upon whom the privilege or power to issue bank notes is conferred, are practically invested with the authority and power to make and put in circulation a medium of exchange. If the bank note is see ured by a deposit of stock or bonds to insure its payment and maintain its value, as is the case with the National Bank note, which is secured by a deposit of United States bonds in the Treasury of the Federal Government, it will form a perfectly safe, uniform and convenient medium of exchange. But a bank note possesses two peculiar features, which do not belolng to money, (of any kind, whether made of gold, silver, or paper) and which render it a costly medium of exchange. One peculiarity of a bank note is that it enters into cir culation encumbered with interest, and constantly accumulates value, whether it is in use or not. Its very existence, tlherefore, is a tax upon production and trade. The other peculiarity, which grows out of the one just mentioned, is that a bank note is not free to obey the 49 SYSTEMIS Ol' MONEY. natural laws of trade, but is subject to the will and control of the corporation which puts it in circulation.'This can be made perfectly clear by supposing two notes, a greenback and a National Bank note, to be put into circulation at the same time and observing the course taken by each. A greenback dollar is paid out by the United States goverinmient to A. for its equiv-alent in labor or value. A. pays it to B. for a dollar's worth of commodities. B3. lends it to C. for thirty days at 6 pel cent interest. C. pays it to D. for a dlebt. I). retains it il his possession for three months and then puts it in circulation again. It passes from hand to hand, until flinlly it reaches Z., who pays it to a collector of internal revenue, when it is returned to the Federal Treasury, to be used over and over again in the same mannier. While p)erforming its use as a niedium of exchange, it bore no interest. When held by D. for three months in a state of idleness, it accumulated no value for any one. It is true B. lent it to C. for thirty days at 6 per cent. interest, but that was an individual transaction land extended no10 furtlr thlall the parties concerned. As soon as C. put it in circulatioi again, it went on its way, as free and unencunibered as when it left the Treasury of the TUnited States. But it is very different with a bank note. The bank, which issues it, lends it to A. for sixty days at say 6 per cent. interest, and A. puts it in circulation. At the expiration of sixty days, A., unable to return the identical note which he borrowed, pays the bank with a greenback or another bank note. This note in turn is immediately lent to B., and the process goes on indefinitely. The original bank note thus constantly realizes interest and accumulates value for the bank, whether it circulates in the channels of trade, or reposes in the vaults of the bank as a deposit, or lies rotting at the bottom of the ocean. This interest comies out of the profits of production, 50 SYSTEMS OF MONEY. and is a tax upon the community at large. The tax thus imposed upon the public for a mediumn of exchange is a gloreater burden than industry can bear, and every few years labor is driven to the wall and production, except of the necessities of life, ceases. To promote production, or in other words, to "develop the producing forces of a country," it is, as we have seen, more essential to have a cheap medium of exchange, than it is to have cheap transportation; but a bank note is the most expensive medium of exchange that could possibly be devised, because it is accumulating value all the time, whether it is performing the uses of money or not. The bank note is subject to the will and control of the corlporation which issues it, because when the bank ceases to discount paper, as it usually does whenever there is a money stringency, and calls in its circulation, it is obliged to leave the channels of trade, no matter how much its services are neededas a medium of exchange, and return to the bank. But this is not all. The tax which banks are thlus authorized to impl)ose on the medium of exchange issued by them, enables them to control not only their own notes, but the money of the country, whether coin or legal tender paper money, as will be more fully explained in another chapter, and thus it happens, as at the present time, that the circulating medium of the nation every few years becomes concentrated in the money centers of the country. A bank note medium of exchange, whether redeemable ini coin, as in England, or in greenbacks, as in the United States at the present time, it will, therefore, be observed, constitutes a peculiar and distinct system of money, and one, it may be added, that has proved an infinite source of disaster and weakness in both England and America. It was for these reasons, in days gone by, that Jefferson insisted that "Bank paper must be suppressed and the circu 51 SYSTEMS OF MONEY. lation restored to the nation to whom it belongs;" that John Adams denounced bank paper as a vile freak of those who were shapen in Toryism and British idolatry; that Jackson waged war on banks of issue; that Calhoun labored to establish a legal tender paper money, to be issued by the Federal Government; and it is for the same reasons that a host of the foremost statesmen, political economists and philanthropists of the country are to-day urging the people of the United States to assert their rights and prevent the money power from destroying the greenback, in order that they may substitute the National Bank note in its stead, and thus secure the entire control of the medium of exchange of the nation. A Treasury note issued by the Federal Government represents the property and productions of the country to the amount or value inscribed on its face. It rests on the credit of the government in the same mananer that a bank note rests on the credit of a corporation, and represents the property and productions of the country (including gold and silver) for which it is exchangeable, just as a bank note represents the coin or Treasury note in which it is payable or redeemable. Tihe foundation of the Treasury note is the same as that of a United States bond, which secures the payment and maintains the value of the bank note, and it, therefore, possesses the highest and best security that a medium of exchange can possibly have.* A bank note is a promise to pay money, but a Treasury note, being a legal representative of value (property andcl products), is money. It is not, therefore, a promnise to pay-it would be more accurate to describe it as aprotise to receive. It is true that the present legal tender money of the UJnitecl States (the greenback) professes to be a promise to pay, which is a 'See note at the end of this chapter. 52 SYSTEMAS OF M[ONEY. misfortune, because it misleads people, even professors of political econolmy,* but the promise is an empty phrase, wholly foreign to the nature of the Treasury note and the principles upon which it is based. It was spread on the face of thie greenback at tihe instance of the money power, which was unwilling to recognize any other kind of money than that based on bullion, and for the purpose of depreciating its value as a medium of exchange. It is apparent, tlherefore, that legal tender paper money or Treasury notes and bank notes belong to two separate and distinct systems of money, based on entirely different principles. In the one case the medium of exchange is furnished by the governlment and subject only to the natural laws which govern trade. In the other, it is furnished by private corporations, who tax the public heavily for its use, and is subject, not to the laws of trade, but to the control of the corporations issuing it. In Great Britain, where the system originated, the legal tender money of the country, in which bank notes are payable, is gold and silver, as was the case in the UnLited States prior to the war, and hence the system is commonly known, and is generally referred to in these pages, as the specie basis system. When the mediuml of exchange is limited to gold and silver, or paper money based on gold and silver, the public is compelled, on account of the scarcity of these metals, to use bank credit, which explains why the money power is now striving to force the American people to submit to a return to specie payments, no matter at what sacrifice. TIE POWER TO 3IAME MONEY A GOVERN MENTAL FUNCTION. The power to make andcl regulate money has long been recognize( as a governmental fuicetion, or, in the language of Tooke, "In every civilized country supplying andcl regu'See Professor Newcomb's silly comments on this point in Appendix. THIE POWER TO fiAKE MIOXEY lating the circulating imedium is a function of sovereign prerogative." The reason of this is obvious. Aloney to be a public niediumn of exchange must lpossess legal representative value, and this can be derived only from thle sovereign or law making power of a nation. The bullionists do not concede this, but profess to believe that the government is vested simply with the power to coin gold and silver, because "the State can do the work best, * * as no attestation (of tlhe weight andi purity of coin) furnished by private persons can compete in authority with the stamp imposed by the governmentt mint."* This view of the matter grows out of the peculiar ideas in regard to the nature of money held by those wlho advocate the apecie basis system. Bolnamy Price, Professor of political economy in the University of Oxford, England, says: "Coin, metallic coin, alone is true money and noth-inug else is, unless it be a commodity, as an ox, a cow, or a piece of salt,"-'L)recisely the same theory of mnoney, it will be observed, as that held by the ancient Romanls, who used bars of copper and cattle, and by the American Indian of the present day. The Constitution of the United States confers upon Congress the following, among other, powers, viz: "To lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the commlon defense and general welfare of the United States; * * to borrow money on the credit of the United States; *, to coin monlley, regulate the value thereof and of foreign coins; * * and to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper to carry into effect the foregoing powelrs, etc." It also prohibits the States from coining money, emitting bills of credit, or making anything but gold or silver coin a tender in payment of debts. The exclusive power to make and retgulate the 'Currency and Banking, by Bonlamy Pricee, page 17. 54 A GOVERAXMENTAL FUNCTION. medium of exchange, therefore, dlevolves uponl tlhe Federal Gover1nment At t}e time the Federal Constitution was fiamedl the money question was one that had to be handled with great delicacy. The money power, then as always in fact, was on the alert, and care had to be taken not to incur its hostility, lest it might prevent the ratification of the Conistitution by the several States. When it was proposed to insert a clause in the Constitution empowering the Federal Govermnent "to emit bills of credit," it was boldly stated on the floor of the Convention that "the moneyed interest would oppose the plan of government if paper emissions (bills of credit) be not prohibited," and the clause was rejected by a vote of nine States against to two for. As "bills of credit" are promises to pay i,n lawful money and belong to the specie basis system of mioney, it is fortunate that no suchl provision was inserted in thile Constitution. In this respect its framers, perhaps, "builded better thal they knew." As the Federal Governmenit is clothed with no power "to emit bills of credit," and States are expressly prohibited from1 doing so, it is a very pertinent question as to how either the Federal or a State govelrmennt can delegate that power to a private corpo]ration. Individuals can issue promises to pay, because they are in thle nature of a common contract, but when it comes to corporations issuing promises to pay (bills of credit), under special authority of law, which are clothed with the attributes of monley, it is a very different matter. The well known legal maxim that what one "'does through another he does himlself," would seem to fit the case pretty closely. But the people can not afford to waste time with constitutional quibbles. They can compel their Ptepresentatives in CongI,ress to extinguish banks of issue and "restore the circulation to the nation to wihomi it belongs,"* and if it is necessary to amend 'Thomas Jeffersoni. 55 TI-IE POWER TO lMAKE NIONEY the Constitution in order to accomplish that purpose, they can also do that. But there seems to be no difficulty so far as the Constitution is concerned. That the framers of the Constitution, when they refused to empower the Federal Government "to emit bills of credit," did not intend to prohibit paper money or in any way curtail the legitimate functions of government with respect to making and regulating the medium of exchange of the country, is apparent from cotemporaneous history, as well as the subsequent course of the government. Mr. Madison, who was a imemiber of the Convention which framed the Conastitution, in speaking of his vote against empowering the Federal Government "to emit bills of credit," says: "The vote in the affirmative by Virginia was occasioned by the acquiescence of Mr. Madison, who became satisfied that striking out the words ['to emit bills of credit'] would not disable the governmnent from the use of public notes, as far as they could be safe and proper; and would only cut off the pretext for a paper currency, and particularly for makiilng the bills [of credit currency] a tender either for public or private debts." [See "Madison Papers."] Mr. Jefferson repeatedly urged that banks of issue should be suppresed and that public notes issued by the Federal Governmient should be substituted for bank notes as a medium of exchange. In a letter dated June 24, 1813, to his son-in-law Eppis, who was a member of the committee of ways and means of the national House of Representatives, urging this point, lhe said: "In the war of 1755, our State availed itself of this fund, by issuing a paper currency, bottomed on a specific tax for its redemption, and to insure the credit, bearing an interest of five per cent. Within a very short time, not a bill of this 56 A GOVERN"MIENTAL FUNCTION. emission was found ill circulation. It was locked up) in tile chests of executors, guardians, widows, farmers," etc. "We then issued bills bottomed on a redeeming tax, but bearing no interest. These were received, and never depreciated a silngle farthling." "Inl the revolutionary war, the old Congress, and the States, issued bills, without interest and without tax. They occupied the channels of circulation very freely, until those chainnels were overflowed by an excess beyond the calls of circulation. But although we have so ilmprovidently suffered thl.e field of circulating meditum to be filched from us by private individuals, yet I think we may recover it, in part, and even in the whole, if the States will co-operate with us." "If Treasury bills are emitted, on a tax appropriated for thelir redemption ill fifteen years, and (to insure preference in tle first momlents of competition) bearing an interest of six per cent., there is no one who would not take them in preference to bank paper now afloat, on a principle of patriotism, as well as interest, and they would be withdrawn from circulation into private hoards to a considerable amount. Their credit once established, others might be emitted, bottomed also on a tax, but not bearing interest; and if ever their credit faltered, open public loans, on which these bills alone should be received as specie. These operatiig, as a sinlking fund, would reduce the quantity in circelation, so as to maintain them in an equilibrium with specie. It is not easy to estimate the obstacles which, in the beginning,, we should encouiter in ousting the banks from the possession of circulation." Mr. Jefferson's plan, it will be observed, is identical in principle with the much derided 3.65 inter-convertible bond plan, so ably advocated by Pliny Freeman, Judge Kelley, 57 THE POWER TO MAKE MONEY I-orace Greeley* and a host of able and earnest friends of the American masses. The issue of Treasury notes under the Constitution accordingly began at an early day, though not without meetilng with fierce opposition from the money power, and theilr legality has been sanctioned from the first by all departments of the government. The first issue of Treasury notes was made in pursuance of an act of Congless of June 30, 1812. Further issues were authorized by the acts of Coilgress of February 25, 1813; March 4, and December 26, 1814; October 12, 1837; January 31, and August 31, 1842; July 22, 1846; and January 28, 1857. The validity and constitutionality of these acts were tested and affirmed in the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Thorndike against the United States. Judge Story, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: "By the statutes of the United States, under which the Treasury notes have been issued, it is enacted that suclh notes shall be receivable in payment to the United States for duties, taxes, and sales of public lands, to the full amount of the principle and interest aclcuing, due on such notes. It follows, of course,:that they are a legal tender in payment of debts of this nature, due to the United States; and, by the very terms of the acts, public officers are bound to receive them." NVhen the act of Congress of October 12, 1837, authorizing an issue of Treasury notes, was pending, IMr. Calhoun advocated the measure in strong terns. The following extracts from a speech delivered by him September 19tlh, prior to the passage of the bill, confirm the distinction which we have made between public notes and bills of credit, and explain what was meant when we stated that it would be CHorace Greeley's famous editorial on the.65 Bond plan will be found in the Appenidix. 58 A GOVERNMNIENTAL FUNCTION. more accurate to describe a greenbaek as a promise to receive than a promise to pay.* ie said: "It is, then, my impression, that in the present condition of the world, a paper currency, ill some form, * * is almost indispensable in finahcial and commercial operations of civilized and extensive communities. In many respects it has a vast superiority over a metallic currency, especially in great and extended transactions, by its greater cheapness, lightness, and the facility of determining the amount." * * "It may throw some light on this subject to state, that North Carolina, just after the revolution, issued a large amount of paper, which was made receivable in dues to her; it was also made a legal tender, but whlili, of course, was not obligatory after the adoption of the Federal Constitution. A large amount, say between four and five hundred thousand dollars, remained in circulation after that period, and continued to circulate, for more than twenty years, at par with gold and silver during the whole tine, with no other advantage tian being received in the revenue of the State, which was much less than one hundred thousand dollars per annum." "No one can doubt but that the government credit is better than that of any bank; more reliable-imore safe. Why, then, should it mix it up with the less perfect credit of those institutions? Why not use its own credit to the amount of its own transactions? Why should it not be safe in its own hands, while it shall be considered safe in the hands of eilght hundred private institutions, scattered all over the country. and which have no other object but their own private profit; to increase which they extend their business to the most dangerous extrenies. And why should the community be compelled to give six per cent. discount *Sec page 52. 59 TIlE POWEE TO IMAKE MIONEY for the goverumnelit credit, blended with that of the bank, whenl the superior credit of the government could be furiiished separate, witlhout discount, to the mutual advantage of the government and the community?" * * * "Believing that there might be a sound and safe paper currency, founded on tie credit of the government exclusively, I was desirous that those who are responsible, and have the power, should hlave availed themselves of the opportunity." * * "We are told the form I suggested is but a repetition of the'old Continental money; a ghost that is ever conjured up by all who wish to give the banks an exclusive monopoly of government elredit. The assertion is not true; there is not the least analogy between them. The one was a promise to pay, when there was no revenue; and the other a promise to receive in the dues of government when there is abun dant revenue." "We are told that there is no instance of a government paper that did not depreciate. In reply, I affirm, that there is none, assuming the form I propose, that ever did depreciate. Whenever a paper, receivable in dues of government) had anything like a fair trial, it has succeeded. Instance the case of North Carolina, referred to in my opening, remarks. The drafts of the Treasury, at this molment, witl all their incumbrance, are nearly at par with gold and silver. * * * The case of PRussia lmight also be mentioned. In 1827 she had a fixed paper circulation in the form of bank notes, but which were inconvertible, of upward of one hundred and twenty millions of dollars, estimated in the metallic rouble, and which had for years remained without fluctuation, having nothing to sustain it, but that it was received in the dues of the government, and that too with a revenue of only about ninety millions of dollars annually. I speak on 60 A GOVERXMEXTAL FUNCTION. the authority of a respectable traveller. Other instances, no doubt, might be added, but it needs no such support." "It has another striking advantage over bank circulation, in its superior cheapness, as well as greater stability and safety. Bank paper is cheap to those who make it; but dear, very dear, to those who use it, fully as much as gold and silver. It is the little cost of its manufacture, and the dear rates at which it is furnished to the community, which gives the great profit to those who have a monopoly of the article. Some idea may be formed of the extent of the profit, by the splendid palaces which we see under the name of banking houses, and the vast fortunes which have been accumulated in this branch of business; all of which must ultimately be derived from the productive powers of the community, and of course adds so much to the cost of production. On the other hand, the credit of government, while it would greatly facilitate its financial operations, would cost nothing, or next to nothing, both to it and to the people, and of course would add nothing to the cost of production; which would give to every branch of industry, agriculture, commerce and manufactures, as far as circulation might extend, great advantages, both at home and abroad." Subsequently, 1MIarch,' 1838, MIr. Calhoun, in his speech on the Independent Treasury bill, said: "I now undertake to affirm positively, and without the least fear that I can be answered-what heretofore I have but suggested-that a paper issued by government, with the simple promise to receive it in all dues, leaving its creditors to take it, or gold and silver, at its option, would, to the extent to which it would circulate, form a perfect paper circulation, which could not be abused by the government; that would be as steady and uniform in value as the metals themselves. I shall not go into the discussion now, but on a 61 THE POVWER TO M3AKE MONEY suitable occasion I shall be able to make good every word I have uttered. I will be able to do more-to prove that it is within the constitutional power of Congress to use such a paper, in the management of its finances, according to the most rigid rule of construing the Constitution; and that those at least who think that Congress can authorize tile notes of private corporations to be received in the public dutes are estopped from denying its right to receive its own paper." The United States Treasury notes, issued prior to the war of 1861, had enever been made i' tender in payment of private debts, Inor had they been issued in a suitable form to use as a circulating mediumn of exchange. But when the RPebellion broke out in 1861, the necessity for an incereased amount of money became imperative, and it became necessary to issue public notes better adapted to the wants of the times. The banks of New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, soon after the war began, agreed to lend the Federal Government $150,000,000. After the loan had been negotiated, the Secretary of the Treasury, unexpectedly to the banks, required it to be paid in specie instead of bank notes, and the result was that the banks throughout the country were obliged to suspend specie payments. The government stood in need of soldiers, ships, gunboats, cannon, guns, ammunition, commissary stores, quartermlaster stores, transportation, etc. The people at large were obliged to supply the wants of the government, and fortunatelypossessed both the ability and willingness to do so, but it was impracticable to acconmplish the ends desired except through the instrumentality of a medium of exchangemoney. Congress, by virtue of the sovereign prerogative inherent in the people, and as their representative duly authorized by the Constitution, enacted a law authorizing and directing the Treasury Departmient of the Federal Gov 62 A GOVERNXENXTAL FUXCTION. erninment to issue public notes which should be a legal tender for debts, both public and private. As they were issued by the people in their collective capacity, and represented the property and products of the nation, it was eminently just and proper that they should declare that what they did in their collective capacity should be binding upon them individually. In fact, in no other way could the people all have been put upon the same platform with respect to the wants of the government, in the exigency which then existed, than by declaring their public notes a legal tender in payment of debts. These notes, as we have said, represented the property and products of the nation, and by virtue of their legal tender property they naturally and necessarily conformed to the unit and standard of value of the country. They therefore possessed the power to measure and exchanige, as well :s to represent value, and consequently possessed all the aLttributes of money-in a word were money, in every sense of the term; and the American people found themselves, unexpectedly, it is true, in the enjoyment (to use the language of President Grant) " of the best currency that was ever devised." IWhen public notes were issued, the people ill a collective capacity in effect said to those who were able to supply the wants of the government: "Give the government all the guns, ships, food, transportation, etc., that is required, and the rest of the people will make good to you whatever amount you may contribute over and above your share out of any other property or products which they may possess that you need or desire." As it was a matter of compulsion on the part of the people to supply the wants of the goverlnment, it was an act of supreme folly in them to encumber their circulating medium with interest directly or indirectly, as was done, which can only be compared to a man paying 63 THE POWER TO 3IAKE MIONEY somebody else interest for the privilege of using his own money. It simply made it the prey of speculators and money dealers, greatly to the disadvantage of the nation. That it was unnecessary appears from the fact that greenbacks to the amount of hundreds of millions of dollars circulated in the channels of trade and performed all the uses of money, as effectively as gold or silver could have done, for more than a year before the United States bonds, bearing six per cent. interest in gold, with which they were interchlangeable, were issued, and continued to do so after their interchangeability was taken away by act of Congress. MIr. Spaulding, chairman of the sub-committee of Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, in a speech on Jailuary 12, 1863, said: "The Secretary has paid out nearly $250,000,000 legal tender notes, being all that he was authorized to issue; and notwithstanding he has had authority for the last ten months to sell $500,000,000 of five-twenty six per cent. bonds at the market price, he has only disposed of about $25,000,000, and has still authorityto sell $475,000,000 at the market price, and take his pay for them in legal tender notes. One of the reasons why more of these bonds have not been disposed of is, that there has been no redundancy of currency, and it has been difficult for the Secretary of the Treasury to get legal tender notes on a sale of tlhe bonds and seven-three-tenths notes that he has already negotiated." In other words, the people needed greenbacks far worse than anything else, and could not spare them to invest in fivetwenty bonds, which have since been paid both principal and interest in gold. At this time gold ranged from 134 to 160. Had Congress not yielded to the demands of the money power, but passed the legal tender act as originally framed and offered in the House of Representatives, that is to say, had made the greenback a full legal tender (receivable for 64 A GOVERNMENTAL FUNCTION. duties on imports as well as other public dues), and not made the interest on the bonds, with which it was intended to be interchangeable, payable in gold; and resorted to a judicious system of taxation, using the bonds only to sustain the greenback in -case its credit ever faltered, by receiving it alone as specie for bonds, there is every reason to believe, from the experience of the country at that time and since, that the war could have been carried through successfully without incurring but a fraction of the debt now owed by the Federal Government, and that the debt, whatever it might be, would be held mostly at home instead of abroad. But no sooner had the legal tender act made its appearance in Congress than the money power was up in arms against its passage. Delegations of bankers from New York, Boston and Philadelphia hurried to Washiington; and formally organizing, by selecting one of their number chairman, they summoned the Finance Committee of the Senate, the Committee of Ways and Means of the House, and the Secretary of the Treasury into their presence. In the end the money power, although it did not succeed in preventing the passage of a legal tender act, secured a complete triumph. The interest of the bonds was made payable in gold in order to create a demand for gold, and then duties on imports were made payable in gold in order to get the gold to pay the interest on bonds. A premium on gold was thus established, and the public notes of the government were dishonored by the government itself; and, as we have seen, the premium on gold was run up to 160 before ever the gold interest bearing bonds of the yovernment were issued. A National Banking law was also enacted to enable the money power to regain control of the monetary affairs of the nation. This was the beginning of the most stupendous robbery, boldly and openly planned and remorse 5 65 THE POWER TO MAKE M[ONEY lessly executed, to be found in the annals of any nation, of either ancient (or modern times, the details of which will be accurately set forth in a coming chapter (Chapter VI.), and the end is not yet. The legal tender acts passed during the war not only received the sanction of every department of the government, but met with the u~liversal approbation of the wealth producing classes of the nation. Their validity and col~titutionality, which were of course contested by the money power, have been affirmed b)y the Supreme Court of the IUnited States, and by the Supreme Court of fifteen States, and only in one instance has a State Court failed to endorse their constitutionality. The Constitution of the United States does not in express terms confer upon Congress the authority to make anything a tender in payment of debts, the word tender being no where mentioned in that instrument, except in the clause prohibiting States from making anythilg but gold and silver a tender, but the right to do so is so clearly anl incident of the general powers of Congress over thie currency of the country, that it has never hesitated to enact such laws upon the subject as the interests of the nation required. The right to declare by law what shall be a tender in paymenlt of debts has thus been exercised by Congress in twenty-four statutes passed duringc the administrations of W\ashington, Jefferson, M,adison, Monroe, Jackson, Tyler, Polk, Fillm1ore, Pierce, Lincolil ald Jolinson. But driven out of the Sul-preie Court, the money power is now busy striving to inculcate the doctrine that Congress could only make public notes a tender in payment of private debts in time of war. A distiiinuished lawyer,* who has made himself conspicuous of late in his effots to mislead the public upon this subject, says: "That the only currency 'Honi. Ieverdy Jolinson. 66 A GOVERNMENTAL FUNCTION. known to the Constitution is gold and silver, or paper convertible into it on demand," and gives it as his opinion that the Supreme Court did not intend to go so far, in the legal tender cases decided at the December term, 1870, as to decide that such an act would be constitutional if passed in time of peace. As the fiamers of the Constitution, as has already been explained, refused to authorize Congress "to emit bills of credit," (paper convertible into gold or silver on demand) it is evident that this distinguished advocate of banks of issue, in asserting that such at currency is "known to the Constitution," has allowed his zeal to outrun his judgment, and he is no less in error in regard to the opinion of the Supreme Court. Mr. Justice Bradley, one of the Judges of the Supreme Court, who read an opinion ill the cases referred to, says: "Another ground of the power to issue Treasury notes or bills is the necessity of providing a proper currency for the country, and especially of providing for the failure or disappearance of the ordinary currency in times of financial pressure and threatened collapse of commercial credit. Currency is a national necessity. The operations of the govemrnment, as well as private transactions, are wholly dependcnt upon it. The State governments are prohibited from ,naking money or issuing bills. Uniformity of money was one of the objects of the Constitution. The coinage of money and regulation of its value is conferred upon the General Government exclusively. That government has also the power to issue bills. It follows as a matter of necessity, as a consequence of these various provisions, that it is specially the duty of the General Government to provide a national currency. The States cannot do it, except by the charter of local banks, anld that remedv, if strictly legitimate and constitutional, is inadequate, fluctuating, uncertain and 67 II II i I THE POWER TO MAKE MONEY insecure, and operates with all the partiality to local interests, which it was the very object of the Constitution to avoid. But regarded as a duty of the General Government, it is strictly in accordance with the spirit of the Constitution, as well as in line with national necessities." (12 Wallace's Reports, 562.) The necessities of peace may be as great, though of a different character, as those of war, as the American people are experiencing at the present time. For several years the nation has been suffering a daily loss of millions of dollars, by reasor of its inability to develop the producing forces of the country, as they mnight be developed under wiser laws. XNor need any one indulge the hope that "tinmes will change," because there can be no change, except from bad to worse, until the cause which has produced the present prostration of all forms of productive industry is removed. The repeal of the act decreeing specie resumption January 1, 1879, which rests as anil incubus upon the industries of the country, might afford temporary relief, and would certainly avert the general bankruptcy, which is inevitable if its provisions are carried out, but to place the affairs of the nation on a sure foiundationl something more is required, viz., the extinction of banks oI issue and the adoption of a monetary system based on sound principles. Specie circulation would then come naturally as soon as the nation produced a sufficient surplus of products to cause its return. This was witnessed in France after the late war with Germany. Stimulated by an abundance of irredeemable legal tender paper money, the French people bent every energy towards producing wealth, and in less than three years astonished the world by paying off the German indemnity of $1,000,000,000; and specie now circulates there side by side at par with irredeemable paper money. The immense sum paid by France to Ger 68 A GOVERNIMENTAL FUNCTION. many was not paid in actual gold, but in bills of exchange, etc., which represented the proceeds of French industry. It is a common error in the United States to suppose that interest on the public debt is paid in gold, and that therefore it is nlecessaryto require duties on imports to be paid in gold. It is a mere fiction. The interest of American securities held abroad ale paid in products, and products do not sell for a farthing more or less in foreign markets, on account of being measured and exchanged in the United States by greenbacks instead of gold. The premium, however, on gold, which exists by reason of the law requiring duties on imports to be paid in gold, is a disadvantage to all classes, except the bondholder and money dealer, which should be remedied. If the greenback were made a full legal tender, and sustained by an interest-bearing bond with which it was interchangeable, there is every reason to believe that the premiuln on gold would almost totally disappear. In 1861, by the acts of July 1.7 and August 5, the Treasury Department was authorized to issue $50,000,000 in what were commonly known then as demand notes. An additional issue of $10,000,000 was authorized Feb.10,1862. These notes were receivable for all public dues, duties on imports included, and were subsequently made a legal tender for private debts, and the result was that they commanded the same premium over the ordinary greenback that gold did, and went up with gold, step by step, to the enormous premium of 285. Could any better evidence than this be required to prove that a greenback made a full legal tender would circulate at par, or nearly so, with gold? These "demand notes" were of course very obnoxious to the bullionists, because they gave the lie to all their theories about paper money, and accordingly they were got out of the way at the earliest moment possible all except about $75,000, which are probably lost and, if such is the case, constitute a gain of that amount to the people at large. 69 II I HOW PAPER M/ONEY ISSUED BY THE HOW PAPER MONE']Y ISSUED BY THE GOVERN:3IENT REPRE SENTS -VALUE. The nature of moniey has been so constantlyy and generally misrepresented that, as we have already suggested, it is not surprising that people find it difficult to understand how a )iece of paper issued by the government represents value. This can be fully understood by considering briefly the attitude of the individual with respect to his duties and obligations to the government. In an organized state of society the controlling power, or sovereignty, is exercised for the common good through the agency of a government. As the sovereignity in the United States resides in the people ait, large, the duties of the individual may be said to be selfimposed. The powers with whicl the goverlmnenlt, whether Federal, State, or local, is vested, imiply a correspondinlg duty on the part of the individual. It isl the duty of the Federal Government to provide for the common defense and general welfare. In time of peace it imposes taxes to defray the expenses of government andl discharge its obligations; and in tiite of war it can demand the personal services of the individual. Thus the entire wealth of the nation is held subject to the needs of the State. Private property is taken daily, no matter how much it may be endeared to the ilndividual by association, for public uses, as in thie case of roads, streets, etc., and the tax warrant takes precedence over all other liens, without respect to priority The expenses of the government arel paid out of the earnings of the people at large. When the goverinment needs money it has to look to the people for it; taxes are laid and the people are obliged to respond., But if there is no money ill the country, people are muiable not only to carry on private transactions, but to supply the necessities of the government. They may possess property and lprodlucts ilr 70 (;OVLRNMA ENiT REtlI'IESIENTS VALtUE. abundance,, but they cain not be imade ava.ilable fo-r the uses of the government, except tlrou,gh the instrumentality of a medium of exchange, and it is lnecessary, therefore, that a medium of exchange be devised. Tihe government migiht borrow gold or silver, or the credit of corporations in the shape of bank notes, by paying interest; but why should the people be compelled to pay interest for the use of a commodity like gold, when they have abundance of other commodities at the service of the government, which only require a medium of exchange to be made available, or for the credit of corporatiQns, when their own credit is much better than that of any corporation? Through the agency of the Federal Government, up)on wllom, under the Conlstitution, that duty devolves exclusively, the people in a collective capacity can issue their owni notes, whicli cover the entire property and wealth of the nation, including gold, silvereverything, in,. word, that can be reached by a tax warranit. These notes represent property to the amount inscribed on their face, which the goverlnmenlt w,ts entitled to demand in the way of taxes at the tilme the notes werei issued. It was in this sense that CalhouLii declared that they were in reality "promises to receive," and bore no anialogy to notes pronmising paylment ill money. As between citizen and government they are the same as llmoney, and, if the individual iiiL turn is not obliged to receive theim as the representative of property to the aminounit inscribed on their face, it is tantamount to the people repudiatingc individually what they have done collectively. It is, therefore, but a matter of simple justice and equity that Congress should declare the public notes of the governiment a legal tender. It is also a n-iatter of great advantage to the people, for when a public note is made a legal tender it acquires all the functions and serves all the purposes of ioneicy. The public note is I 7 1 HOW PAPER MONEY ISSUED BY THE not, then, one thing to the government and another to the people, but its value becomes fixed and certain, as determined by law. A dollar legal tender note of the government then represents a dollar's worth of property-neither more nor less. It consequently corresponds to the unit of value fixed in the minceLs of the people by usage and education, and is a measure of value. It has, therefore, representative value and the power to measure and exchange property; in other words, all the attributes or functions of money. As it represents a dollar's worth of property, it cannot vary as a standard or measure of value, except as the unit of value may vary in the nminds of the people. This is not the case with money possessing intrinsic value, because its power as money then depends chiefly upon the value of the material of which it is made, and as that will fluctuate according to the laws of supply and demand, it cannot be used as a fixed measure of value. Thus gold fluctuates in value, and is itself, whether in coin or bullion, a thing to be measured. That a measure of value must possess intrinsic value is a dogma of the schools, which men of science, out of a desire to be consistent perhaps, adhere to —notwithstanding the fact that they are furnished with abundant proof to the contrary in almnost every transaction of daily life-with as much pertinacituy, as the men of science and the churlchmen of the 17th century adhered to the opinion that it was the sun that revolved around the earth and not the earth around the sun. WhenI the Federal Governeniit pays out a dollar legal tender note for value received, it will be asked how, when and where is the holder to obtain the property or value which it represents? The Federal Governmient could say, this note represents property, which the government is now entitled to receive, and a tax warrant can produce the property any moment, if it takes the last dollar's worth ) 72 GOVERNMIENT REPRESENTS VALTJUE in the country; but the government is constantly receiving property, or its equivalent, in the shape of revenue, and there is no necessity to make a special levy of taxes to pay this particular dollar; nor is there any necessity to fix a time for its redemption in property. Being a legal tender, every individual in the nation will take it at the value inscribed on its face, and in the natural course of events it will redeem itself, in one sense, by returning to the Federal Treasury in the form of taxes or revenue. It was for this reason that, in the case of North Carolina, mentioned by AMr. Calhoun, several hundred thousand dollars of legal tender paper money, issued by the government of that State, circulated for years at par with gold and silver, with no other advantage than being received in the revenue of the State, which was less than one hundred thousand dollars per annum. The wealth of the United States is estimated at over $40,000,000,000. The annual expenditures of the Federal Government amount to about $300,000,000, requiring a corresponding revenue. The amount of public notes, based on sound principles, which the Federal Government, backed by $40,000,000,000 of property, with a revenue of $300,000,000 a year, could safely issue, is a matter of opinion, arrived at in much the same way that the credit of an individual is measured. The amount of money required by a nation is just what can be used safely and profitably in carrying on its affairs, public and private. It will vary in different years and at different seasons of the same year, through the operation of causes existing in various parts of the world. Hence the necessity of sustaining the legal tender note of the government with a bond, with which it may be interchangeable in times of redundancy; and it might be possible, if the government were out of debt, to accomplish the same end by increasing or diminishing the rates of taxation as occasion required. 73 74 GOVERNMENT SECURITY TIlE SAFEST. NOTE.-OOn page 52 we stated that "thie foundation of the Treasury note (greenback) is the same as that of a United States bond, which secures the payment and sustains the value of thie bank note, and it, therefore, possesses the highest and best security that a medium of exclhangte can possibly have." Professor Bonamy Price, although lhe seems to think that notes issued by a government are not as good as bank notes, because "there are no means for compelling a government to pay money, if it choses to say that it has none," (Currency and Bailking, page 45) neveirtheless, is of the opinion that no guarantee for the solvency of the notes of a bank is so natural and safe as a deposit of government securities. He says: "Bank notes circulate largely among the poor and uneducated, and when the bank breaks, tile loss is severe and distressing. These facts supply ample warrant to the State to require of issuing bankers, not only that they should pay their debts to the utmiost extent of their fortunes, as any other person, but further that they shall lodge such security as shall always provide for the payment of the d(ebt acknowledged on the note. A guarantee for the solvency of the notes miay be obtained in various ways, but none seems so niatural and so simiple as a deposit of government securities with some officer of the State. It combines two advantages-safety, and a natural and fitting profit for the banker from the interest accruing on the bonds or stock. The old Exchequer bill of the English governlmelnt was an excellent specimen of this kind of security. It could always be paid in for taxes, bore a daily interest, and was thoroughly trusted, and with reason, by the whole community." (Currenvcy and Banking, page 53.) It is a bad cause that obliges a professor of political economy to blow hot and cold in this manner. CHAPTER III. BANKS AND BANKING. BANKING had its origin at an early period in the history of commerce, and a banker originally was simply a dealer ill money. In the New Testament mention is made of a bank in which money could be placed at interest, and only recently the tablets of anI ancient banker, with their inscriptions uneffaced, were brough]t to light by the explorations now being made amongst the ruins of Italy. In Englancd, until as late as the beginining of the 18th century, the business of banking was carried on by goldsmiths. Banking, however, as it is now conducted, is an institution of inode.ii growth. The check, certificate and bill of exchange have come to perform anl important part in the work of exchal)ge. It is not tihe intention to enter into a consideration of the principles and details of banking, futrthler than is necessary to a propelr understa,nding of the question of money, with which it is initilnately connected. 3onley, as has been explained, is an agency of trade, u(d, in an accumulated form as capital, an instrument of production. The first thougrht. of the possessor of money is safety and the next profit. Mone(y cannot accumulate value of itself, and consequently has to be put to use6 in order to bring its owner a return. Then hoarded it is no, only useless to the owner, but society is deprived of the advantage of an impoitant agency of exchanige and of production. It is, therefore, a matter of importance to society, as well as to the individual, that money should be tffoided every opportunity to occupy the channels of trade and perform the uses for which it is I I I i t I I i BANKS AND BANKING. designed. The interests of society, as we have seen, are best promoted by a division of labor. One class is devoted to agriculture, another to manufactures, trade, education, etc., etc., and each class is again subdivided into innumerable forms of industry. In this way it happens that a class has grown up which is specially engaged in the collection, custody and investment of money, and in dealing in debts and credits based on money. The banker offers reasonable safety and repayment on demand, or moderate interest, and in turn lends the money for the purposes of trade. The offices of a bank are to receive money on deposit subject to order, to collect money, to invest money, to lend money, and to buy and sell securities and exchange. The check and bill of exchange are invaluable aids to business and commerce, and for many purposes are preferable to money. The great facilities which a bank affords for the transaction of business, as well as its ability to promote the circulation of money and foster enterprise, render it an agency of trade, second in importance and usefulness only to money itself. Like all other human institutions, banking is of course liable to abuses, but when legitimately and properly conducted there is no other institution so closely connected with the well being of every individual, or one which is capable of rendering so much service to society. It is, therefore, important that banking, like money, should be based upon sound principles. Banking legitimately conducted is purely a matter of private enterprise, as much so as dealing in grain or lumber, and the relation, which the banker sustains to the community, differs in no respect from that of an individnal, following any other pursuit or profession. Banking should, therefore, be free, and subject only to general laws, such as the laws under which partnerships are conducted. The generally recognized and acknowledged '76 BANKS AND BANKING. importance of banks, however, have led individuals to seek and governments to bestow upon them powers and privileges, such as are bestowed upon the vocation of no other class of society. We refer more particularly to the power, with which banks are clothed by law, of issuing promissory notes, nominally payable on demand, to circulate as money. There is no reason why bankers should be invested with this authority any more than any other class of society. The temporary relief which, by reason of this privilege, they are enabled to afford to individuals, and from which the community derives a benefit, has blinded society to the far greater evils which flow from the custom. A distinguished writer* upon the subject of money and finance, Iin speaking of this feature of banking, says: "The bad practice which originated with the Bank of England was an agreement to pay gold on demand for its inscriptions of credit. This was to undertake to do an impossibility. The general debts of a bank are redeemed by its general resources, and these consist mostly of loans and discounts which mature in the future. A more flagrant violation of sound banking was never conceived. It has repeatedly involved the banks of the United States in fatal embarrassments, and brought; ruin upon thousands of merchants who were otherwise able to pay their debts and retain a handsome surplus." It is not alone the excessive and unfair profits which this system (banks of issue) enables those engaged in it to reap from the public, but the periodical derangement of business and trade, so fruitful of disaster, which it leads to, that renders it so obnoxious. Jefferson, who never failed to warn his countrymen against the evils of the system, in a letter upon the subject in 1813, said: "But it will be asked,'Are we to have no banks? Are merchants and others to be deprived 'J. S. Gibbons, in Johnson's Universal Cyclopsedia. 77 i I . BA-NKS AND BANKING. of the resource of short accommodations found so conven ient?' I answer, let us have banks; but let them be such as are alone to be found in any country on earthl, except Great Britain. * No one has a natural right to the trade of amoney-lender but lie who has the money to lend. Let those, then, among us who lhave a moneyed capital, and who prefer employing it in loans rather than otherwise, set up banks, and give casl, or national bills (United States Treasury notes) for the notes they discount. It is from Great Britain we copy the idea of giving paper in exchange for discounted bills; and while we have derived from that country some good principles of government and legislation, we unfortunately run into the most servile imiitation of all her practices, ruinous as they are to her, and with the gulf yawning before us into which these practices are precipitating helr." The dependence of the government upon a medium of eexchange for its revenues has contributed largely to the abuses of the banking system, to which we refer, but since the Treasury note, made a legal tender, has been found to answer all the purposes of monley, much better than gold, silver, or the bank note, there is no longer any reason for tolerating banks of issue. That this theoTry in substance finds able advocates, even in England, is manifest from the following extract frontm aii article in the West)ninster Review of October, 1873, entitled, "The Mint and the Bank of England:" "In breaking this monopoly of the bank, we should be taking great strides toward the attainment of that ideal system of currency which Sir Robert Peel must have had in heart when he passed his currency laws; a system under which the State shall be the sole fountain of issue; under which no money shall circulate on credit, or if it does, shall 0 BANKS AND BANKING. circulate on the credit of the State, all bank notes, as well as coins, bearing the image and superscription of the head of the State, and under which all profits upon the issue of money shall form part of the imperial revenue. * * The power of issue, now exercised by the Bank of Ellgland, and by the English, Irish and Scotch banks, [all private corporations,] is a relic of feudalism. * * The manufacture of coin has been suppressed long ago, but the manufacture of paper money still remains, and the profits of this manufacture are allowed to remain in private hands, the State taking upon itself the manufacture of the only part of the currency upon which there is, or can be, a loss. It is high time this state of things ceased; that all rights of issue were gathered into the hands of the State; that the debt -of the Bank of England was paid off; that all notes but those of the State were suppressed; that the powers of issue, now exercised by the banks, were vested in the royal mint, * * and that the profits upon paper currency were claimed by the State, and appropriated * * * to the reduction of taxation." Public banks in the United States are conducted solely for private gain, and are free from governmental connection or control. They are, however, as we have already observed, invested with extraordinary privileges and franchises of a public nature, intended for the public good. While they are eminently successful in enabling their corporators and stockholders to secure their own ends, they are far from being beneficial to the public. The languishing condition of the country at the present time demands that the right to make a circulating medium of exchange shall no longer be suffered to remain in private hands, but shall be restored to the nation, to whom it belongs, and by whom alone it can be exercised in a spirit of equal and exact justice to all. 79 -I I II I i CHAPTER IV. BANKS OF TIlE OLD WORLD. IMPORTANT lessons can be learned from the teachings of experience. A brief glance at the banks of the old world will be found useful at the present time, as well as interesting. The first bank of which history gives an authentic account is the Bank of Venice, established in the year 1171, and which, strange to say, furnishes an example of success that has never been equaled. TIlE BANK OF VENICE. The Bank of Venice was established under peculiar circumstances. The Venetian government, under the Duke Vitale Michel II., was engaged in a war with the Grecian Emperor, on account of an outrage perpetrated in his empire upon Venetian merchants, and also in a war with the Emperor of the West. Standing greatly in need of means, the Venetian government resorted to a forced loan, and required its wealthiest citizens to contribute to the support of the government according to their ability. A chamber of loans was organized, of which the creditors were constituted the managers, books were opened and aln inscription of credit entered for the amount paid in, by each, on which the State agreed to pay interest at the rate of four per cent. a year. These inscriptions of credit were made transferable in whole or in part on the books of the bank. The government entered into no obligation to repay the money, but, to quote froma Colwell, "reimbursement of the loan ceased to be regarded as either necessary or desi i i BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. rable. Every creditor was reimnbursed when he transferred his claim on the books of the bank. From being convenient and valuable as an investment readily obtained, and as readily disposed of, it became, by a natural process, a medium of payment in transactions of commerce. That fund, which was desirable to all seeking investment, would be willingly, in many instances, accepted in payment of debts already existing, or for goods just purchased. There is good reason to believe that this fund was largely used in this way for centuries before the final arrangements were made, of which our accounts are more clear. * * There is no question, although we have not the details, that the government had found it perfectly easy to enlarge the amount of the original loan or stock of tlhe bank, as the demand for its funds generally exceecded the supply. All money deposited for the purpose of obtaining a credit in bank was accounted an addition to the original loan, and as such taken into the public treasury as money lent the State. Every such investment increased the stock of the bank, and replenished the treasury of the republic. If individuals could make purchases and pay debts by transfers in bank, the public treasury could well afford to receive, in payment of its dues, credits in bank, as that would only be equivalent to taking up its own obligations. Thus, the more these credits were employed, the more the demand for thelm increased, the more rapidly money flowed into the treasury, and the more readily the government could afford to receive payment of its revenues in the funds of the bank." The history of the Bank of Venlice is presented by Mr. Colwell, in his able work entitled, "The Ways and MIeans of Payment," in such a clear light, that we can do no better than to continue Io quote from him at length as follows: "The way was opened, by the experience of two centuries 81 BANKS OF THlE OLD WORLD. and a half, for the next chief characteristic of the Bank of Venice. In the year 1423, in the administration of the Doge Thoomas _zvonce9tigo, it was decreed that all bills of exchange payable in Venice, whether domestic or foreign, should be paid, unless otherwise stipulated and so expressed, in the bank; and that all payments in gross, or in wholesale transactions, should be effected also in bank. This at once brought the mass of the payments of that great commercial city to the bank. Whatever irregularities, and whatever confusion had prevailed, this introduced a uniform and, from long familiarity with the bank, an intelligible system. The endless diversity, and bad condition of the coins circulating in Venice were a sufficient recommendation of the new regulation to all who had not very special reasons, indeed, for disliking it. This measure at once created a great additional demand for the funds of the bank, and brought large sums into the public coffers. The government, however, no longer paid interest for the sums received from the bank. The funds obtained in this way were brought to the bank for the payment of bills of exchange, and were paid in for that purpose, and not with a view to interest. The rapid succession of payments occurring at a point where all the payments of Venetian commerce were accomplished, made the intervals during which the funds remained in the hands of any one merchant too short to make him solicitous about interest on balances or deposits. As all payments of the kind above designated were, by law, to be made in bank, unless otherwise agreed, and as that mode of payment was far more convenient, it became almost the exclusive usage of trade. All who had engagements to meet, found them in the bank: of course, all such provided the bank funds necessary to meet them, or carried to the bank the amount of coins requisite for the purpose. Tiie government con 82 i 4 I BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. tinued to take all money paid ill as a consideration for allowing an inscription on the books of the bank to the credit of the depositor. The sums which thus flowed through the bank into the treasury would, with the previous bank funds, make uLp the quantity needful for the convenient discharge of the commercial payments of Venice. As this amount fluctuated from year to year, and during each year, with the course of commerce, a very effective mnode of accommodating the supply of bank funds to the exigency of the demand came obviously into use. When the payments in bank were heavy, and the bank funds in great demand, money flowed freely into bank, and the credits were proportionably increased. When an occasional demand for the precious metals arose, the holders of bank funds could readily dispose of them at a slight reduction for coins. The purchasers of bank funds were sure of meeting soon a demand for them; for the demand for a medium in which the ever-recurring payments of debts were made so much exceeded in intensity the occasional demand for specie for exportation, or any other use, that during the whole existence of the bank, with very slight exception, the bank fund was at a large premium over coins, so large that it was finally fixed by law at 20 per cent." "The republic could well afford to maintain a liberal policy towards an institution so important, both as a fiscal and commercial agent. That the inhabitants of Venice were satisfied, we cannot doubt, as not an objection was ever made to the bank, at least none is extant; neither book, nor speech, nor pamphlet, have we found, in which any merchant or dweller in Venice ever put forth any condemnation of its theory, or its practice. There was no hesitation in carrying money to the bank, so long as it was not doubted that the bank funds would purchase specie without a loss, 83 BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. whenever it might be needed; and the uniform premium of bank funds settled that point. Under such a system, the regular payments of trade would proceed with a rapidity and economy previously unknown, so far as the history of commerce informs us." * "It is worthy of remark, that this very efficient mode of adjustment discovered and used so largely at this early period in the history of commerce, was not dependent for its efficacy on the guarantee of the republic. That guarantee sprung out of the mode in which the bank originated: this convenient method of liquidation sprung from the use of this new substitute for money." "The facility of payment furnished by the bank, which made it the admiration of Europe, honorable at once to the government and merchants of Venice, and a support to the pride and power of its people, consisted in substituting, as a medium of payment, the debt of the republic for current coin. * * * The government took the coins one time for all, giving therefor a corresponding credit in the bank; and allowed the depositor or lender to transfer his claim upon the republic in payment of his debt, in place of transferring over the coin in each payment. Whatever men can employ in payment of debts, they will be willing to receive in payment, and this independent of any legal compulsion." "Experience soon evinced the power and convenience of this mode of payment. These bank credits were divisible to every desirable degree, and they could be transferred with a readiness, speed and safety, beyond all comparison, superior to any mode of paying in coin. The same sum or credit might be kept in such rapid circulation, as to effect an amount of payments, in a specified time, far beyond any possible movement of coin. This rapidity became a great 84 tI BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. economy, for a much less sumin of credits was made to effect a given amount of payments with far greater speed than could have been attained with coin. But this economy resulting from an increased speed and power of circulation was still more important, arising fron the fact that the coins which were deposited as the basis of the credit were very soon again restored to the usual channels of circulation by the payments of government. Thus the coin was not withdrawn from its proper functions, and the credits remained a perpetual fund, to be employed in large payments. This system of payments was so well adapted to the exigencies of commerce, that it was maintained in full vigor, in the great commercial city of Venice, for almost four htndred years. It was an institution or device of the credit system, for by its aid payments were effected, and that to a vast amount annually, without any use of coins or bullion. It only perished, when the city itself fell, at the conquest of Italy by Napoleon; but the conqueror carried off no coin, no penny of prey. The credits of the bank were crushed under the rude touch of an invading foe. They were lost to the proprietor, but no equivalent passed into the hands of the destroyers. If the holders of these credits suffered, the invaders were not enriched. In assuming the sovereignty of Venice, thle conqueror assumed the right and duty of making good these bank credits." The Venetian government was careful at all times to provide for the wants of the public. In course of time it became necessary to establish in the bank a department for the custody of coin or bullion, which the owner might desire to use. Deposits of this kind were subject to the order of the owner, who could reclaim them at pleasure, or transfer them in the same manner as bank credits. This feature of the bank prove eminently useful to the public, but did not 85 II 1. i BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. lead to any dimiinutionl in the funds of the bank itself, as the demand for inscriptions of credit was always greater than the supply. The original capital of the bank was 2,000,000 ducats, but it rose to about 5,000,000 in the 18Sth century, and to over 14,000,000 (about $16,000,000) at the close of its long and remarkable career. The history of the bank of Venice establishes several important facts of deep significance to the American people at the present time. The inscriptions of credit of the bank were simply evidences of indebtedness of the government, bearing no interest, which constituted a medium of exchange. The law which required all bills of exchange payable in Venice to be paid at the bank, unless otherwise expressly stipulated, was apparently an arbitrary requirement, but it worked no injustice; on the contrary it increased the strength of the bank inscriptions, and resulted in greatly promoting the facilities of commerce and in making Venice the commercial metropolis of the world for centuries. The evidences of indebtedness, which the government in the first instance required its creditors to take, it in effect made a legal tender for private debts, which was no more than just. The large premium which these inscriptions bore was not due to any act of the government, but to the value attached to them by the public. It rose to as high as 30 per cent., when the goverment found it necessary to impose a limitation, which was fixed at 20 per cenit. This premium on inscriptions of, credit in a bank, which were not redeemable or payable in gold, (mere "rag money" they might be styled) which existed for centuries, is inexplicable on any theory which can be advanced by the bullionists. The Venetians were enabled, by the use of their irredeemable inscriptions of credit, to achieve a degree of power and prosperity, which they retained for centuries, that proved a 86 I BANKS OF THIE OLD WORLD. constant source of envy and wonder to the rest of the world; and durib1g thle whole time they never once suffered from commercial crashes or money panics, such as are experienced in England and the LUnited States every six to ten years. It has been a matter of surlprise that other nations witnessing the prosperity of Venice did not imitate her example, but that is not half so strange as the fact that the people of the United States, having experienced the great advantages of even partial legal tender paper money, should blindly cling to the rotten and disastrous specie basis system of banks of issue. TIIE BANK OF GENOA. The Bank of Genoa was established early in the 13th century, and, like the Bank of Venice, had its origin in the necessities of the State. The loans upon which it was based were not, however, forced, but were the spontaneous offerings of the people. The creditors of the bank became a very powerful body. In the course of time the bank adopted various new devices, and its system became greatly complicated. According to Colwell, thie Bank of Genoa was the first to originate the bank note, which has since played so important a part in the affairs of the world. It met with the same fate that befell the Bank of Venice at thie time of the French invasion under Napoleon. TIIE BANK OF AMSTERPDAIM. The Bank of Amsterdam was established in 1609 on the theory that deposits once made could never be withdrawn. For nearly two centuries it enjoyed great credit, and contributed largely to the prosperity of Ansterdclam. Coin and bullion were also received on special deposit, and couldcl be reclaimed by the owner at pleasure. The fact that deposits once made could not be withdrawn, resulted in the bank 87 i i I BANKS OF TIlE OLD WORLD. accumulating a vast amount of money, but how much was kept a secret. When the supply of credits based on deposits exceeded the demand, the excess was bought up by the bank, through brokers, at a premiumi of four per cent. In 1790 it was discovered that, during the preceding fifty years, large loans had been secretly made to the East India Company, the Provinces of Holland and the city of Amsterdam, and that there was but little treasure left in the bank. It consequently failed through the unfaithfulness of its officers. TIlE BANKI OF HAM[BURG. The Bank of Ilamburg was established in 1619 on the model of the Bank of Amsterdamn. It is still in existence, and is a useful and flourishing institution. THE BANK OF ENGLAND. The next great bank established in the course of time was the Bank of England, an institution which has exercised, from its organization, a powerful influence ill thie commercial and financial affairs of the world. Its charter was obtained in 1694, and it went into operation January 1, 1695. Its charter conferred on it full authority to borrowv or receive money and give security for the same under seal, buy or sell bullion, gold or silver, etc., etc. No special power was granted to issue bank notes, but the authority to do so was assumed as an incident to the general powers with which the bank was invested. It was, in brief, chartered as a bank of deposit, loan, discount, issue and circulation. The whole amount of the capital stock originally subscribed, ~1,200,000, was handed over to the government as a special loan, the interest on which was secured by certain taxes designated for that purpose, and the sumn of $20,000 a year was allowed by the government to the bank for the management of the loan. The capital stock of th e ba Bk is now out 88 BANKS OF THE OLD WORLDIS o X14,000,000, and the accuniulated profits about ~3,000,000 in all about $88,000,000. It can issue balnk notes to the amount of $70,000,0000, not under ~5 ($25) in denomination, against that amount of government securities, and also to the amount of gold and silver held in its vaults for their redemption. At an early period in the career of the bank, it took a bold and dangerous step, which introduced a new feature in banking. By its charter the bank was authorized to deal in bills of exchange and promissory notes, and, as has been mentioned, it also assumed the right to issue its own notes. Bills of exchange and promissory notes, then as now, entered largely into all commercial transactions, and usually had some time to run before they were payable. In order to acquire favor with the public and increase its business, the bank adopted the custom of giving its own notes, payable on demand, for discounted paper, payable in the future. This custom was adopted on the theory that the small bills of the bank would pass into circulation, like money, and be dispersed throughout the kingdom; that they would become indispensable in business transactions, which would be greatly increased by the number in circulation, and that consequently they would not be returned suddenly, or in large amounts to the bank for redemption. The unsoundness of the principles of banking, adopted about this time by the Bank of England, and upon which the sjpecie basis system of bailking has been built up, is fully demonstrated by Colwell, from whom we again quote as follows: "Upon such considerations, the bank decided to issue notes payable to bearer on demand, in exchange for individual paper payable at a future day. The bank thus undertook to do an impossibility, in the hope that it would not be called upon to redeem the promise or make the 89 I BAN-IS OF THE OLD WORLD. attempt. What the bank could do was to give its own notes, of convenient denominations for circulation in exchange for individual paper and payable at the same time; and in doing this alone, the bank could have rendered a great service to the public with small risk. The bank had not the money, and could not, therefore, purchase the paper offered; the notes offered by the bank were not money, thlough a much better substitute for money than the notes of individuals, which could only circulate to a very limited extent as a medium of payment. The bank issued notes payable to bearer, without endorsement, and this certainly added to the facility and convenience of their passing rapidly fromnt hand to hand as a currency. It departed from sound principles, when it made these notes payable on demand in gold or silver; for it must be contrary to sound principles to undertake to do what cannot be done. The bank notes were nothing more, and should not have been held up to the public as anything more, than the mere promissory notes of the bank, convenient in form for circulation among all those who chose to take them, not as money, but as promises to pay money. The promise should have been only such as the bank could perform. Strictly speaking, the bank could only pay in coin when it received in coin. It could exact payment for the note received of every individual only when the note matured and not before. The accommodation between the bank and its customers was mutual in this exchange of notes; the bank received a profit, and the customer received the bankl notes, a better medium of payment, one which would be received out of bank as well as in it, in payment of debts or in making of purchases. But it should never have been imagined for a moment, that by this process between the bank and its customers they manufactured money. - * This advantage, (notes payable on demand,) which the 90 I. BANKS OF TIlE OLD WVORLD. Bank of England only offered in the first instance to attract business, and to give currency to their notes, hlas been paid for since by the people of Ellglandcl, in a series of pressures, revulsions, and currency fluctuations, which have inflicted injuries and losses upon the government and people of Great Britain, in comparison with which the present national debt may be insignificant. * * * * * * "But the bank was still more daring; it discounted notes largely, and carried the amount of the proceeds to the credit of the party, as so much money deposited; that is, in tile same column in which the bank gave its customers credit for gold and silver deposits, it gave them credit for the amounts of notes and acceptances having months to ]rulln before maturity, and engaged to pay the amount of these securities on demand. It mingled a process of credit with a process of cash, in a mode as absurd in theory as it was dangerous in practice. The men who had given their notes on time had provided for a regular progression of payments, according to the movements of business and the demands of consumption; but the Bank of England virtually abolished the contract of deferred payment between the parties, and became paymaster on demand of debts not due for months, to an immense amount." "The bank had no warrant, in principle or practice, for this hazardous engagement. Its only excuse was the same which was given for the issue of bank notes payable on demanld, without the money, namely, that the bank would not be asked to pay for them all at one time." "We regard this error of the Bank of England as the parent of the greater portion of the mischiefs and evils for which banks in morie modern times are answerable. The banks from that day to this have continued to issue notes payable on demand, and to grant credits so payable, in ex 91, I I I iI BANKS OF TIIE OLD WORLD. change for securities payable in fronm 30 to 120 days. They do this, relying wholly on the forbearance of the public, just as the Bank of England did at first. Sad experience has shown, that there are times when the public is not only not forbearing, but when men rush with frantic haste to demand of the bank payment of both notes and deposits. Nearly every bank in existence, conducted on this plan, has, at some period of its history, felt the power and rashness of the public in seasons of commercial panic. The banks lose their power and usefulness at the very molment when the public most needs their assistance. Friends in sunshine, they become enemies in the storm." The most notable event in the history of the Bank of England was the suspension of specie payments in 1797. This was caused by the l'l'e aldvances made by the bank to the governmenit, to aid in the prosecution of the wars with France. The specie in the bank had been reduced to a little over ~1,000,000, when the directors of the bank became alarmed and brought the matter to the attention of the Privy Council. The council on the 27th of February, 1797, determined "that it is indispensably necessary for the public service, that the Directors of the Bank of England should forbear issuing any cash in payiment, until the sense of Parliament can be taken on the subject." On the 3d of MIay following, the suspension was sanctioned for a limited tinme by an act of Parliament, and wa, subsequently continued by repeated acts of Parliamenlt until 1820, when an act was passed providing for the resumption of specie payments by degrees, beginning on the 1st of October, 1820, and reaching full payment on the 1st of Alay, 1823. The people of Great Britain were obliged, therefore, to carry on their affairs for a period of twenty-five years with an irredeemable bank paper currency. During this period, notwithstanding 92 BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. the vast expenditures of war and the great burdens of taxation, Great Britain increased in wealth and prosperity more rapidly than at any other period in her history. The public revenues were increased from ~23,126,000 ill 1797 to J72,210,000 in 1815, at the close of the war with France, and stood at ~54,282,000 in 1820. The amount raised by loan and taxation, during the time referred to, was never less in any one year than ~47,362,000; during nine years it was over ~70,000,000 a year; and for the years 1813 and 1814 it was respectively ~108,397,000 and ~105,698,000. The loans negotiated by the bank for the government during the suspension of specie payments amounted to ~350,000,000. During this period the Bank of England was a tower of strength to the government. But what after all enabled Great Britain to surmount all difficulties and come off victorious in one of the greatest contests of modern times, was the wonderful development of her producing forces, occasioned by the abundance of money put in circulation by the war, irredeemable though it was. During this time 3,000,000 of acres of unimproved land were brought under cultivation, and the exportation of manufactured cotton goods increased in amount from ~7,000,000 in 1801 to ~27,000,000 in 1822. All classes of society participated in the general prosperity which prevailed, and during the entire period the nation never once suffered from a commercial crash or money panic. The guns of Waterloo, however, had hardly ceased to echo, until the money power became clamorous, just as it is in the -United States now, for a return to specie payments. No one was so blind as not to be able to see that Great Britain was enabled, by her paper money alone, to carry on her wars on the Continent, and that by it alone were the people enabled to make such remarkable progress in comn 93 B3ANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. lnercec, agriiculture and manufactures; but thlere were, nevertheless, large numbers who were bitterly hostile to paper currency, and who seemed to imagine that they were being subjected, in some way, to a great wrong. Landlords, for example, in miany instances, in contempt of the law which gave their tenants the righlt to pay in bank notes, compelled -them to pay their dues in gold. There were evidently fools and rascals in those days, as well as at the present time. The "political economists," backed by the "cannibals of change alley," were strong in Parliament, and the country gentlemen were led to believe that a return to specie was ,essential to their interests and safety. Specie payments were accordingly resumed in 1823, and the resumption was accompanied by the most disastrous commercial crash anld money panic that ever visited any nation. The era of general prosperity departed to return no more. PReal estate depreciated largely in value, and the real estate owners of the kingdom decreased in number from over 150,000 to less than 40,000; business men, merchants, manufacturers, etc., :,were ruined by the thousand; wages were reduced, and laborers thrown out of employment by the tens of thousands; :and the public revenue fell off to such an extent that payanents on the public debt ceased, and have never practicably been resumed.* The bank act of 1844, by which the issue department was separated from the genleral banking business of the iistitution, remedied some of the defects of the system which tlhe bank had founded, but suspensions of specie payment are still of frequent occurrence. In 1837 another crash and money panic occurred in England, which also involved this country. Congress, in 1832, had raised the price of gold, as compared with silver, to sixteen to one, and demon'See Chaj)ter ou Specie Resuiimptoll. 1,94 BAN1KS OF TIIE OLD WORLD. etized silver by making it a legal tender only for small sums. Gold thus became the basis of the currency, and when the Bank of England called it away to supply thle lwants of England, the banks of the United States were obliged to suspend. Business in the Unjited States was brought to a complete stand, and for three years the Aimerican people were left without any gold basis, and wele coniisequently obliged to use shiuplasters. In England tlhe losses were so enormous and the distress so great, that Parli amenelt at its next session reorganized the bank by separating the issue department from the general business department, as already mentioned. From September 7, 1844, when the bank was reo-rgaiized, to February 4, 1858, it altered its rate of interest lifty-six times, raising it, from timie to time, from two to ten per cent., in an effort to retain its specie in its vaults; this, in the meantilme, led to great financial embarrassment, and a panic iwas only averted by thle bank suspending specie payments (October 23, 1847) and affording relief by issuitng irredeemable paper. In 1857, having ruined thle nmerchants and business of England, it was again obliged to suspend. Eleven changes in the rate of interest were made between April, 1857, and January, 1858. The bank again drew upon the LUnited States for gold, causing the banks to suspeind, involving thousands of people in ruin and bankruptcy. In 1866 thle Bank of England suffered another suspension in consequence of the war on the Continent of Europe; but this time the United States escaped. Greenbacks were the medium of exchange, and the nation was no longer at the mercy of foreign banks. Gold was shipped abroad to the amount of $45,000,000, and sold as a commodity at a Lhigh price for the use of the B ank of Elnglanld, without occasioning the slightest ripple in the business affairs of the country. 95 BANKS OF TIlE OLD WVORLD. A distinguislecd statesman,a, in conmmenting on these facts, says: "Thus, three times within less thlan twenty years in thlis generation, each tilme in violation of law and without right,, has the bank of England suspended, and acknowledged her bankruptcy! what a'marvel of financial strength and credit' she has been, to be sure! WVell lmay the bullionists sing pelanls to this destructioniist of all va-lues for their benefit. True, each time her failure was sanctioned by a healing act of Parliamenit, because her illegal suspensions were necessary to save thle credit of the go-vernliment itself and to prevent the widespread destructioni of all values and the overthrow of commerce and manufactures which was thlen going on." "Neither of these suspensions took place until she had refused all discount to her customers, even on the best sixty day commercial bills secured by goverinmenit securities. It will be thus seen that gold w-as not the regulator of the currency of England, but the price paid for money at her bank, and having provided herself with a currency based oi1 gold, in order to retain that basis whenever it is wanted for foreign loans, or because of a foreign war, she is oblig,ed to increase tlhe value of her unit by changing tlhe rate of discount, or the interest which her people were obliged( to pay for their money." "This is a very illportanit miatter to be bornle in nindy Indeed it is the root of the whole miatteri, and in discussing questions of finance has been too often overlooked, because it shows that after all, a currency based on gold lmust have its value determined by the rate of interest paid for it, and not by the stability in value of gold itself. Because of this necessity of keeping gold in her vaults, the Bank of England could not maintain a steady and permanent rate of interest *Address of Hon. B. F. Butler, at the request of the Board of Trade of New York City, Oct. 14,187a5. 96 I i i BANKS OF THE OLD WORLD. for money to which her business men could adjust their affairs. Hence come fluctuations of trade, financial depression, ruin of commerce, the stoppage of manufacture. Who can carry on business requiring credit, successfully and without failure, when the rate of interest which he must pay for his accommodations and loans, alters day by day and quintuples in a month, and especially when these changes come from causes that he can neither foresee, guard against, hinder or alleviate?" "I challenge all the bullionists of the country to show any disasters and losses in trade and commerce, traceable to inconvertible paper, continental money and all, which shall be equal in effect, either as to stuns, amounts, disasters or ruin to the business and people of a country, with these I have sketched coming from a curren cy called' honest mioney,' based on gold in the vaults of a bank." The average bank note circulation of the Bank of England for the past twenty-eight years has been $100,000,000; its average of bullion, $so80,000,000; its average rate of discount, 4 per cent.; its average deposits, $100,000,000; its average liabilities, $102,000,000; and its average reserve, $9,500,000. BANKS OF SCOTLAND. The first public bank in Scotland was established iil 1695, under a charter from the Scottish Parliament before the union with England. The Scotch banking system is similar to that of England, but is conducted very differently. With a population of a little over 3,000,000, Scotland has nearly 400 banks. From Colwell we learn that, "Whilst the Bank of England, from its first conception, was identified with the government, the Bank of - Scotland, and those which succeeded it, identified themselves with the whole body of the people, from the laborer who could save five pounds to the 7 97 i i i i I BANKS OF TIlE OI)D NA-OPLD. richest merchants and manufacturers. They became at once, and have continued to be, thle savings banks of the poor but industrious (lasses. The banks paid one per cent. below the current rate of interest for these deposits, and returned them on demalnd, or according to stipulation. These s-avings of the poor help largely to make lup the vast sum of deposits which characterize thle banks of Scotland. One result has been to giv-e the benefits of these savings to the general customers of tlhe l)anIks, instead of their beinig invested in the public debt, or lent ul)pon mortgage, as in England. No doubt this has contributed greatly to that progress in wealth and productive industry which has so much distinguished Scotlanid for more than a century. It had another good effect in begetting that care, caution and prudent managemenit for which the banks of Scotland have so well founded a reputation." Another peculiar feature of the banking system of Scotland consists in the manner of giving cash credits. An applicant deposits approved securities witlh the bank and is allowed a standing credit on its books. I-e tlhen drIaws chlecks for this amount and makes deposits in the ordinary wayv. An account is madle up every six months, the rate of interest chlarged on loans being one per cent. more than that allowed on deposits. In commenting upon this feature of banking in Scotland, Colwell says."In Engliand, the bank which deals ini p)romissory notes and bills of exchange, is dealing in paper whichl represents business transactions whichl are past; in Scotland, the bank opeins credit for its customers, with reference to business which is to come. In Scotland, the banks give their customers a credit which helps their standing, and upon which they can draw for the purpose of payment, whenever there is need. The theory of the English banks is, that the currency must follow, and be controlled in quantity, by the 98 I I i iI If II BANKS OF THE OLD 0WORLD. business transactions weh go before. The thleory of the Scotch banks is, that these business transactions beilng all managed by mnen of business, who decide according to the exigencies of iindustry and trade what will promote their private initerest, and meet the wats of the peol)le, it must prove an important aid to men thus eng,aged to supply them, -in advance of the progress of their business, with a credit npon which they an draw at pleasure. * * In Eigland, they think thiis wN ill lead to over-tiading, by the stimulus it affords to so large a class of dealers: in Scotland, long experience has ta-l,ght them that this English apprehension is wholly groim(lless. They know that the dealers who enjoy these caslh credits ale so immediately brough-lt under the supervision of the banks, and their own sureties, that they are, perhaps, the mst prudent and safe men of business in the world. * * There is a prevalent idea. among ,statesmen and writers upon money, that there should be a broad basis of money or gold coin, under and as a support to the paper circulation; * * t]hat a paper currency, to ibe perfect, should fuctueate as a gold currelncy would do, if. it were the sole medium of l,)a)ment. To the mind of a Scotch bankier, a greater absurdity could not be presented in as many words. Hie would say:'What! w-hen a demand springs up for gold, in consequence of some foreign war, must we so reg,ulate the issues of,our banks, as to reduce the currency of notes in the same proportion that the currency of gold is carried off RPather should we increase our issues, and supply the place of the currency that is exported.' They know that bank notes can fully discharge the functions of money, for they see it ev-ery day; and not only so, but they are certain that almost no business of Scotland is carried on by means of a currency of gold. The Scottish people cain never be made to comprehend why .:e * ~. 99 i i I i I II BA~NKS OF TIlE OLD WORLD. their bank notes, bank deposits, and cash credits, should fluctuate in amount as gold would fluctuate, if exclusively employed. These forms of currency do not come of gold; they are not founded upon it, and they have notlhing to do with it. In Scotland they understand, as w-ell as they do inl England, the use of gold as money; they know its value as a commodity, but being a costly commodity, they do not incline to employ it as a currency, except so far as their bank currency fails of its object; nor do they wish to purechlase or hold it as a commodity, except for such special purpose as may promise adequate advantage. Their system of banking enables them to dispense with it ahluost entirely. In this,, they are far from thinking thelmselves behind their neighbors, in intelligence or financial skill." The banks of Scotland issue bank notes as low as ~1, and the people of Scotland are always amnply supplied with a mediumo of exchange. TIlE FRENCII' SYSTEM[ OF FINANCE. .France enjoys a fiinancial systemi superior to that of any other nation. The fiscal affairs of the government are' conducted by a central administration, or -Iinistry of Finance, and eighty-six branches located in different districts. All transactions between the government and the people are carried on in the forms and methods of the treasury department, without the ilntervention of banks. Thle government has no connection with the Bank of France, but deals with it as it does with individuals, except that its notes are made a legal tender whenever the scarcity of specie renders such a step necessary. The treasury department of France in many respects takes the place of banks. It is regarded as a duty by the French government to afford the people all the facilities in the way of domestic exchange that banks could 100 I I i i .. I: -".: i,:- I. ,. i,. ...,. ii THE FPENCI-I SYSTEMf OF FINANCE. give, instead of allowinlg it to be furnisled( exclusively by the banks. In each district there is a receiver general, in whose office the revenues of the district are paid. WI-hen once paid in they are subject to the order of the central administration alone, and abundant precautions exist to insure strict accountability and integrity. The treasury is managed with special reference to the wants and requiremenlts of thle public. The manner in which its operations in this respect are conducted is thus set forth by Colwell: "Among its numerous officials, is one in direct relations with the chief minister of finance, who has special charge of the locality of all money in the treasury. Ile can neither receive nor pay money; but he can transfer the public money from one office of the treasury to another, and place it wherever the exigencies of the government may require. It is in the office of this functionary that is estalblisl-ed a direct and very imlportant connection with the current business of the day. Hiis duty requires of hini a, careful and timely study of the points of public expenditure; hle must know not only where the money will be wanted, but lie must have it ready when required. To accomplish this important object, it becomes his duty to study the domestic trade of the country, that he may avail himself of the internal exchanges in the necessary distribution of money in the treasury. It is very rare, indeed, that the French treasury ever shifts the locality of gold or silver. It may require many circuitous transfers to move the excess of revenue, in some departments, to the points of expeniture, and to supply the deficiency in other departments. To mnake these transfers, the officer Mlwho has special charge of that dulty relies almost wholly on the domestic exchanges. Ile is well informed where funds are wanted for the purposes of industry or trade; he learns 101 102 THE FRENCH SYSTEM OF FXAlN-CE. where and when those who reside in the vicinity of each office of the treasury desire to remit funds; and hle learns whence and when they wish to draw them. htis office becomes tl-he depository of this information, because he intervenes in this business of giving drafts upon the treasury, payable at other points, and giving money at his own office for money received at othler offices. hIis intervention in the transmissioni of funds assists in balancing thle internal exchanges of tle country; for, of course, the office is only applied to when the business of individuals requires such accommodation. But this business is not confined to receiving money at an office of the treasury in one place, and paying the amount as may be required at anothler office, in a different place; that is, to a mere exchange of money between the treasury and individuals at different places; it goes much further. At times and places where large transfers of funds become necessary, the proper officer of the treasury becomes the receiver of commercial or individual paper to a large amount." "Thle receivers-general of the eighty-six departments, and their subordinates, the receivers of the treasuries of the arrondissments aind communes, maintain reciprocal business relations by frequent exchanges of money, by drafts upon each other, and by bills upon Pairis and other places. The chief officers of the treasury become, by the constant report of tlhis business to them, intimately acquainted with the whole industrial and commnercial movement of the population. They regard it as extremely important to tl-hese interests, that the money which is necessal'ily withlldrawn- from. private uses for public purposes, shouldl be retained in the treasury as short a time as possible. Out of 300,000,000 or 400,000,000 of francs annually remitted front the country treasuries to Paris, not more than ten per cent., or 30,000,000 k i TIE FIIRENC(II SYSTEM OF FINANCE. or 40,000,000 of francs, are ever It olne time in the public treasuries.* This shows that disbursement follows so rapidly upon receipt, that the money taken from the people for taxes does not remain, on the average, more thlan.a month or two out of its proper channels, and that the governimeni t has carefully reduced the inconvcnience and disadvantage of taxation to the lowest possible point. By this regular and constant collmunication witlh menI of capital and business, by this constant association witlh them in the business of transfelrring funds, the officeis of the treasury are able at all times to command, in advance of the regular receipts, lairge sums of money, which are freely placed in the public treasury at low rates of interest. Money is, in fact, frequently pressed uponL the various receivers by those who desire short but safe investments, and by those who would secure, in good season, the aid of the treasury in placing iimoney at particular points. The treasurers of the departments do not lend moiiey, though they receive it in the way of short loans; they transfer money for individuals, and they purchase bills of exchange upon such points,is the exigencies of the public may require. Upoi ole side, then, there are open relations between the public treasuries and the movements of trade, industry and curirency; that is, ulpon tlie side of the domestic exlchanges of the country; the transactions of the treasury, in relation to the distribution of its fuids, are blended with the movements of the internal exchang:es as conducted by the individuals concerned in it. This constitutes. very broad field of contact between the business of the country, from which the money is with-drawii by taxation, and the public treasury. The public money l)eiiig retained for the shortest possible time, is so managed, nevertheless, as to render an inmportant serviee in aiding aEnd regulating the internal exchanges." This was prior to 1860. .t03 104 THE FRENCH SYSTE3M OF FINANCE. "Taxation having reached, in France, a point beyond which it cannot be increased without passing the ability of the people to pay, an alleviation of thle burden, like that we have just mentioned, is of signal advantage. According to the former revenue system of France, the money remained -for many months in the hands of the receivers, who merely made advances, on interest, to the government from time to time, and settled their accounts once a year. Now, all money is held to be in the treasury from the mioment it is received into the office of any department; and it is sent into general circulation again with as little delay as posssible. The assistance thus afforded to the adjustment of the domestic exclhanges greatly promotes punctuality in commrercial and industrial payments and remiittainc es, by diminishing the expense and the disturbanices occasioned by paying the balances of the internal trade. These features of thle present financial system, by which it is so closely connected with the internal trade. and exchanges, are reg,arded by an eminiient French writer upon financee as rendering less necessary in France than in other countries, that development of credit in banking which is so prevalent and so dangerous elsew here." Business in France, owing to tie abundance of money always kept in circulation, is done'ilainly with cash, and the credit system, which has wroug,]t so niuchli evil in Great Britain and the United States, has never gained a foothold there. So great is the prejudice of the French people against the systemn, doubtless because they are not blindc to its workings in England, that they cannot be induced to even keep ordinary bank accounts and use checks, in the way of business. M. Pinard, Manager of the C(omptoir d'E,sco,?)lte, testified before the Frencel commission of Inquiry of 1865-8, that great efforts had been made by that THE FRENCH SYSTEM OF FINANCE. institution to induce French merchants and shop-keepers to adopt English habits in this respect, but in vain; " it was no use reasoning with them," li]e said, "they would not do it, because they would not." Gold and silver are the legal tendelr money of France, but whenever occasion renders it necessary the notes of the Bank of France are declared a tender ill payment of debts; and the channels of trade are thus always supplied with a medium -of exchange, to keep the producing forces of the nation at'work. The wisdom of this policy has been signally illustratedcl twice within. the past thirty ye'ars in 1848 and in 1870. In 1848, after the revolution, the republic found itself without revenue and the p)eol)le out of employment. Miatters were in a precarious situation, nd the Baiik of France alone possessed any available money. Instead of looking after its own interests alone, it united withl tlhe government in a hearty effort to stimulate industry, by supplying the arteries of trade with a fresh supply of money. To accomplish this end, tlhe government declared the notes of the bank a legal tender -anl act wlichl was everywhere denounced by the bullionists as suicidal. The marvelous results of this step are thus depicted by the London Tizes, of February 16, 1849, although less than a year before it had been loud in its denunciation of such a course: "As a mere commercial speculation, with the assets wtich the bank held in its hands, it might then have stopped payment, and liquidated its affairs witlh e-very probability that a very few weeks would enable it to clear off all of its liabilities. But thlis idea was not for a moment entertained by M. D'Argout, and hle resolved to make every effort to keep alive what may be termed the circ(tlcation of tlhe life blood of the community. The task was overwlelming. Money was to be found to meet not only the demands of the bank 105 THE FRENCH SYSTEMI OF FINANCE. but the necessities, both public and pl)rivate, of every rank in society. It was cssential to enable thle inanufac-tul'ers to work, lest their wolrkiaeii, driven to desperation, should fling theniselves amiongst thle most violent enemies of publie order. It was essential to provide nioney for tlhe food of Paris, for the pay of tlhe troops, and for thle dlaily support of tlhe ateliers?tbtio ~.a,ttG. A failu-e on a,y oie poilt would hlave led to a fresh coinvulsion. lBut tlhe panlic had been followed by so great a scarcity of the metallic currency, that a few days later, out of a ptaym-ent of 26 millions fallen dclue, only 47,000 fr'uics could be recovered in silver." "In tlhis extremity, wlen tlhe bank alone retained any available sumis of money, the goveiriiiiient came to tlhe rescue, and, on tlhe night of the 5thl of MIarch, tlhe notes of the bank were by a decree madle: legal telder, the issue of these notes being lim-ited in:ll to 350 millions, but the alnount of tlhe lowest of tli(iii reduced for the public convenience to 100 f rnes. Olie of thle great difficulties mentioned in the il'eport, was to print these 100 firanc notes fast enough for the public con suln1i)tioln-in tetii days tle amount issued il this form lhad reaclied 80 millions. No sooner was the bank relieved fiomi the necessity of payilig away the remnant of its coin, thai it iad(le every exertion to increase its metallic rest. About 40 millions of silver were purchased abroad at a high price. loire than 100 mnillions were made over in dollars to the treasury and tle executive departments in Paris. In all, taking into account the branch banks, 506 millions of five-frai'c pieces have been thrown by the bank into the country since filrcli, and her currency was thus supplied to all the clhannels of the social system." "Besides the strictly monetary operations, the Bank of France found means to furnish a series of loans to the government-50 millions on exchequer bills on the 31st of 106 THE FRENCH SYSTEM OF FINANCE. March, 30 millions on the 5th of MIlay, and on the 3d of June, 150 millions, to be paid up before the end of NMaich, 1849; of thlis last sumt only one-third has yet been requiled by the State. The bank also took a part iin thle renewed loan of 250 millions, anld made vast advalncees to tlhle City of Paris, to Marseilles, to the departimient of the Seine, a(dl to thehospitals, amounting in all to 260 miillions miore. But evei this was not all. To enable the manuf.aturing interests to weather the storm, at a niomlenit wvlhen all the sales were interrupted, a decree of thle National Asseimbly had directed warehouses to be opened for the reception of all kinds of goods, and provided that tle i'egistered invoice of these goods, so deposited, should be miade negotiable by endorsement. Thle Bank of Firance discounted these receipts. In Havre alone, 18 millions,wee tlhus advanced onl Colonial produce, and, in Paris, 14 nillions on meerchandise-in all, 60 millions were thus inade available for the purposes of trade. Thus, the great institution had pla-ced( itself, as it were, in direct contact w-itIt every interest of the colLmmunLity, from the Min-ister of the Tre(asui'v down to thle trader in a distant ontpoit. Lil(e a hluge ]-ydraulic machine, it employed its colossal powers to l)upp a fresh stream into the exhausted arteries of trade, to sustain credit, aind to preserve the cireu — lation fiomi complete collapse." Again, in Septeimber, i870, after France becamie involved in thle w-ar wili Gewithy, tlh'e Bank of Francee suspended specie p:lym,elits,and( issued le,gal tender notes to an iummense amount, with like marvelous r'esults. In JLune, 1870, the circulation of the bank was 82 75,000,000; in 1871, after the termination of lhostilities, it aimoiinted to $420,000,000, and in Octobo,i, 18 i:3, to $602,000,000. W\hen tlhe first iinstallment of the ildeia-nity of $1,000,000,000 to Germany fell due, gold, for a short period, borce a lpremiunii of 2j- per cent., 107 THE FRENCH SYSTEM OF FINANCE. but with this exception the notes of the bank circulated at par with coin, and continue to do so to this day. The amount of irredeemable bank notes in circulation in France at the present timue is nearly 8500,000,000. The only reason that can possibly be given why French irredeemable bank notes, to the amount of $500,000,000, circulate at par with coin, while U-nited States Treasury notes, less than $400,000,000 in amount, are at a depreciation of over 12 per cent., is that the French notes are a full legal tender for all debts and dues, both public andl private, while the United States Treasury notes are only a partial legal tender, not being receivable for duties on imports. By the free use of irredeemable paper mnoney, the French people, like the people of the Unlited States dur'ing the Rebellion, were enabled to rally to the support of their government. But there the parallel ends. After the German war had ended, the circulation of irredeemable bank notes, as we have seen, was increased nearly $200,000,000, and the producing forces of the French people were developed in every way possible, in order to repair the losses sustained during the war, and to enable the government to pay the indemnity to Germany. The wonderful success of this policy is known to all the world. The German indenmity of $1,000,000,000 was paid before it fell due, apparently without an effort, and gold has flowed into France until now the French people have, besides their legal tender bank notes, a specie circulation estimated at $1,200,000,000. It has been the lot of the French people to suffer, in common with other nations, many evils resulting from bad government, but they have great cause to feel profoundly thankful that they have never, in the administration of their finances been cursed with a Hugh McCulloch. '108 CHIIAPTER V. PAPER MONEY AND BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. THE trials and tribulations to which the American people have been subjected from the earliest settlement of the country, on account of the want of a proper and well settled system of money, would form a sad but instructive chapter in American history. The limits of this volume, however, preclude more than a cursory view of the subject, but that will be sufficient to establish the fact that when paper money fails to perform the functions of money, it is because it is not based on sound principles, and also that bank notes, nominally redeemable in specie, constitute the worst form of paper money ever devised. For many generations after the first settlement of the colonies the work of production was slow and laborious, and the surplus products, at least such as could find their way to foreign markets, were hardly sufficient to procure in return the common necessaries of life. The small sumis of money brought to the country by the settlers were soon exhausted sent abroad for merchandise, and trade for the most part had to be carried on by the inconvenient method of barter. The Indians found along the shores of Long Island SoLund were more advanced in civilization than those further northl, and used a circulating medium of exchange consisting of beads of two kinds, one white, madle out of the end of a periwinkle shell, and the other black, made out of the dark part of a clam shell. They were rubbed down and polished, and, when artistically arranged in strings or belts, foirmed objects of real beauty.* These beads circulated 'Professor Sumner's History of American Currency. E1APRLY COLONIAL CURRENCY. among the Indianls as imoney, Qone black bead being regarded as worth two white onles, and were knowii as wampuin or wampumpeag. The colonists came to use themi, first in their trade with the Indians and then amongst themselves. In MIassachusetts they became by custom the common currency of thle colony, and were made a legal tender for 12 pence. Barter currency was established at an early day in the colonies, and products of all kinds were made a tender in pay-ment of debts. "In Connecticut tlere w-erie four priices: 'Pay,' l'pay as imoney,''I money,' and'trustilng.' The mierchant asked his customer liow lie would pay before fixing his price.'Pay' was barter at the government rates. 'Money' was Spanishl or New England coin, also wampum for change.'Pay as money' was barter currrency at prices one-third less than the government rates.'Trusting' was an enhanced price according to tilme. A six-penny knife cost 12d. in pay, 8d. inll pay as money, and 6d. in coin.'"* About the middle of the 17th century the trade with the WVest Indies began to bring inl coin, and a mint was established in Boston, though an infraction of the prerogative of the crown. Laws forbidding the exportation of coin were passed, but it could not be kept in the country. The first issue of paper money made in the colonies was made by Massachusetts in 1690, six years before the establishment of the Bank of England. An expedition ihad been sent out against Canada, and, returning without spoils and in a state of misery, the soldiers were clamorous for their pay. ~7,000 were issued in notes from 5 shillings to ~5. The formn of these notes or bills was as follows: "This indented bill of ten shillings, due from the Massachusetts colony to the possessor, shall be in value equal to money, and shall be accordingly accepted by the treasurer and receivers subor'Professor Sumner's History of Amnerieain Currency, 110 EARI,Y COLO.NIAL CU-RPENCY. dinate to him, in all public payments, and for any stock (cattle) at any time ill the treasury." Thlen followed the date and the signatures of the committee appointed to issue them. They were Inot a legal tendei', but wer'e receivable merely for taxes and- property in the treasury. In 1692 it was ordered that these bills be received at 5 per cent. premiium over coin in the treasury, and the result w-its that they circulated at par with coin for twenty years, until redeemed, and barter curreincy ceased for a tinme, olr at least became less common. In 1703 anotler issue of bills in the same form, for ~15,000, was authorized 1)by ct of Parliament, but they were not made a tenidei. A suIbsequecnt act passed iii 1712, however, made themn a telld(leri for private debts. Ini 1716 another issue of bills to the amnount of ~150,000 was authorized by an act of Parliament; to be distributed among the different counties of the province; and to be put into the hands of five trustees in each county, to be appointed by the legislature, to be let out by thle trustees on real estate security in the county, in certain specified suiims, for the space of ten years, at five per cent. per annum. These bills were not made a tender. Another act for ~50,000 in bills was passed in 1720, containing similar provisions. In 1773 Massachusetts was out of debt. In 1720 bills were issued by the colony of Rhode Island and were made a tender for all debts, except special ones; and similar bills were authorized at different times subsequently, some a tender and others not. The colony of Connecticut issued silmilar bills at various times between 1709 and 1731. ZNew York began to issue bills in 1709; Pennsylvania, in 1723; Mlaryland, in 1733; Delaware, in 1739; Virginia, in 1755; and South Carolina, in 1703. The first emission of bills by Virginia bore - interest at 5 per cent., and, according to Jefferson, in a very ill t EARLY' COLONIAL CURRENCY. short time nlot one of tlhem was to be found in circulation. They were locked up in the chests of executors, guardians, widows, farmers, etc.'" We then," says Jefferson, "issued bills bottomed on a redeemiing tax, but bearing no interest. These were received, and never depreciated a farthing.'"* In 1764 Dr. Franklin bore testimony before the British Board of Trade, as we have already mentioned,t to the value and usefulness of the bills issued by Pennsylvania. Just after the Revolution North Carolina issued a large amount of paper money, which was made receivable in dues to her; it was also made a legal tender. Several hundred thousand dollars of this paper money remained in circulation miore than twenty years, at par with gold and silver, with no other advantage than being received in thle revenues of the State.1 In 1751 Parliament passed an act forbidding the issue of any more paper mloney, save in the form of exchequer bills redeemable in a year, except in case of war, when they could be made redeemable in four years; and in 1763 all colonial acts for issuing paper nmoney were declared by act of Parliament to be void. Dr. Franklin protested against the act, but without avail. The Englishl had reachled the conclusion thlat nothing was money but gold and silver, and, anilated by that peculiar spirit wlhich has characterized their immediate descendants in this coiuntry, were determined thlat, ri,ght or wrong, everybody else shouldl subscribe to the same opinion. In 1773, however, Parliaiment allowed allny bills issued by the colonies to be a tender to their treasury. CO,NTI-NENTAL MIONEY. During the Revolutionary war Congress issued nearly $350,000,000 in bills of credit. The first issue was in 1775, and the confederated colonies were pledged for its redemption. In form these bills were as follows: "This bill entitles the 'See page 56. tSee page 43,. ISee page.9. 112 CONTINENTAL MONEY. bearer to receive.... Spanish milled dollars, or the value thereof, in gold or silver, according to the resolutions of Congress." The last emission was in 1780 under the guarantee of Congress, and was in the following form: "The possessor of this bill shall be paid.... Spanish milled dollars by the 31st of December, 1786, with interest, in like money, at the rate of 5 per cent. per annum, by the State of.... according to an act of the legislature of the State of...., the.... day of...., 1780." The endorsement by Congress was: "The United States insure the paynient of the within bill, and -will draw bills of exchange,'annuaily, if demanded, according to a resolution of Congress of the 18th of Marcli, 1780." The bills were required by Congress to issue upom the responsibility of the several States, and the confederated colonies ple(lg,ed their faith for their payment. They were not made a legal tender, doubtless because Congress did not possess the authority to make them such. They circulated at par with silver for over a year, but after that they began to depreciate rapidly in value, owing to the character of the bills and the excessive amount put in circulation. In March, 1778, they were depreciated to $1.75 for $1, and before the end of the year to $4 for $1; March, 1779, $10 for $1; September, 1779, $18 for $1; MIarch, 1780, $40 for $I. Coingress then passed a resolution to fund the whole mass at that rate, but the depreciation continued until it reached $500 for $1, iii 1781, and after that they ceased to circulate. In 1791 they were still permitted to be funded at the rate of $100 for $1. Continental money, according to Jefferson, "expired without a single groan. Not a mnurmur was heard among the people. On the contrary universal congratulationls took place on their seeing the gigantic mass, whose dissolution had threatened convulsions which should shake their infant confederacy to its center, quietly interred in its 113 CONTINENTAL MNIQNEY. grave. Foreigners, indeed, who do not like the natives feel indulgence for its memory, as of a being which has vindicated their liberties and fallen in the moment of victory, have been loud, and still are loud in their complaints. A few of them have reason; but the most noisy are not the best of them. They are persons who hlave become bankrupt by unskillful attempts at commerce with America. That they may have some pretext to offer to their creditors, they have bought up great masses of this dead money of America, where it is to be had at five thousand for one, and they show the ce'tificates of t.heiirpapel possessions, as if they had died in their hands, and had been the cause of their bankruptcy." As Continental money is the "ghost conjured up by all who wish to give the baiks an exclusive monopoly of government credit,"* it may be well to pause a moment to consider its nature. The paper money issued by the several colonies prior to the Revolution had answered the purposes of money admirably, though not issued according to any well settled policy. Whenever it had a fair trial, however, it never failed to succeed. But Continental money was issued under very different circumstances. The colonies had been brought together not out of choice but by necessity. Congress assumied the powers which it exercised through necessity, and its acts were acquiesced in by the people only out of a spirit of patriotism. Congress had no power to lay and collect taxes, and the confederation was without revenue. Whatever was (one, had to be done through the States. Even after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation, in 1781, Congress possessed only the semblance of authority. Judge Story describes the situation at the time in the following language: "In the first place there was an utter *Calhoun, see page 60. 114 CONTINENTAL MONEY. want of all coercive authority to carry into effect its own constitutional measures. This of itself was sufficient to destroy its whole efficiency, as a superintending government, if that may be called a government which possesses no one solid attribute of power. * * In truth, Congress possessed only the power of recommendation. It depended altogether upon the good will of the States whether a measure should be carried into effect or not. * * Even during the Revolution, while all hearts and hands were engaged in the common cause, many of the measures of Congress were defeated by the inactivity of the States; and in some instances the exercise of its powers was resisted. But after the peace of 1783 such opposition became common, and gradually extended its sphere of activity, until, in the expressive language already quoted,'the confederation became a shadow without the substance.' * * But a still minore striking defect was the total want of power to lay and levy taxes, or to raise revenue to defray the ordinary expenses of government. The whole power confided to Congress upon this head was the power to ascertain the sums necessary to be raised for the service of the United States, and to apportion the quota or proportion on each State. But the power was expressly reserved to the States to lay and levy the taxes, and of course the time, as well as the mode of payment, was extremely uncertain. The evils resulting from this source, even during the Revolutionary war were of incalculable extent; and but for the good fortune of Congress in obtaining foreign loans, it is far from being certain that they would not have been fatal. * * Requisitions were to be made upon thirteen independent States, and it depended upon the good will of the legislature of each State, whether it would comply at all; or if it did comply, at what tiue and in what manner. The very tardi 115 CONTINENTAL MIONEY. ness of such all operation, in the ordinary course of things, was sufficient to involve the goyernment in perpetual emibarrassment, and to defeat many of its best measures, even when there was the utmost good faith and promptitude on the part of the States, in complyilig with the requisitions. But many reasons concurred to produce a total want of promptitude on the part of the States, and, in numerous instances, a total disregard of the requisitions. Indeed froni the moment that the peace of 1783 secured the country from the distressing calamities of war, a general relaxation took place; and many of the States successively found apologies for their gross neglect in evils commoni to all, or complaints listened to by all. Many solemn and affecting appeals were from time to time made by Congress to the States, but they were attended with no salutary effect. Many measures were devised to obviate the difficulties, nay the dangers which threatened the Union; but they failed to produce any amendments in the confederation. An attempt was made by Congress, during the war, to procure fromn the States all authority to levy an impost of five per cent. upon imported and prize goods, but the assent of all the States could not be procured."* The population of the thirteen colonies was estimated ili 1775 at 2,448,000,t and the entire property of the country at less than $600,000,000. That a paper currency, issued to an excessive amount, by thlirteen sparsely settled colonies, in a state of rebellion, under a revolutionary government possessing only a shadow of authority, against the most powerful nation onl the earth, should have circulated at all, is one of the most remarkable facts connected with the Revolution, and is to bc accounted for only by the patriotism of those engaged in that memorable struggle. But, as we 'Story oln the Constitution, Vol. 1, page 171. tJefferson's Works, Vol. 9, page'272. 116 CONTIN\ENTAL MONEY. have seen, it circulated for over a- year at par with silver, and in 1778, three years after the first emission, it depreciated only to $1.75 for $1. Congress resorted to various measutres to sustain thle credit of Continental bills, but, as ought to have been expected, without success. MAloney, as has been fully explained, derives it power to represent value from law, but there must be value in piroperty or products, for which it can be exchanged, for it to represent, and the law must emanate froLm:t responsible source-froiu a' government possessiing tlie right aind power to commiand such property for its uses, otherwise it is only money in namne. It is worthy of note, too, that Continental bills were not issued in the foirm of pa)er lnololey, suc as wa.is first introduced by M-assachusetts, and subsequenitly ldo)ted by manlly of the other colonies, but in the fo rm of Iprnoises to pay sp)ecie, at certain specified times, which, under the cicumnstances, was a manifest impossibility. The gradutal depreciation of Cointinental money, as it passed froml hand, inflicted a loss uponi each successive holder, vlticli (came to 1)e re,garded in the nature of:t tax ol contributioil towarid.s the cause of ilidependence. The large sums leld bly individuals after it ceased to circulate were takell tt its greatest dep)reciation, rnd no great loss was sustained. W\hen, after it had seen the liberties of the people villdicated, it sank, in the moment of victory, quietly into its grave, 110o co(linercial crash or money panic attended its fall. Its ghost has troubled no one since, except the advocates of the Britisli systeml of bank cuurirency, wllich, perhaps, is only in accordance with the eternal fitness of things. 1BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. We come now to aL new era in the history of American currency. Wiheii the colonies entered the Federal Union, 117 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. under the Constitution framed in 1 787, they surrendered all power or control over the question of money to the Federal Government. The object of this was to secure to the people a uniform and stable medium of exchange, and hence it was that a clause was inserted in the Constitution expressly prohibiting States from coining money, emitting bills of credit, etc.* But this wise provision of the Constitution was soon totally subverted by the money powver, through the instrumentality of banks of issue, modeled on the British system of bank currency; and practically the currency of the country has been subject to the control of that power ever since. About the close of the Revolution four banks of issue were established inll the United States; one in each of the States of Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts and Maryland. At the time the Federal Constitution was framied, there was a large and formidable party, with aristocratic notions and tendencies, under the leadership of Alexander Hamilton, a statesman of undoubted patriotism and great ability, which was strongly in favor of the formation of what was termed "a strong government." This policy grew out of a want of faith in the people, and the belief that they were incapable of self-government. Inll a speech on this subject, June 18, 1787, Mr. Hamilton said: "I believe the British government forms the best model the world ever produced, and such has been its progress in the minids of many, that this truth gradually gains ground. This governmient has for its object public strength and individual security. It is said with us to be unattainable. If it was once formed it would maintain itself. All communities divide themselves into the few and the many. The first are the rich and well born, the other the mass of the people. * * Can a democratic assembly, 'See page.54 118 BAXKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. who annually revolve in the mass of the people, be supposed steadily to pursue the public good? Nothing but a permanent body can check the independence of democracy. Their turbulent and uncontrolling disposition requires checks. * * Let one body of thle legislature be constituted during good behavior or life. Let one executive be appointed (for life) who dares execute his powers. * * All State laws to be absolutely void which contravenie the general laws. An officer to be appointed in each State to have a negative on all State laws. All the militia and tlhe ap)pointment of officers to be under the national governmenit. * * The people are gracldually ripening iln thleir opinions of governiment; they begin to tire of an excess of democracy."* This policy of a strong governIment, based on an aristocracy of wealth, was rejected by the convention; but it has never been abandoned by the money power of the counltry. In 1863, in a speech, in the IlouLse of RTepresentatives, ill support of the National Bank Currenicy Bill, Hlon. E. G. Spaulding, a banker of New York, boldly asserted that, "It is now mlost apparent that the policy advocated by Alexander Hlamiltoni of a strong, central government was the true policy;" and at the present time we have the policy of a third termi openly and fearlessly advocated by the mnoney power and its tools. Halmilton, who was the first Secretary of the Treasury, urgl(ed the establishlmenit of a National Blank modeled upon the British systecm, and upon his recommendation tlhe first Bank of the LTniited States, with a capital of $10,000,000, was charterecd by Coni'ess, Febl)ruarIy 25, 17917 for a period of twenltyv ya'. Jefferson, who was then Secretary of State, gave a written op)inion denying the power of Congress to incorporate a bank of issue, and AIadison, who was in 'Yates' Debates of the Constitutitonall Conlvention (1787.) 119 BANKS OF THiE UNITED STATES. Congress, opposed it, in a powerful speech, as a violation of the Constitution. In 1811 the bank applied to Congress for a renewal of its charter, but it was not granted. Clay and other leading statesmen opposed its re-charter on the ground that it was "unconstitutional, anti-American, and strictly a British institution." In the meantime a imania to start banks had sprung up in New England, which subsequently extended to the MIiddle States, and finally all over the country. In 1815 Jefferson gave the following statement of the number of banks which had been established up to that time: "In 1781 we had 1 bank, capital,............ 81,000,000 " 1791 " 6 banks, ".............13,500,000 " 1794 " 17 " "............ 18,642,000 " 1796 " 24 " "............ 20,472,000 " 1803 " 34 " "............ 29,112,000 " 1804 " 66 " amount of capital not known. And at this time (1815) we have probably one hundred banks." Notwithstanding the constitutional prohibition against emitting bills of credit, charters, illeorporating private institutions, authorized to emit bills of credit (bank nlotes), were granted by the legislatures of the several States in large numbers, in utter disregard of the Constitution, as well as of the public good. In Peinnsylvania, for examlple, twenty-five charters, incorporating specie basis banks of issute, were granted during the session of 1813, but were v-etoedl by the Governor. At the next session of tlhe legislature, in 1814, a bill was passed over thle veto of tlhe Governor chartering forty-one banks, with a capital of $17,000,000. Thirty-seveni of them went into operation at once, and six montlhs afterwards suspended specie payment. The manner of obtaining a charter was very simple. A petition setting forth "the wants of the people" in the locality where thle bank was to 120 BANKS OF THlE UNITED STATES. ~ be established was all that was required; political influence anid inltrigue accomplished the rest. Specie basis banks are always required by law to redeem thleir notes in specie, but as they are, also, always authorized to issue notes to three times the amount of their capital stock, their redemption in specie becomes an impossibility. This feature in banking, as has been explained,* was originally niothinig imore than a bold plan on the part of certain ingenious financiers and schemers to acquire favor with the public for the Bank of England and increase its business. As the system in time was found to have a tendency to concentrate wealth in the hands of the few, it commended itself to the aristocratic, or goverlninrg class, of that kingdom, and s0ooi becaime an initegrlal part of the structure of British society. Transplanted to the free atmosphere of Amiierica the systemi was afforded an opportunity to develop its latent evils, greatly to the disadvantage of Aiiiieican society. If banks were authorized to issue only a dollar of paper for a dollar of specie leld for its redemptioni, there would be no advantage in issuing inotes; they might as well lend the specie. Individuals obtain charters to carry on the business of bankiing on the theory that they have capital to employ iii thlat business, but under the specie basis systemt they are not required to use their capital at all. Bank notes are issued and exchanged for the notes of individuals. These bank notes are based on the credit of thle institution which issues them, and represent nothling more; if redoemed, they are good; if not, they are as worthless as the note of an insolvent individual. A bank of issue in effect siimply substitutes its notes, of various denominations and otherwise convenient for use in payments, for the notes of its customlers. As a large portion of the 'See pag,e 89. 121 BANK,S OF THE UNITED STATES. community are constantly lihavii,g paylieilts to make in bank, the notes of the banlk are as good to them as money, and they thus come to perfoirm not only the functions of the individual notes, for which they were substituted, but also the functions of a circulating mnedium. Whilst in reality they are nothing mfore tlhan promises to pay, representing credit, (evidences of the indebtedness of the bank,) they at the same time becom-ie sub)stitutes for money. In this way a bank of issue enables its corporators and stockholders to force their credit, or evidences of indebtedness, upon the public, at a high rate of interest, and compel its use as a circulating mediumo, whetlher the public desires to use it or not. Trhe mediumi of excltingre Ithus forced Uupon the public, encumbered with interest, becoiues a tax pil)on the conmmunity at large, because its cost enters into the price of commodities.* As bank notes rest entirely upon1 private credit, th,ley are subject to depreciation in value, whlichl imposes an additional burdeni u1pon trade and production. It is, as we have seen,t a part of the specie basis system to treat discounted paper as deposits, and this furnislhes the basis for additional loans of credit. By encouiraging discounits and lending credit, tlhrough the instrumentality of bank notes, to be used as real capital, business b ecomes active, prices advance and speculationi becoimes rife. Inflation of bank credit and notes goes on and a huge structure of credit is erected upon an insignificant basis of specie, supposed to be resting in the vaults of the bank, which is toppled over by the first financial breeze that springs up, and thle public is buried in its ruins. When the banks are called upon to redeem their promises to pay they are of course unable to do so, for the wit of man has not yet devised a way to redeem several paper dollars with one gold dollar. Like 'See page 49. tSee page 91. 1,22 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATESo individuals, banks can be thlrownI illtO bankruptcy and compelledl to go into liquidation, but such a step only aggravates the distress of the public, and is rarely adopted; and tlhe banks are permitted to escape, only to repeat the operation as soon as confidence has been restored through the aid of the Sheriff.* The extent to which banks are enabled to lend their credit by mneans of the specie basis system of banking will appear froln an exainiationl of the following table, which is an abstract of the Conintissioners' Report of the banks of Connecticut for a period of twelve years, from 1837 to 1847 inclusive and the year 1849. The banks of Connecticut, it should be nientioned, were conducted during this period with as much safety to the public as those of any other State in the UUnion: Total e Loans and Liabilities. Specie. Discounts. $15,71, 964 59 $415,386 10 $13,246,495 08 12,302,63111 535,447 86 9,769,286 80 14,942,779 31 502,180 15 12286,946 97 12,950 572 40 499 032 52 10 428 630 87 1 3,866'373 45 454,298 61 10,944,673 35 ]213,465 052 32 471,238 08 10 683 413 37 12,914'124 66 438,7-2 92 9 798,392 27 14 472 681 32 455 4:30 30 10 842'955 35 15,243,235 79 453,658 79 12'477,196 06 15,892 685,25 481,367 09 13 032 600 78 15,784,772 04 462,165 53 12,781'857 43: $157,550,872 44 $5,168,957 95 $126,292,898 33 1849 8,985,91'34,51575,676 30 13,740,591 00 $5,744,633 95 $140,033,489 33 Average.. Cpa —--— $8,688,295 55 Average.. iii, —13,129,239 37 Average..~ pi, —— 478,719 50 Average.. oa adiot-11,669,457 44 Kellogg, who gives this table,t in colnmmenting upon it, says: "By the foregoing table it will be seen that the average amount of the specie h-eld by the banks in the State of Connecticut, for the twelve years, was $478,719, while the average amount of their loans to the public, during the same 'See page 20. tKellogg's New MonetaLry System, page 204. 123; I Year. j Capital. Circulation. .837 $8,744,697 5()i $3S,998,325 30 1838 8,754,467 50 1.920,552 45 1839 8,832,223 00 3,987,815 45 1840 8,878'245 00 2,325,589 95 1841 8,873,927 0 2,784,721 45 1842 8,876,317 57 2,555,638 33 1843 8,580,393 50 5,3i9,947 02 1844 8,292,238 00 3,490,963 06 1845 8,359,748 00 4,102,444 00 1846 8,475,630 00 3.565,947 06 1847 8,605,742 00 4,437,631 06 $95,273,629 57 $38,549,575 13 18 49 8,985,917 4,511,571 104,259.546 5 Average Capital, - - - Average L,iabilites, - - - Average Specie, - - - Average Loans and Discounts, - BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. period, was $11,669,457-more than twenty-four and onethird times as much money as the banks had specie. The annual interest on $11,669,457 was $700,167. If they could have loaned only their specie, the interest would hlave amounted to but $28,723. The banks gained from the public annually $671,444 above the interest on their specie; and, in the twelve years, $8,057,328. They collected this interest in advance, and made their dividends half yearly to their stockholders; therefore, it is proper to compound this interest half yearly, which would swell their gains to nearly $12,000,000, that is to say, $1,000,000 interest annually. These were actual gains, as much realized by these banks as if they had produced and sold annually $700,167 worth of agricultural products." (The statements of the banks of any of the large cities, published from time to time in the newspapers, will disclose a similar inflation of credit at the present time. The fact that the National Banks do not redeem their notes in specie makes no difference. They are banks of issue and belong to the specie basis system all the same.) The banks of the United States have been compelled to suspend specie payments at various times as follows, to wit: in 1809, 1814, 1819, 1825, 1834, 1837, 1839, 1841, 1857, 1861, and in 1873 currency paymelnt. These suspensions, have invariably occasioned great public distress, and in several instances have inv-olved the entire country in bankruptcy and ruin, from which it took years to recover. In March, 1809, a legislative committee of the State of Rhode Island made an examination into the affairs of the Farmers' Exchange Bank of Gloucester, and it was found that tihe bank had $580,000 of its notes in circulation, and only $86.16 in its vaults for their redemption. Before the end of the year a general suspension of the banks of New England took place, and it was discovered that they were nearly all in the same condition-no specie and nothing to show but the worthless notes of speculators. 124 BANKS OF THIE UXITED STATES. CRASII OF 1814. In 1814 all the banks outside of New England, including the forty-one banks chartered by the Pennsylvania legislature in the early part of the year, were obliged to suspend specie payment, occasionling great distress. The people were helpless, and could do no better than to use their depreciated notes. This coniditionl of affairs lasted for years. The followingi table shows the depreciation of the notes of the banks of the cities of Baltihore, New York and Philadelphia during the suspension: P hiladelphia. Per cent. 5 9 I I 11 15 15 16 14 14 14 12* 14* 14 16 15 11 11 15 91 2 7 7 4~ 4 1814-September......... October........... November........ December........ 1815-January.......... February......... Marhl............ April............. M:ay............. June............. July............. August........... September........ October............. Noveniber......... Decemiber......... 1816 January.......... Feb ruary......... MarIlch............ April............. NMay.............. * June............. July............. August........... Septemiber........ October.......... NoveiIb)er.......... l)ecembcr.e........ 81 7-Januiary.......... Fel-bruaLy......... 125 Baltimore. Per cent. 20 15 10. 14 20 5 5 10 14 16 20 19 20 211 T 15 18 15 13 18 23 20 20 15 12 10 I 8 9 9 . 2 2 -1 New York. Per cent..' 15 2 5 61 5 11 14 12i - 13 16 12 121 121 9 121 lot 12i 121 6 5 3 2 11 21 1 2i 2i BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. Oni the first of January, 1817, the second Bank of the United States began business, and on thie 20th of February following specie payments were nominally resumed. The extent and character of the resumption that took place mnay be gathered from the following case cited by Suinner, in his History of American Currency: "In 1817 a case at Rich mond, after specie payments were resumed, gave an insight into'the state of things. A man having presented teii one hundred dollar notes for redemption was refused. He could not get a lawyer to take a case against the bank for a long time. Finally having obtained judgment, the Sheriff was sent to collect. - The president of the bank was taken before the court, but refused to pay. The bank was closed by the Sheriff, but soon after opened and went oni." The specie basis system had now been in operation long enough to produce its legitimate fruits, and accordingly we find that here and there the people were becoming alarmed at its encroachments upon their rights, as well as at the evils which it inflicted upon the public. The following is an extract from a report of a legislative committee of the State of New York in 1818: "Of all aristocracies, none more completely enslave a people than that of money; and, in the opinion of your committee, no system was ever better devised so perfectly to enslave a community as that of the present mode of conducting banking establishments. Like the siren of the fable, they entice to destroy. They hold the purse-strings of society, and, by monopolizing the whole of the circulating medium of the comuitry, they form a precarious standard, by which all property in the country-homes, lands, debts and credits, personal and real estate of all descriptions-arc valued, thus renderilng the whole community dependent upon them; proscribing every maln who dares to expose their 126 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. unlawful practices. If he happens to be out of their reach, so as to require no favors from them, his friends are made the victims; so no one dares complain. The committee, on taking a general view of our State, and comparing those parts where banks have been, for some time, established with those that have none, are astonished at the alarming disparity. They see, in the one case, the desolation they have made in societies that were before prosperous and happy; the ruin they have brought on an immense number of the more wealthy farmers, and they and their families suddenly hurled from wealth and independence into the abyss of ruin and despair. If the facts stated ill the foregoing be true, (and your committee have no doubt they are,) together with others equally reprehensible and to be dreaded, such as that their influence too frequently, nay, often already, begins to assume a species of dictation altogether alarming, and, unless some judicious remedy is provided by legislative wisdom, we shall soon witness attempts to control all selections to offices in our counties nay, the elections to the very legislature. Senators and members of assembly will be indebted to the banks for their seat in this capitol; and thus the wise end of our civil institutions will be prostrated in the dust of corporations of their own raising." THE CHAtSH OF 1819. In 1818 the bank of the United States had discounted to the amount of $43,000,000, and had $2,000,000 in specie. It had established eighteen branches, and its notes could not be signed fast enough for the public. To increase its reserve of specie it had bought $7,000,000 of bullion abroad, at a cost of $800,000 for expenses, but it was exported as fast as it was imported. The Bank of England, which had been in suspension since 1797, was preparing to resume specie 127 8BANKS OF THlE UNITED STATES. payments, and was drawilng specie froml every source that was available. In April, 1818, less tlhian fifteen months after the Bank of the Unlitedcl States started, it was believed to be insolvent. A committee, appointed by Congress to investigate its affairs, reported a resolution requiring the bank to show cause why its charter should not be forfeited, but the resolution was lost, forty members of Congress being stockholders in the bank. The bank now resorted to vigorous measures to save itself from bankruptcy, and in a little over two months was once more solvent. It had, however, iuined the country. The amount of bank note circulation in 1813-14 was about $45,000,000; in 1817-18,$100,000,000; and in 1819 about $45,000,000. Contraction had done its work, and the ruin which it had accomplished was deep and widespread. In August, 1819, 20,000 persons were seeking employment in Philadelphia, and a similar condition of affairs prevailed in New York, Baltimore and other cities. The distress was least severe in New England. In the Western States it was intense. In the South the banks still pretended to pay specie, but the following account of the man,ier in whichi they did business in some localities would hardly justify the pretension: One who presented a bill hadl to make oath in the bank that the bill was his ownl and that lhe was not an agent for any one. He was required to make this oath before the cashier and five directors, and had to pay $1.371 expenses on each bill. Staignation and distress lasted throughout the year 1820. Wheat was 20 cents per bushel in Kentucky. At Pittsburgh flour was $1 per barrel, boards, $2 per thousand, etc., etc., while imported goods remained at their old prices. One and a half bushels of wheat would buy a pound of coffee; a barrel of flour would buy a pound of tea, and twelve and ahalf barrels of flour would buy a yaird of broadcloth. But 128 BANKS OF TIIE UNITED STATES. a better idea of the condition of affairs may be formed, perhaps, from a report of a committee of tie Senate of Pennsylvania, of which the distinguished Condy Raguet was chairman, made on the 20thl of February, 1820. It is as follows: "In ascertaining the extent of the public distress, your committee has had no difficulties to encounter. 3lembers of the legislature from various quarters of the State, have been consulted in relation to this subject, and their written testimony in answer to interrogatories submitted to them by-the committee, has agreed, with scarcely a single exception, ol all material points. With such respectable weight of evidence, added to that which has been derived from the protlhonot-tries, recorders and sheriffs of the different counties, from intercourse with numerous private citizens residing in different parts of the state, as well as from the various petitions presented to the legislature, your committee can safely assert that a distress unexampled in our country since the period of its independence, prevails throughout the commonwealthl. This distress exhibits itself under the various forms of "1. Ruinous sacrifices of landed property at sheriff's sales, whereby, in many cases, lands and houses have been sold at less than a half, a third, or a fourth of their former value, thereby depriving of their homes, and of the fruits of laborious years, a vast number of our industrious ftarmners, some of whom have been driven to seek, in the uncultivated forests of the west, that shelter of which they have been deprived in their native State. "2. Forced sales of merchandise, household goods, farming stock and utensils, at prices far below the cost of production, by which many families have been deprived of the common necessaries of life, and of the implements of their trade. 9 129 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. "3. N Tumeirous bankruptcies and pecuniary embarrassments of every description, as well among the agricultural and manufacturing as the mnercantile classes. "4. A general scarcity of money throughout the country, which renders it almost impossible for the husbandman or other owners of real estate to borrow at a usurious interest, and where landed security of the most indubitable character is offered as a pledge. A similar difficulty of procuring on loan had existed in the metropolis previous to October last, but has since then been partially removed. "5. A general suspension of labor, thie only legitimate source of wealth, in our cities and towns, by which tl:ousainds of our most useful citizens are rendered destitute of the means of support, and are reduced to the extremity of poverty and despair. "6. An almost entire cessation of the usual circulation of commodities, and a consequent stagnation of business, whichi is limited to the miere purchase and sale of the necessaries of life, and of such articles of consumption as are absolutely required by the season. "7. A universal suspension of all maniufacturing operations, by which, in addition to the dismissal of the numerous productive laborers heretofore engaged therein, who can find no other employment, the public loses the revenue of the capital invested in machinery and buildiings. "8. Usurious extortions, whereby corporations instituted for banking, insurance and other purposes, in violation of law, possess themselves of the products of industry without granting an equivalent. "9. The overflowing of our prisons with insolvent debtors, most of whom are confinedl for trifling sunms, whereby the community loses a portion of its effective labor, and is com 130 BANK5 &)F TIlE UNITED STATES. pelled to support families by charity who have thus been deprived of their protectors. "10. Numerous law-suits uLpon the dockets of our courts and of our justices of the peace, which lead to extravagant costs and loss of a great portion of valuable time. "11. Vexatious losses arising from the depreciation and fluctuation in the value of bank notes, the imposition of brokers and the frauds of counterfeiters. "12. A general inability inl a community to meet with punctuality the payment of debts even for family expenses, which is experienced as well by those who are wealthy in property as by those who have hitherto relied upon their current engagements. With such a mass of evils to oppress them, it cannot be wondered at that the people should be dispirited, and that they should look to their representatives for relief. Their patient endurance of suffering, which can -only be imagined by those who have habitually intermingled with them at their homes and by their firesides, merits the commendation of the legislature and prefers a powerful claim to their interference." The people of the IUnited States had not been without warning as to thie evils and dangers of the specie basis system, but they had supinely allowed the money power to gain control of the monetary affairs of the country, precisely as they are doilng now. January 16, 1814, previous to the crisis of that year, Jefferson iwrote as follows: "Everythinlg predicted by the enemnies of the banks in the beginning is now coming to pass. \\Ve are to b)e ruined by the deluge of bank paper, as we were formerly by the old Continental paper. It —is cruel that such revolutions in private fortunes should be at the mercy of avaricious adventurers, who, instead of employing their capital, if any they have, in manufactures, commerce, and other useful pursuits, make it an instrument 131 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. to burthen all the interchanges of property with their swindling profits, profits which are the price of no useful industry of theirs. * * I am an enemy to all banks discounting bills or notes for anything but coin." And again, January 6, 1816 ihe wrote as follows: "The American mind is now in that state of fever which the world has so often seen in the history of other nations. We are under the bank bubble, as England was under the South Sea bubble, France under the M-ississippi bubble, and as every nation is liable to be, under whatever bubble, design or delusion may puff up in moments when off guard. We are now taught to believe that legerdemain tricks upon paper canll produce as solid wealth as hard labor in the earth. It is vain for coimmon sense to urge that nothiyg can produce but qothigny; * Not Quixot enough, however, to attempt to reason Bedlam to rights, my anxieties are turned to the most practicable means of withdrawing us from the ruin into which we have run. Two hundred millions of paper in the hands of the people, (and less cannot be from the employment of a banking capital known to exceed one hundred millions,) is a fearful tax to fall at hap-hazard on their heads. a a And what have we purchased with this tax of two hundred millions; whickh we are to pay by wholesale, but usury, swindling and new forms of demoralization." As we have seen, the bubble burst, as predicted by Jefferson, in 1819. The stagnation and distress continued during 1821 and 1822. In 1823 there was a large creation of banks in New York, and the Bank of the United States began to expand. In 1824 all the banks began to expand. Pennsylvania rechartered the banks of 1814. In the spring of 1825 petitions were presented in New York for fifty-two charters for banks and insurance companies. "In Kentucky there was anarchy. Alabama and Tennessee notes were at a 132 BANKS OF TIIE t'UNITED STATES. discount. Indiana, Illinois and Mlissouimi were still sutffering from the' relief' system (stay law-s ag,ainst thle collection of debts, etc.)'The New Yorki ald Boston banks were fighting the country issues. * * The balnk of the Uniteel States increased its issues ov-er $3,000,000."'* crASH oF 1825. In the latter part of 1824 and beginining of 1825 the Bank of Elngland found it necessary to curtail its discounts, in order to check the outflow of bullion. This occasioned another terrible crisis in that country. Seventy banks failed and nearly two tltirds of the merchants anld manufacturers stopped payment, causilig great ldistress aiong thle working classes. Gold began to flow from the UnIited States, and the banks were obliged to suspend specie payients. Fifty failures occurred in New York before Deceii)ber, and banks went under all over the countlry. The crisis, howVever, was not felt so severely in the United States as it was in England, because the banks had not yet had sutfficient tinie to inflate their credit and circulation to the gLieatest extent. Hiere and there tliroughotit the country industrial activity was stimulated somiewhat du']ingi the inext few years by the high tariff of 1824 and 1828, and by the building of railroads, which began in 1830; but business generally continued to suffer from the rotten monetary systenm w-hich had been fastened upon the country, and distress was more or less common. THE WAR WITH THE UNITED STATES BANK. The fight between President Jackson adi the United States Bank, wliih occupied tle attentioni of thle people for years, now begt,.n. The specie basis system haCd been in operation for over a quarter of a centiyre, and during the whole time tie coiniitry lald iev-er once enjoyed the advan *Sumner's History of Amierican Curreiscy. 133 BANKS OF TIIE IJ ITED STATES. tages of a sound currelncy. Pecuniary distress, periodical returns of expanlsion and contraction, deranged currenley, ruined exchanges, and pallics and convulsions had char'acterized the enitire period. The balnks, although based on "hard imoney," and professiing to pay COinl, were in a state of chronic suspension. The press of the country was colapletely subsidized; Congress, as well as State legislatures, bowed in abject submiissioii to the mandates of the money power; and even the Supreime Court of the United States did not escape its contaminatig infilene. Thle people were perfectly helpless, and the outlook of Aimi:ie-ica1 free — dom and independence was dark indeed. It is wortlly of mention that Pitt, inl 1791, whlen ITlamilto brougtlht for\ward his funding and banking scheme, said: "Let the Ailericans adopt their funding systemi and go ilto tlheir bailking institutions, and their boasted independence will be a imere phantom." 3But fortunately for tlhe country tle elec(tion of 1828 resulted in the choice of Aii(drew jtacksoin as President of tle IUnited States, and the people found inl iimi a leader, as fearless as hle was patriotic. In his first miesslage to Congress, Deeceiber 8, 1829, in languag,e of extleilie m-1ioderationi, he called public attentiom to the United Stattes Bank, and expressed himself as unfavorable to its continued existence. He said: "The charter of the Bank of tle United( States exp)ires in 1836, and its stockholders will pr)obably apply for a renewal of their privileges. In oider to avoid the evils resulting from precipitancy in a mese involving such ilortant principles, anld such deep pecunIiary interests, I feel that I cannot, in justice to the parties interested, too soo n present it to thl-e deliberate consideration of the legislature and the people. l3otli tllhe constitutionality cud expediency of the law creati-ng this bank are well questioned by a 134 BANKS OF TIHE UNITED STATES. large portion of our fellow citizens; and it niLust be admitted by all that it hlas filed ini the great end of establishing a uniform anid sound currency." The bank iiinme(diately begaii preparations for war. Through its branchles and its control over State banks, its power extended into every part of the country. Millions of dollars (belonging, as it subsequently appeared, to depositors and stockholders) were squalndered for the purpose of corrupting the people. Statesmeni, Congressmenl, brawling politicians, editors, all succumbed to its influence, very much in the same wvay as they are seeni bowing to the power of the National Banks at the present day. After a careful survey of the field and a thloroug]l canvass of Congress, itwas determinied by the bank that a renewal of its charter should be al)plied f(r during the session of CoInress immediately precediing the next general election in 1832. The bill passed Congress T)y a majority of eight in the Senate and twentytwo in the ItIouse. As was expected, it was returned with the President's veto, on the 10thl of July, 1832. The contest was then transferred to:t wider field and carried on with excessive virulence. The money power everywhere went to work to defeat Jackson. In Philadelphia, for example, "the bank would order the business meli to hold public mneetings ill its behalf in order that it might ascertain who were its friends, and who were courageous enough to stand bv the government in its efforts to redeem the people, and then, in turn, would appoint places for thle assembling of the different trades, in order thiat the employers might see who of their workmen had opinions which they dared maintain."* The masses, however, rallied to the support of the President, and the capacity of the American people for self-government was triumphantly vindicated. President 'From Speech of Hon. W. D. Kelley, at Indianapolis, Aug., 1875. 135 BANKS OF THE UNITEI) STATES. Jackson was re-elected, defeati,ing Mr. Clay by a vote of 228 to 49 in the electoral college. UpL)onii examrinationl it will be found that the principles involved in the contest between General Jackson and the ULiiited States Bank are precisely identical with those whichl underlie the imil)pending contest between the people and the National Banks. The subject is, therefore, worthy of snore thani a passiii(g notice. Benlton, in his "Thirty Years in the UTlited States Senate," in comnmenting upon somne erors of aMons. d(e Tocqueville "in relation to the J3Iank of thle United States, the President and the people," gives t clear and( comprehen sive analysis of the principles and purposes involved in the contest, from which we quote as follows: "This passage* was the gradlll feature of tle message, rising above precedent anid judicial decisions, going, back to the Constitution and the foundation of party oil principle; and risking a contest at the comrmenceieiiet of his administration, whicll. iaeire politician would have put off to the last. The Supremie Court had decided( in favor of the constitutionality of the institution;:[ democratic Congress, in chartering a second bank, had yielded the question, both of constitutionality and expediency. al. Madison, in signimg the bank charter in 1816, yieldled to tlec authorities without siirenderin( lhis convictions. I:)ut the effect was the same in bel.lf of the ilstituttior, a,nd agalist tlie Constitution, mad ag,ainst the integrity of p::rty founded on priuicilTle. It tliiewv dowl the great landmark of par nty, nd yielded a power of construcetion -which nullified the limritationis of the Constitution, and left Congress at liberty to pass any law whichl it deemed neie essac;/ to carry into effect any granted power. The whole airg,umeint for the baink turned upon the word'necessary' at the end of the enumerated *See page 13, 136 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. powers granted to Congress; and gave rise to the first division of parties in Washington's time —the federal party being for the conistruction which would authorize a national bank; the democratic party (republican, as then called,) being against it. "It was not merely the bank which the democracy opposed, but the latitudinarian construction which would authorize it, and which would enable Congress to substitute its own will in other cases for the words of the Constitution, and do what it pleased under the plea of'necessary'-a plea under which they would be left as much to their own will as under the'general welfare' clause. It was the turning point between a strong and splendid government on one side, doing what it pleased, and a plain economical government on the other, limited by a written Constitution. The construction was the main point, because it made a gap in the Constitution through which Congress could pass any other measures which it deemed to be'necessary;' still there were great objections to the bank itself. Experience had shown such an institution to be a political machine, adverse to firee government, mingling in the elections and legislation of the country, corrupting the press, and exerting its influence in the only way known to the moneyed power-by corruption. General Jackson's objections reached both heads of the case-the unconstitlltionality of the bank and its inexpediecncy. It was a return to the Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian times of the early administration of General Washington, and went to the words of the Constitution, and not to the interpretations of the administrators for its meaning. "Such a message, from such a mian-a man not apt to look back when lie had set his face forward-electrified the democratic spirit of the coiuntirv. The old democracy felt as if they were to see the Constitution restored before they 137 BANKS OF THE U.NITED STATES. died-the young, as if they were sullmlmoled to the reconstructionl of the work of thleir fathlers. It w.:lS evident that a great contest was comlin(g on, and thle odds entirely agailist the President. On the oiie side, tle ucndivided phalanx of the federal party (for they had not tlienii tken the namne of whig); a large part of the democratic party, yieldiing to precedent and judicial decision; the ban]k itself, with its colossal money power-its armls ill ecely State by means of branlches-its power over thie State bailks-its power over the business comimuility-over public enie whio should become its debtors or retainers-its orgaiiizaItioi undi(ler a single head, issuilng, its orders in secret, to b)e ol)eyed in all places and by all subordinates at the same menoIInt. Such was the formnidable array on one side: on tle other side a divided democratic party, disheairtened l)y division, with nothing to rely upon but the goo(lnIess of their cause, the prestiye of Jackson's ir-alie, antid the presidential power;good ag,ainst anything less tlan two-thirds of Collngress on the final question of tic he-(:haltel; but tlie risk to ]r-un of his non-electioni before tlhe 4ina.l question ca(lie oi. "Under suchl circumstances it required a. stioJi llseiise of duty in the neew President to coiimmence his career by riskilg such a contest; but lie believed thle instittiiioii to be uncoiistitutional and dangerous, aind that it ougilit to cease to exist; and there was a clause in the Coustitutioni-tlhat Constitutioni whicih hlie had sworn to sipplort —whichl coium-ande(d hini to recommend to Co-ngress, for its consiideration, such measures as he should dceem expe(lient and proper. Under this sense of duty, and under the obligation of this oath, President Jackson had recommended to Congress the ion-renewal of the bank charter, and the substitution of a different fiscal agent for the operations of tlle governie niie t-if any such agent was required. And with his accustomed fiunikniess, 138 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. and the fairness of a man who has nothing but thle public good in view, and with a disregard of self which permits no personal consideration to stand in thle way of a discharge of' a public duty, he miade the recommendation six years before thle expiration of the charter, and in the first message of his first termn; thereby taking upon his hands such an enemy as the Bank of the United States, at the very commencement of his administration. That such a recommendation against such an institution should bring upon the President and his supporters, violent attacks, both personal and political, with arraignmenlt of motives as well as of reasons, was naturally to be expected; and that expectation was by no means disappointed. Both he and they, duriing the seven years that the bank contest (in different forins) prevailed, received from it-from the newspapers and periodical press in its interest, and from the public speakers in its favor of every gradean accumeulation of obloquy, and even of accusation, only lavished upon the oppressors and plunderers of nations-a Verres, or a Hastings." * * "HIe imputnged neithler the integrity nor the skill of the institution, but repeated the objections of the political school to which he belonged, and which were as old as Ir. Jefferson's cabinet opinion to President Tas]hingtoni, in the year 1791, and 3'I. 3Iadison's great speech in the Hiouse of PRepresentatives in the same year. Ie, therefore, made no attack upon the bank, either upon its existence, its character, or any one of its rilghts. On the other hand, the bank did attack President Jackson, under the lead of politicians, and for the purpose of breaking- himi down. The facts were these: President Jackson had communicated his opinion to Congress in Decemb)er, 1829, against the renewal of the charter; near three years afterwards, on the 9tlh of January, 1832, while the charter had yet above three years to run, 139' BANKS OF TIlE UX1ITED STATES. andl a newv Congress to be elected before its expiration, and the presidential election impending-il (General Jackson and M-r. Clay the caniidiates)-thle melmorial of the president and directors of the bank was suddenily presented in the Senate of the -United States, for renewal of its chlarter. "Now, how canie tlhat meniorial to be Ipresented at a time so inopportune? so premature, so inievitably mixing' itself with the presidential election, and so eincroaching upon the rights of the people, in snatching the question out of their hands, and having it decided by a Congress not elected for the purpose-and to the usurpation of the rights of the Congress elected for the pulrpose? T-How camne all these anomalies? all these violations of rigilt, decency and propriety? They came tlihus: thle bauk an(d itsleading anti-Jackson friends believed that the institution wa:s stironger than the President-that it could b)eat hiim in the election-that it could beat him in Congress (as it then stood), and carry the chartec —driving himn upon thle veto power, and rendering lhim odious if hlie used it, acnd disgracing him if (after what he had said) he did not. This was the opinion of the leading politicians friendly to the bank, and inimical to the President. But the bank had a- class of friends in Congress also friendly to Gen. Jackson; and betw-eei these two classes there was vehement opposition of opinion on the point of moving for the new chliarte. It was founld impossible, in communications betweeii AWaslhington and Philadelphia, tTln slow and uncertain, in sta,ge coach conveyances, over miry roads and frozen waters, to come to conclusions on the difficult point. ifr. Biddle and the directors were in doubt, for it would not do to move in the mnatter, unless all the friends of the bank in Congriess acted togethler. In this state of uncertainty, General Cadwallader, of Philadelphia, friend and confidant of M[r, BIiddle, and his uslual envoy in -140 BANKS OF TITE UNITED STATES. all the delicate bank negotiations or troubles, was sent to Washington to obtain a result; and the union of botla wings. of the balnk party in favor of the desired movement. He came, and the miode of operation was throtugh the miachinery of cCa?.6cus-that contrivance by which a few govern many. The two Aings being of different politics, sat separately, one headed by AIh. Clay, the other by Gen. Samiuel Smith of Mlaryland. The two caucuses disagreed, but the democratic being the smaller, aild Ali.- Clay's strong will dominating the other, the resolution was taken to proceed, and all bound to go together." * * "The prudential counsels of suchi men as 3iJr. Dallas did not prevail; political counsels governed; the bank chlarter was i)shed-Awas carried tliroughL both I-ouses of Coingress -dared thle veto of Jackson —received it-i-oused the people -and the bank and all of its friends Aweire cruslled. Theii it affected to have been attacked by Jackson; and Alins. de Tocqueville has carried that liction- into history, with all the, imaginary reasons for a groundless accusation, which the bank had invented. "The remainder of this quotatioln from Mons. de Tocqueville is profoundly erroneous, and deserves to be exposed, to prevent the mischiefs which his book might do in Europe, and even in America, among that class of our people who look to European writers for information upon their owil country. Ile speaks of the well informed classes who rallied round the bank; and the common people who had formed no rational opinion upon the subject, and who had joined General Jackson. Certainly the great business community, with few exceptions, comprisinlg wealth, ability and educationI, went for the bank, and the masses for General Jackson; but which had formed the rational opinion is seen by the event. The'well informed' classes have bowed not merely 141 BANKS (OF TIIE UNITED STATES, -to the decision, but to the intelligence of the nmasseso They have adopted their opinion of the instituttioiin-conldemnled it -repudiated it as an'obsolete idea;' and of all of its former advocates, not one now exists. All have yiel(lded( to that instinctive sagacity of the people, which is al ovennriatcli for 1book-learning; and which being the result of common sense, is usually right; and being disinterested, is always honest. I adduce this instance-a grand national onec-of the sulccumbing of the well informed classes to the instinctive sagacity of the people, not merely to correct MIons. de Tocqueville, but for the higher purpose of showing the capacity of the people for self-government. The rest of the quotation,'tie independent existence-tihe people accustomed to make and unmake-startled at this obstacleirritated at a permanent institution-attack in order to shake and control;' all this is fancy, or as the old Englishl wrote it, fantasy-enlivened by French vivacity into witty theory, as fallacious as witty." * * "Now, while AIons. de Tocqueville was arranging all this fine ecomiwn upon the bank, and all this censure upon its adversaries, the whole of which is nothing but a Frenclh translation of the bank publications of the day, for itself and against President Jackson-durinig all this time there was a process going on in the Congress of the United States, by which it was. proved that the bank was then insolvent, and living from day to day upon expedients; and getting hold of property and money by contrivances which the law would qualify as swindling-plundering its own stockholders -and bribing individuals, institutions, and members of legislative bodies, wherever it could be done. Those fine notes, of which he speaks, were then without solid value. The salutary restraint attributed to its control over local banks was soon exemplified in its forcing many of them into -142 B13ANKS OF TIIE UNITED STA.TES. complicity in its crimes, and all into two general suspensions of specie payments, headed by itself. Its solidity and its honor wclre soon slhown in open bi,~kruptey —ii the dishono, of its notes th-e violation of sateled dceposits-the disappeairance of its capital the destruction of institutions connected with it thle extinctioni of fifty-six millions of capital (its own, and tl-hat of otllers dra-wn into its vortex);-, and the uin or daiiiag,e of fa.nilies, both foreigii and Aiieriican, who had been induced by its n anc, aid by its delusive exhibitions of credit, to invest their imoney in its stock. Placiing the opposition of President Ja(kson to such an institution to the account of base aid personal iIiotives-to feelings of revenge because hlie had been uiable to seduce it into his support-is til error of fact ninaifestedl by all the 1history of the case; to say nothling of his own personal character. I-e was a senator in Coingress dut'iiig the existence of the first national hank, and was against it; and on the saiae grounds of unconstitutionamlity anid of iniexpedieciy. -ie delivered his opinion against this second one befor'e it liad manifested any hostility to hiiii. hlis fist opposition was abstractagainst the institution-without refeirence to its conduct; he knew nothiug against it thene, and neither said, or insinuated( anythiug ag,ainst it. Subl)sequeltly, wlheni misconduct was discovered, he clitrged it; and openly and responsibly. Equally uLfoIIunded is tlle ilnsiunation in another place, of subserviency to local banks. HIe, the instruient of local banks! lhe whlo colil(d not be made tle friend, even, of the great bank itself; who was all his life a hard mnioney man an opposer of all banks-tlthe denouncer of delinquent banks in his own State; wlho, with one stroke of his pen, in the recess of Cong-ress, -and- against its will, in the summer of 1836, struck all tlcir notes flroia the list of land office payments! and lwhose last message to Congt,ress, and in his 143 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. farewell address to the people, admonished theim earnestly and affectionately against the whole system of paper money (bank currency)-the evils of which he feeliingly described as falling heaviest upon the most meritorious part of the communLity, and the part least able to bear thlem-the productive classes." The United States Bank continued its war upon the administration until the last imoment of its existencle. Its charter expired by limitation in 1836, but it was entitled to two years in which to wind up its affairs. Instead of )preparimg to close up its business it resorted to new and despl)erate measures to proloIig its powers. In January, 1836, a bill was "snaked" thirough the legislature of Pennsyl}vanaia, by means of bribery and corruption, entitled "An A(ct to repeal the State tax, and to continue the improvement of tle Stato by railroads and canals, and for other purp)oses;" and under the vague generality of "other purposes," was fourd a charter for the United States Bank, adopting it as a State Bank. The people of Pennsylvania were astounded, and met in masses to denounce the act and demand its repeal; and at the next session of the legislature an investigation was ordered, but, as is usual in such cases, it came to nothing. Rotten and corrupt as the institution subsequently proved to be, it went onI for several years, and exerted great influence in the commercial and political affairs of the country. The two general suspensions of specie payments, headed by the United States Bank, referred to in thle foregoing extracts from Benton, were the suspensions of 1837 and 1839, in the latter of which the bank closed its doors upon its creditors October 9th, 1839, never really to open tliem again. A report of its affairs was made by a committee of stockholders, and disclosed, to quote again from Benton, " such an exhibition of waste and destruction, and of downright plundering and 144 BANKS OF T''HE UNITED STATES. criminal misconduct, as was never seen before in the annlals of banking. Fifty-six and three-quarter millions of capital out of eighty-two and one-quarter millions, (including its own of thirty-five,) were sunk in the limits of Philadelphia alone; for the great monster, in going down, hlad carried many others along with her; and, like the strong man in scripture, slew more in her death than in her life. Vast was her field of destruction-extelnding all over the United States —and reaching to Europe, where four millions sterling of her stock was held, and large loans had been contracted. Universally on all classes the ruin fell-foreignlers as well as citizens-peers and peeresses, as well as the ploughlman and the wash-woman-merchants, tradesmen, lawyers, wards and guardclians; confiding friends who came to thl-e rescue; deceived stockholders who lheld on to their stock, or puirchased more; the credulous masses who believed ill tlhe safety of their deposits, and in the security of the notes they heldall-all saw themselves tlhe victims of indiscriminate ruin. An hundred millions of dollars was the lowest at which the destruction was estimated; and how such ruini could be worked, and such blind confidence kept up for so long a time, is the instructive lesson for history; and that lesson the report of the stockholders' committee enables history to give. From this authentic report it appears that fromi the year 1830 to 1836-the period of its struggles for a re-charter-tlhe loans and discounts of the bank were about doubled- its exlpenses trebled. Near thirty millions of these loans were not of a mercantile character-nleither made to persons in trade or business. * * To whom were they made? To members of Congress, to editors of newspapers, to brawling politicians, to brokers and jobbers, to favorites and connections; and all with a view to purchlase a re-charter, or to enrich connections and exalt himnself, (Nicholas Biddle, 10 145 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. President of the Bank.) The importance of tihe destruction of the United States Bank cannot be overestimated. In no other way could the government have been rescued from the domination of the money power, which was sparing no pains to subvert the liberties of the people. John Randolph warningly said: "Charter a bank with thirty-five millions of capital; let it establish and learn its power; and then find, if you can, means to'bell the cat.' It will be beyond your power; it will overawe your Congress, and laugh at your laws." His words were fully verified. Even Clay, who had said, in 1811, "I conceive the establishment of this bank (National Bank) as dangerous to the safety and welfare of this republic," and Webster, who had declared his hostility to bank currency repeatedly, as "one of the greatest of political evils," and "a contrivance for cheating the laboring classes of mankind," were both dragooned into the support of the United States Bank, in its application for a renewal of its charter; and all this power over the monetary and political affairs of the country was developed by the bank while it was yet in its infancy and rotten, financially, to the core. We have dwelt at some length upon the subject of the LUnited States Bank, because the country is now ulndergoinig a similar ordeal. Tihe money power is seeking to again secure control of the monetary and political affairs of the country through the instrumentality of the National Banks. The monster is now hlydra-headed. Its political tools of both parties, in and out of Congress, pretend to be in favor of specie circulation-of 1"hard money," "honest money," etc. It is a mere pretense. If they were honestly for "hard money," and opposed to "paper money," their first step would be to suppress the paper money of the banks, because, of all forms of paper money, that is the worst and most dangerous. Benton, the great champion of hard money, 146 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. could tolerate United States Treasury notes, and even voted for a bill authorizing their issue; but, unlike these hypocritical champions of hard money of the present day, he left no one in doubt in regard to his views upon the question of banks of issue. In his speech, on the Divorce of Bank and State, in 1837, he said: "Banks of circulation are banks of hazard and of failure. It is an incident of their nature. Those without circulation rarely fail. That of Venice has stood seven hundred years; those of Hamburg, Amsterdam, and others, have stood for centuries. The Bank of England, the great mother of banks of circulation, besides an actual stoppage of a quarter of a century, has had her crisis and convulsion in average periods of seven or eight years, for the last half century-in 1783,'93,'97, 1814,'19,'25,'36and has only been saved from repeated failure by the powerful support of the British government, and profuse supplies of exchequer bills. HIer numerous progeny of private and joint stock banks of circulation have had the same colvul sions; and not being supported by the government, have sunk by hundreds at a time. All the banks of the United States are banks of circulation; they are all subject to the inherent dangers of that class of banks, and are, besides, subject to new dangers peculiar to themselves. From the quantity of their stock held by foreigners, the quantity of other stocks in their hands, and the current foreign balance against the United States, our paper system (bank currency) has become an appendage of that of England. * * The power of a few banks over the whole presents a new feature of danger in our system. It consolidates the banks of the whole Union into one mass, and subjects them to one fate, and that fate to be decided by a few, without even knowledge of the rest. (This was strikingly illustrated by the almost general suspension of the National Banks in 1873.) An unknown 147 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. divan of bankers sends forth an edict which sweeps over the empire, crosses the lines of States with the facility of: firmian, prostrating all State institutions, breaking up all engagenients, and leveling all laws before it. This is a kind of consolidation which the genius of Patrick Henry had not even conceived. But while this firmaii is thus potent and irresistible for prostration, it is impotent and powerless for resurrection. It goes out in vain, bidding the prostrate banks to rise. A veto power intervenes. One voice is sufficient to keep all down; and thus we have seen one word from Philadelphia* annihilate the New York proposition for resumption and condemn the many solvent banks to the continuation of a condition as mortifying to their feelings as it is injurious to their future interests. Again from tie mode of doing lbusiness among our baniks-using each others notes to bank upon, instead of holding each other to weekly scttlements, and liquidation of balances inll specie, * *' our' banks have all become links of one cl:lain, the strength of the whole being dependent on the strength of each. A few govern all. WVhether it is to fail, or to resume, the few govern; and not only the few but the weak. A few weak banks fail; a panic ensues, and the rest shut upl); many strong ones are ready to resumne; the weak are not ready, and the strong must wait. Thus the principles of safety, and the rules of government, are reversed. The weak govern the strong; the bad govern the good; and the insolvent govern the solvent. This is our system, if system it can be called, which has no feature of consistency, no principle of safety, and which is nothing but the floating appendage of a foreign and overpowering system." Who can doubt as to where Jackson and Benton would stand to-day, if they were alive, in regard to the issue now pending, whether the government and people of the United See page 150. 148 BAtNKS OF T-IE UNITED STATrES. States shall use Uniited States Treasury notes, or National Bank notes, noninjally redeemable ill gold, for their circulating mediumi? It was impossible in Jacksoii's tinme for the adminiistrationi to supp'ress Stdtte )banks of issue, so deeply had they becomie rootedcl iii tle structure of American society, bult everytliigi possible was don,e to curtail their powerI for miischlief. The first step talken ill this direction waVs thie publication, July 11, ]830, of tlhe famous "speci circular," ordering ag,elits for the sale of public lands to take nothliig ill paylaelit but specie. This circular was based on a law passed in 1816, requiring the Secretary of the Treasury to take liothiiig, but specie, Treasury inotes, or thie notes of sTe'ie paying b:als. Tlie notes of eastern banks at tlTis tilme were sent tWest for a "g,ood circ1ulation," and " cooil-box banks" were set up) in the Western States, which issued notes in easy loanis to land speculators.* The title to land was passing, rapidly to speculators, and the treasury was beiing, filled with worthless paper. Ten millions of bank currency of this sort was arrested by tihe cilrcular on its way to the land office at Washington. The money power was highly indignant, and Congress, then as now its suppliant tool, at its next session passed a bill resciidinig the circular, but it was not signed by the Presidenit and failed to becoiae a law. This led to the establishment of the Indepencdent Treasury system, of which more will be said hereafter. The number of spl)ecie basis banks in existenice during this period were as follows: Years. Number. Years, Number. Years, Number. 1820... 308 1835....558 1838...663 1830....330 1836....567 1839... 840 1834....506 1837....634 1840....901 Thie country was flooded wvitlh depreciated currency, based on "hard money," and coumercial crashes aind money 'History of Amiericaii Cuirrelncy. 149 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. panics occurLred with alhost as mctiCi regularity as the ebb and flow of the tides. THE CPASII OF 1837. In the latter part of 1836 several large failures occurred in Great Britain. This was the beginning of a crisis which convulsed both Europe and America. Early ill Aay one bank in New York City and three ill Buffalo failed. On thle 10th of May all the banks in New York suspended specie payments, under a law passed by the legislature allowing them to suspend for one year. The ballks tlhroughout the country soon followed their example. The distresses of the year were aggravatecld by a failure of the wheat crop. The New York banks being required by law to resumie MNay 10, 1838, contracted their circulation as rapidly as possible. It was reduced over $12,000,000, or one-half, during the year 1837. The banks of New England were in a bad condition, the best of them having only $1 in specie to redeem $11 in notes. A meeting of bankl delegates in New York was called for Novelmber 27, 1837, to confer in regard to resumption, but tlhe United States Bank refusiiin, the convention did not meet. The New York Banks resulniedl on the 10th of May, 1838, and nearly all tle banks througTiout the country soon followed, at least nominally, except those of Philadelphia. Towards the end of the year the Bank of England again became involved in trouble, produciing the usual effect in America. CRASHI OF 1839. On the 10th of October, 1839, the Bank of the United States closed its doors, and was followed by nearly all the banks in the South and West. Thec banks ini New York and New England miade a show of holding out, but to no1 parpose. According to Sulmner, 343 out of 850 banks closed 150 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. entirely, ancl 62 )airtially, arnd thle governintent lost over $2,000,000 in deposits. C-ASH OF 1841. An attempt was made to resumie specie payments in 1841. But a run was made on thle United States Bank, which had again opened, and it was compelled to finlally close February 4, 1841. This led to another general suspension, followed by great distress.* Specie payments were not again resumied until larchl, 1842. During all these years of banking on the specie basis system, banking operations had been carried on in the most reckless mainner, without regard to personal integrity, or the laws of banking. Every possible device was resorted to by banks to put their notes in circulation, ini such a way as would prevent their speedy return for redemption. Judge Kelley, in an able speech on the subject of banking, delivered at Indianapolis, in August, 1875, thus felicitously describes the mainner in which this was frequently done: "Do you know where the phrase'carpet-bagger' came fromi? The younger men of our day thinki it was invented to describe a man from the North who went South and got an office. Oh, no; not at all. The older members of my audience will attest the truth of what I say when I state thlat the phrase'carpet-bagger' arose from the fact that nearly every specie basis bank had its earpet-bagger-a fellow it sent with notes by the carpet-bag full into sonie distant State to get them into circulation there. If he could not buy cattle, corn, hogs or something else in which there might be a profit, lie was to enter into a treaty with the carpetbagger or other officer of soilme bank out there for an exchange of notes. For instance: The Frogtowu bankfor I amn told there were banks located occasionally in 'How this distress was relieved in Peninsylvania, see )page 44. 151 :BANKS OF T[IE IN'ITIED STATES. almost impenetrable swamps, and in those days, you must renmemiber, there were 110no telegraphs and but, few railroads -the fellow from Frogtown would get way out into Skunktown, another almost inaccessible place, and he would effect aan exciang,e of ten, twenty, or thirty thousand dollars of Frogtown bank notes for a like amount of Skuntktown bank notes, and the Skuinktown1 bankers would put off the Frogtown notes on their custolmers, and the F'rogtown bankers would put off the Skuniktown bank notes onl theirs, and thus they would go on with this legitimate business to their common advantage. I amn givingr you a historic fact iwheii I tell you that I first becaune.acquainted with that term in designating those fellows w}ho were traveling from one outof-the-way place to aniothler with a carpet-bag, full of notes to exeliangie, so that the notes put in circulation in Skunktown couldn't find their way back to Frogtown, because the people in Skunktown didn't know where Frogtown was, an(I the people in Flrogtownl didn't know where Skiunktowii was -and if they did they couldn't get there; the people in one place couldn't get to the other to get the specie on whichl the notes were based. Then after the bank at Frogtowi: had paid out the Skunktowii notes, tlhe bank at Frogtowii would refuse to receive the Skiunktown: notes, but it would send the 1holder, who was its debtor, around the (ornier to a broker, who would biiv tlhem at seven oi nie per cent. discount, and tl-henl thle broker and tle bank wouldl divide the proceeds of this gold basis transactioi. That is a specimeni of whalt was going, onl all over the coiltnti-r." In referring to tlhis period, in the same sl)eecll, Judcge Kelley forcibly says: "It is usual to speak of tlhe great crisis of 1837, but from 1832 to 1-S43 wav-s one unbroken period of individual suffering, r1esultin(g from the alternating expansions and contractions of a banking system based on 152 BANKS OF TIIE UNITEl) STATES.,. what it could not get, and could not lhave ietained if it lhadl got —gold coupled with permission to issue notes and lend money deposited for safe keeping." In 1840 the Independlent Treasury act was passed, which took from the banks the custody of the fulnds of the governmenit. This act excited grieat indignation amongst the banks and their tools, and tlhe next year, a new administration coining into power, Harrison lhaving been elected President, the first step taken by Co,ngress was to repeal it. It was re-enacted, however, in 1846, andcl remained in force until 1861, when it was suspended to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to deposit the ftunds of the government with " specie paying )banks." (The Secretary of the Treastvy wAas about to negotiate a loan of 8150,000,000 from tlhe banks of New York, Boston and Philadlelphia, and the Independent Treasury act was suspended at their inistance, so as to enable them to retain their gold and pay the govermelnt ill bank currency; but the Secretary of the Treasury unexpectedly required the loan to be paid in specie, and, after that, there were no "specie paying banks" left in which to deposit government funds.) The stimulus of the tariff of 1842, a great demand for breadstuffs from abroad, the introduction of foreign capital, the discovery of gold in Californiia, and other causes conbined to carry the country thlrough from 1841 to 1857 without a commercial crash or money panic. (P,ASII OF 1857. In 1857, however, the people of Great Britaini were overtaken by another of their periodical crises, whiichl-, as usual, involved the banks of the United States. The Ohio Life and Trust Company failed Au,igust 24, 1857, witli liabilities to the amount of $7,000,000. Sumner say)s, "at this period 153 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. no rule seems to have governed issues save to keep one-third of the circulation in specie, and in some States even this dwindled down to one-tenth or one-twelfth. Such a rule, however, is entirely fallacious, as any other arbitrary rule of reserve must be, and it proved in the time of trial that there was no strength to endure any shock." The New York banks, as an example of the contraction which followed,cl curtailed their loans from $116,000,000, August 29, 1857, to $94,500,000, November 28, 1857. The banks of Phliladelphia, Washington, Baltimore, and interior towns, suspended ill September, and those of New York, Boston and of the country generally, in October. Stocks fell 40 or 50 per cent., and 20,000 persons were thrown out of employment in New York City within a fortnight.* But it is unnecessary to go into details. It was the same old story over again. Tfhe people were accused of "extravagance," "over production," etc., and after "confidence" had been restored by the Sheriff, the banks started afresh. SUSPENSION OF 1861. In the beginning of 1861, when the great Rebellion broke out, the number of banks in the United States was about 1,600, with a circulation of over $200,000,000. Of this circulation, about three-fourths belonged to the Northern States. The specie reserve of the banks of the Northern States, kept on hand for the purposes of redemption, amounted to probably some $60,000,000. The necessities of the government becoming urgent, to-o loan acts were passed by Congress, during the extra session of 1861, one approved July 17th and the other August 5thl. By the act of July 17th Congress authorized loans to the amount of two hundred and fifty millions of dollars, in bonds running twenty years, at not over 7 per cent. interest; in 7-30 notes rununing three years; *Sumnner, page 183. 154 BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. or fifty millions of the amount could, at the discretion of thie Secretary, be issued in the form of Treasury notes, payable on demlland, without interest.* The act of Congress of August 5th authorized the Secretary of the Treasury to issue 6 per cenlt. bonds, running twenty years, for the purpose of funding the Treasury notes, etc., and also suspended the provision of the sub-Treasury act of 1846, "so far as to allow the Secretary of the Treasury to deposit any of the moneys obtained on any of the loans now authorized by law, to the credit of the ULnited States, in such solvent specie paying banks as hlie may select." Then, to quote from Spaulding's Financial History of the War, "the banks in New York, Boston and Philadelphia most patriotically came forward and made arrangements in several negotiations with Secretary Chase to loan the government $150,000,000 under the provisions of the two loan acts passed at the extra session. Of this sum $105,000,000 was apportioned to the associated banks of New York, payable in installments. The banks were in good condition, * * alnd the loan to the government was made with the expectation that the money would be checked out under the direction of the Secretary, in pursuance of the sixth section (suspending the sub-Treasury act) above referred to. The Secretary of the Treasury refused to use the discretionary power conferred upon him, by that section, and would not check on the banks for tlhe expenses of the war, so that current bank notes could be paid or balances settled thlrough the clearing house, but insisted that the banks should pay the money loaned into the sub-Treasury in gold or gold Treasury notes. * * The banks having been committed to making the loans, and having made partial advances on account of the same, were obliged to complete the loan, notwithstanding the Secretary These notes (klnown afterwards as old deimand notes) were subsequently inade a full legal tender and circulated at par with gold. See Chapter VI. 15.,5. BANKS OF TIlE UNITEDI) ST'iTES. of the Treasury deemed it incompatible with his views of duty, and tile traditions of the suLb-Treasury law to use such banks as disbursilig agents of the governienlt, even under the extraordinary exigency under which the loans were made." Froin this it appealrs that when the ballks "most patriotically came forward" to lend the government the sun of $150,000,000, they confidently cxpected that they would be permitted to exchange bank cur]rency for the bonds of the government, and in effect to become factors between the government and the people, in exclhangingi, the bonds of the government for the products of industry. hlad this arrlrangement been carried out, it is not difficult, in the lilght of sixty years experience with the specie basis ban1kiini system, to conjecture what would have been thle result. The banks would have taken the loans of tle governmenlt as fast 1s they were offered, and inflated tlleir circulation to a corresponiding degree. Sooner or later tie inflation would have ended in a commercial crash and money panic; the banks would have suspended specie payments as usual, and the people would have found themselves with some hundreds of millions of dollars of worthless or depreciated paper on their hands-hir a state of bankruptcy. Secretary Chase undoubtedly became entangled in the toils of the money power, but his action in this particular, in refllsing to take anythiiig but specie froi tl-ie banks on account of their loan of $150,000,000, was a fortuniate ci'rcumstance, which led to important results. When urged to clie(k upon the banks, instead of requiring them to pay specie, lie said, "however harmless or beneficial it might be, if confined to the New York banks, it would inevitably result in a general payment and'receipt for public dues of bank notes, whl-ichl in turn would lead to expansion, whiichI in turn woutild term-inate iln suspen1sion and vast injuries to tle sounld batnks." Letter of J. E. WVilliamis to flol. S1'. ('l.se 156 BANXKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. The banks accused the Secretary of the Treasury of acting in bad faith with them, not only in the matter of requiring them to pay specie, but in continuing to issue Treasury notes (demand notes under the act of July 17, 1861) after he had given assurances to the contrary, and a general suspension of specie payments took place on the 28th of December, 1861. A prominent banker* in speaking of this period says:: " Even with all these unfavorable circumstances surrounding them (the banks), it was an encouraging fact observed by those who were anxiously watching the practical operation of this great and novel experiment, that while the circula ting notes in the country were restricted, the disbursements 'of the government for the war were so rapid, and the consequent internal tradce movement was so intense, thlat the coin paid out upon each installmnent of the loan came back to the banks, through the community, in about one week. The natural effect of this general comnercial activity upon the circulating medlium being to quicken its flow. After takiing the third amount of fifty millions by the associated banks, those in New York who had at that time paid in of their proportion over eighty millions in all found themselves in this position: Their aggregate coin, which on the 17th of August, before the first payment into the Treasury, was..... $49,733,990 Was on December 7th...................... 42,318,610 A reduction of only......................... $7,415,380 and the other two cities in like proportion." In the latter part of 1861 gold began to flow towards Europe. This, togetler with the issue of demand notes, caused the specie reserve of the banks to diminish rapidly. The dramin upon the New York banks in December went on at the following rate: 'Letter of Geo. S. Coe to E.G. Spaulding, Finulcial Ihistory of the War. -157' BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. December 7, 1861, the banks had in specie... $42,300,000 " 14,....39,000,000 " 21, " " "..... 36,800,000 " 28, " " "..... 29,300,000 After a filnal conference with Secretary Chase, in which he refused to abandon the course he had thus far pursued, the banks decided that it was expedient to suspend specie payments, and accordiingly, as already mentiooned, a general suspension took place on Deccinber 28, 1861. Fromi this time on the specie in tl-he New York banks be(gan to increase agaiin, and March 8, 1862, was $30,000,000. The State balnks continued to circulate their notes until after the National Banks were put in opleration, when they were driven out of circulation by taxation. The National Banking bill becamie a law on the 25th of February, 1863, and on the 3d of MIarch following an act of Congress was passed imposing a tax of one per cent. each half year, on a graduated scale, of State bank circulation, according to the capital stock of each bank. This was done for the purpose of getting the State banks of issue out of tlhe way of the National Banks, and proved successful. Thus, after an eventful career of over half a century, duriing whichl they had inflicted incalculable injury and suffering upon the American people, the specie basis banlks of issue, organized under State authority, passed away, not in a merited storm of public indignation, but quietly anid stealthily at the coimand of the money power, to enable it to erect in their stead a more powerful and dangerous development of the same system of bankin,g. NATIONAL BANKSo The National Banking systemi was planned shortly after Secretary Chase entered upon the duties of his office, and was recommended by himn in his first annual report to Con 158 BANKS OF TIIE UNITED STATES. gress, December 10, 1861. It was found impossible to put the system into operation soon enough to meet the necessities of the government, and it became necessary to issue Treasury notes (greenbacks.) There is abundant reason to believe that the instigators of the National Bankling system were in no particular hurry to have it put into operation. As the circulation of the National Banks was to be based on government bonds, it became an object to these conspirators, chief among whoml was the Ijon. John Sherman, United States Senator from Ohio, to so shape legislation as to depreciate the paper of the government and enable them to secure the bonds necessary to establish the National Banking system It the lowest possible figure. Thie XNational Banlking bill, therefore, was not pressed until 1863. It was then foisted upon the country at a time when National Banks could render no possible service to either government or people-in fact, were a disadvantage, for their circulation differs inll no material respect from the circulation of specie basis banks of issue, and is a breeder of inflation. The National Banlking system was conceived in fraud, und its promoters, who found it to their advantage to first depreciate by legislation and then decry, as they are still doing, the paper of the government, were more dangerous, because more subtle enemies of the government, than Jefferson Davis and all his hosts. The last step in the scheme, i)lullned by Secretary Chase and certain capitalists and politicians, is now in process of consummation. We refer to the retirement of the greenibalck and tihe resumption of specie payments, January 1, 18 59. IVhcen this is accomplished the Xational Balnks will hold the purse strings of society, and, by monopolizing the whole of the circulating mediiim of thie country, by which all property in thie country —homes, lands, debts and credits, personal and real estate of all descriptions-are 159 BANKS OF TIlE UNITED STATES. valued, will render the whole conllllnuity dependent upon them. John Randolph predicted, and his prediction was verified, that if a Nationlal Banlk was established with a capital of 835,000,000, it would "overawe Coingress and laugh at its laws." Now we hlave 2,000 National Ballks with a capital of nearly $400,000,000. Beniton characterized the unity of interest of the old State banks of issue as "a consolidation of a kind which thle genius of IPatrick i-henry hadi not even conceived." Tle National Ballking system constitutes "a consolidation" besides which the one denouniced by Benton is a maeie pigmy. italilton when lie sougrht to found a strong government, based on an aristocracy of wealth, and to that end uired tlte establlishment of a%United States Bank modeled on the Britis h syste never dr eamed of such a consolidated powAe, ais that now co(nstituted by 2,000 National Banks, modeled on tlat (tlhe Britishl-) systemi. But, apart fromi thle dangerous power over tlle property and political affairs of the country, wliech such a systemi confers upon a comparatively smiall class of people, why should all other classes be compelled to pay the banking class interest on $400,000,000, more or less, of paper money based on bonds of the government, for which the people are responsible, whieni they can hlave a better circulatilng mediium, without i~,terest, based on precisely the sa111e( security? The history of the National Banking system can be more clearly set forth in connection with tle history of the legal tender acts, passed during the war, anid with that will form the subject of the next chapter. The details of tlhe system will be duly explained in a subsequent chapter (Chapter VII.) 160 CHAPTER VI. HISTORY OF THE PAPER MONEY ISSUED DURING TI-IE HEBELLION. AON-EY, as has been fully explained, is an important element in the production and distribution of wealth in all its forms. Without it production is slow and laborious, and the distribution of the products of industry difficult and expensive. Hence the necessity of an abundance of money based on sound principles-that is money that is free to obey the natural laws of trade, and not subject to the control of private corporations, as is the case with bank currencyto fill the channels of circulation. With a sound currency in circulation the production and accumulation of wealth would go on gradually and steadily, and commercial crashes and money panics would be unknown. Individuals would succeed or fail, as now, but it would be through natural causes. That a people can carry on commercial operationsof great magnitude for centuries, by means of an enlightened system of money, without being visited once by such crises and convulsions as have marked the history of Great Britain and the United States, since the adoption of the specie basis (banks of issue) system-of money, is fully demonstrated by the history of the Venetians,* and the experience of other European nations ill more recent times. The weakness of the specie basis system has been most signally illustrated, however, in times of war, when great activity in both production and distribution became absolutely imperative. In the war with France, from 1793 to 1815, Great Britain was obliged to abandon a medium of exchange based on *See Chapter IV. 11 IIISTORY OF TIIE PAPEJ P MONEY specie altogether. By means of irredeemable paper money she was enabled to carry on successfully one of the mnost tremendous wars of modern tilnes, and at its close the people of Great Britain were, individually and collectively, prosperous. Ignoringi the teachings of experience slhle waded back through individual bankruptcy and ruin to the old system, and has had her comlercial crashes and miioney panics since wi-tli tle same regularity as before. If paper money is found to be so invaluable in the production and distribution of the products of industry, under the most disadvantagous circumstances, in timne of war, what is to hinder it from being equally invaluable in timie of peace, when no uncertainty in regard to its ability to represent value can attend its use? That the use of paper money during war is a matter of compulsion, is the merest sophistry. During the Revolutionary war, when Continental money, which can hardly be said to have been based on anything, began to grow worthless, Congress declared that those who refused to take it should be regarded as public enemies. The public smiled, and barbers papered their shops with it.* Paper money, however, undoubtedly becomes an acknowledged necessity during war especially in countries whose medium of exchange belongs to the specie basis system. In Great Britain business affairs in times of peace have to be conducted almost entirely, as we lhave seeii,t by means of devices of the credit systelm, on account of the limited amount of money in circulation, and when an emergency arises, requiring great rapidity of production and distribution, bothl government and people find themselves without any adequate means to accomplish the ends desired. When the Rebellion broke out in 1861, tlle people of the United States were in the enjoyment of unusual prosperity. *Sumner's Ilistory of American Currency. tSee page 47. 162 ISSUED DURING THIE REBELLION. The crops had been more than ordinarily good, and the country generally was rapidly recovering from the crash of 1857. The cotton crop of 1860 had reached the enormous amount of 5,387,052 bales (of 400 lbs. each.) The state of the banks and the currency from 1857 to 1863 was as follows: Circulation. Deposits. Loans. Specie. 1857-.$214,700,000 $230,309,000 $684,400,000 $58,300,000 1858- 155,200,000 185,900,000 583,100,000 74,400,000 1859- 193,300,000 259,500,000 657,100,000 104,500,000 1860- 207,100,000 253,800,000 691,900,000 83,500,000 1861- 202,000,000 257,200,000 696,700,000 87,600,000 1862- 183,700,000 296,300,000 646,300,000 102,100,000 1863- 238,600,000 393,600,000 648,600,000 101,200,000 1863- 193,300,000 259,500,000 657,100,000 104,500,000 Preparations for war were begunl by the Federal Government on a scale of great magnitude, with an empty Treasury. The real and personal property of the country, according to the census report of 1860, amounted to $h6,159,616,068, or, leaving out the States in rebellion, to $10,957,450,961. The people of the States which sustained the Federal Governmenit possessed ample resources and were inspired by a sincere feeling of patriotism. The only question, therefore, was as to the means by which the resources of the people could be rendered available to the government. It could of course be done only through the instrumentality of a medium of exchange.* Taxation was impracticable at the outset, because the government did not possess the machinery for laying and collecting taxes, and funds were required at once; and besides the amount of money in circulation was insignificant as compared with the wants of thie government. There was manifestly but one of two courses to pirsue. Either to adopt the machinery of the )banks and thlrougi them exchange the credit of the government for the products of industry, or deal directly with the Plead in this connection page G2, also pages 70, 71, 72 andcl 73. 163 HISTORY OF THE PAPER IMONEY people by issuing legal tender Treasury notes, based on and representing the wealth of the country and redeemable in the revenues of the government. Neither course, h-owever, was pursued, or rather the Secretary of the Treasury attempted to use both plans in part, and with the most wretched results. THIE FIRST LOAN ACTS. During the extra session of Congress in July and August, 1861, two important loan acts were passed, which are deserving of special notice, one approved July 17th and the other August 5th. By the act of July 17th the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to borrow $250,000,000, for which he was authorized to issue coupon bonds or registered bonds or Treasury notes in such proportions of each as he might deem advisable. The bonds were to bear interest not exceeding seven per cent. per annum, payable semi-annually, and to run for twenty years, when they would be redeemable at the pleasure of the United States; and the Treasury notes were to be issued in denominations of not less than $50, payable three years after date, with interest at 7 3-10 per cent., payable semi-annually, and exchangeable at any time for twenty years six per cent. bonds. Or, at his option, the Secretary of the Treasury might issue $50,000,000 of the above loan in Treasury notes, payable on demand, in denoiminations of not less than ten dollars each, without interest, and made payable for salaries and other dues from the United States Treasury (afterwards known as old demand notes); or he might issue Treasury notes, payable in one year from date, bearing interest at 3 65-100 per cent. per annum, exchangeable at any time in sumins of $100, or upwards, for three year Treasury notes bearing 7 3-10 interest. By the act of August 5th, which was supplementary to the act of July 17th, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized 164 ISSUED DURIUNG THE REBELLION. to issue bonds bearing interest at six per cenlt. per annum, payable after twenty years from date, which, in denomiiiations not less than $500, might be exchanged for Treasury notes bearing 7 3-10 per cent. interest. The act of July 17th, fixing the denomination of the Treasury notes without interest (demand notes) at not less than ten dollars was modified so as to fix the limit at not less than five dollars, and these notes (demand notes) were made receicvable iA paynmeit of public dues. By the sixth section of this act the Sub-Treasury act of 1 846 was "suspended so far as to allow the Secretary of thle Treasury to deposit any of the monoeys obtained oil any of the loans now authorized by law, to the credit of the Trieasuei of tlhe United States, i such solvezt specie payiqy bcatks as he mnay select.' By an act of Congress approved February 12, 1862, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to issue $10,000,000 of Treasury notes, payable on demand, not bearing interest, in addition to the $50,000,000 of like notes authorized by acets of July 17th and August 5th, 1861, which should be deemed part of the loan of $250,000,000 authorized by said acts. And by the act of Marlch 17, 1862, it was enacted that these demand notes ($60,000,000 in all) shall, iac addition, to being receivable in paymtegzt of duties on inports, be receivable, at(l shall be latwfel money ancd a legal tengler, in like manner and for the same purposes and to the same extent as the notes (greenbaeks) authorized by the act approved February 25, 1862. These demand notes were the only notes issued dutring the war that were made a full legal tender, that is, receivable for all public dues (including duties on imports) and a tender for private debts. After they were made a full legal tender they circulated at par and went up with gold to a premium of $2.85, or in other words it cost $2.85 in greenbacks to buy a dollar in gold or demand notes 165 HISTORY OF THE PAPERP MONEY From these acts of Congress it appears that Secretary Chase was clothed with the most ample powers to borrow money. He immediately proceeded to New York and, on the 9th of August, 1861, held a colsultation with a number of leading bankers and capitalists of the cities of New York, Boston and Philadelphia, whom he met there by appointment. It was suggested on the part of the banks, that the banks of the North should form an "'organizatioii that would combine them into an efficient and inseparable body, for the purpose of advancing the capital of the coutntry uponI government bonds in large amlounts, and thlrough their clearing house facilities and other well known expedients, to distribute them in smaller SUlms among the people in a manner that would secure active co-operation among the members in this special work, while in all other respects each bank could pursue its independent business. This suggestion," says AMr. Coe, fromn whom wve quote, " met the hearty approbation of the assembled companly, and arrested the earnest attention of the Secretary. At his request it was presented to the consideratioii of the banks at a mTeeting: called for that purpose at the American Exchange Bank oni the following day, and was so far entertained as to secure the appointment of a committee of ten bank officers, to give it form and coherence. The committee convened at the Bank of Commerce, whose officers zealously united in the effort, and a plan was reported unaniinously. It may be foulnd, with the names of the committee, in the Bankers' M[agazine of September, 1861. This report was cordially accepted and adopted by the banks in New York, those in Boston and Philadelphia belng represented at the meeting and as zealously and cordially united in the organization. It was greatly desired to include also the banks of the West, *Letter of Geo. S. Coe, Esq.: Spaulding's Financial History of the War. Apx. p. 90. 166 ISSUED DURING TIIE REBELLIO-N. but it was founid iimpracticlble to secure the co-operation of thle State banks of Ohio ai(Id Indcliala, andl the State blnks of Missouri, thie only other orgaiiizatioin iudler a comlpacted systemi, were surroundled by colmbatants. It was at once unanimously agreed that the associated banks of the three cities would take fifty millions of 7 3-10 notes at pI)r, w\ith the privilege of an acdditional fifty millions ini sixty d.ys, and a further aimounit of fifty mlillions in sixty more, making $150,000,000 ill all, and offer them to tlhe people of the country at the same price, withlout ellange." The amiount of specie held by the b)anks of the trllee cities at this timie was as follow: Banks of New'Yoirk........................ $ 49,733,990 4 oston...........................e 6,665,929 "4 Ph]Jiladelphiia...................... 6,765,120 $63,165,039 The Treasury notes could not be delivered alt once, as time was required for their preparation and execution. It was manifestly impossible, therefore, for the banks to advance the several amounts of the loan, in specie, without danger of exhausting their reserve. The Sub-Treasury act, as we have seen, however, had been suspended, evidently at the instance of the banks, with a view to enabling them to handle the bolnds and securities of the government, in return for bank currency. "Accordingly," says MIr. Coe, fron-i wlhomn we have just quoted, "it was at once proposed to the Secretary that he shlould suspend the operations of the SuLb-TreasuLry act in respect to these transactions, and following the course of commercial business, that he should draw checks upon some one bank in each city representing the association, in small sums as required, ili disbursing the money thus advanced. By this means his checks would serve the purpose of a cirocu 167 HISTORY OF THiE PAPER MIONEY lating meediumn, continually red(leemed, and the exchange of capital and industry be best promoted. - To the astonishmenit of the committee, IMr. Chase refused." It was urged by the bankers that the Sub-Treasury act had been suspended for this very purpose, but Mr. Chase thought differently, declaring that it had no such meaning or intent. Another subject of discussion between the banks and the Secretary was the issue of demand notes. A small amount of these notes had already been emitted, and a resolution requesting the Secretary to refrain from issuing any more, until all other means had been exhausted, bad been adopted by the associated banks. Mr. Coe says that the Secretary gave assuances of his acquiescenlce in this suggestion, but refused "to openly pledge himself not to exercise a power conferred by law," and "thlat with this uniderstandingi the banks began their work, paying into the treasury in coin $150,000,000, in sumis at the rate of about $5,000,000 at initervals of six days." The rapid disbursements by the governmenit, and the intense activity of the movements of trade, as we have seen,* bro,ught the coin nearly all back to the banks within a week after it was issued, so that in December the banks of New York, after paying to the government over $80,000,000, found thleir specie reserve reduced only from $49,733,990, August 17th], to $42,318,619, December 7tih. The banks undoubtedly expected that sooner or later Secretary Chase could be induced to accede to their plan, but, as he continued to issue the demand notes, it became apparent in the latter part of December, 1861, after the bankls had paid in a large portion of their loan, that the Secretary was determined to adclhere to his own course; and after a conference, in which he expressed himself to that effect, the banks decided that it was expedient to suspend specie payments 'See page 157. 168 ISSUED DURING THE REBELLION. forthwith, and did so on the 28th of the month. The balance of the loan was paid by the banks principally in Treasury notes, and was finally closed on the 3rd of February, 1862. The patriotism of the banks oozed out as soon as they found that they could not control Secrletary Chase in their interests. After they had succeeded in paying the greater part of their loan without any material diminution of their specie, there was manifestly no good reasor why they should suspend specie payments, other than on account of the inherent weakness of the specie basis system. Their circulation did not exceed $140,000,000, and their specie reserve was unusually large, about $60,000,000. The suspension compll)licated matters greatly. With irredeemable bank paper and demand notes of the government promising to pay specie, when it had no specie, filling the channels of circulation, gold of course began to command a precmium.* I-ad Secre'tary Chase adopted the plan of the banks, the securities of the governll enlt could unquestionably have been handled by them during the first part of the war with advantage to the government. In that event the governmient should have issued no paper currency. But the result would undoubtedly have been disastrous in the end. The expenses of the government soon reached $2,000,000 a day. To mieet the necessities of the government, the banks would have been obliged to inflate their circulation to an alarming extent. The first financial breeze that sprung up would have occasioned a panic; the banks would have been obliged to suspend, as they had done nine times before during their brief existence, and most probably, too, at a critical period of the war, which could not fail to have resulted in great distress and general demoralization, to the great peril of the government. Secretary Chase seemed to apprehend the danger of adopting *A table showing the monthly range of gold, from l1862 to 1876, will be found in the Appielidix. 169 HISTORY OF TIuE PAPER. MONEY the plan su,ggestedc by the associated banlks, bu)tl ilL. all other respects hlie provecd himself utterly incompetent a-s a Minister of Finance. WVhen he renounced the nacihicly of the banlking system, instead of urging upon Congiress the niecessity of adopting at once the full legal tender lmoney systeim, and devising a judicious systeni- of taxation, / e,'ccom~ietded the establisohfe,t 0f thte Vatio(cel Ba)bliAf system). The inconsistency of his -.tctiOn in th-is respect cannot fail to strike thie reader, wNlien it is considered that the National Baniking systel (differs in no essential p'irticular from the State BIankiilg systelli, wiich lie lhad just rejected, except that its iiotes iinstead of beilg secuI'ed by State bonds, as in the case of the banks of New York, were to he secure by bolnds of the Federal Goveriiiment. Vhenl Congress convened, I)Decibei' 2, 1861, the paramount question wAas that relating( to te iinlanees of the Federal Goveiirnment. Tirie people of the Northern States possessed unliniited resources, were animiated by feelings of devoted patriotism, and were w-illing, to assume any burdeins in the shape of taxation, or otherwise, that Conig(ress iniht deenm necessary to impose for the legitimate prosecution of the war for the preservation of the Union. It simply devolved upon CoIngress to devise tle ways andi means to render the resources of the nation available to the government. As this coun l)e Tdone only tlhrou,gh the iistrunientality of a medium of exchiaiige, it was the first duty of Congress to see that the channels of trade were supplied with a sufficient amount of money to develop the producing forces of the nation to their utmost capacity, and enable the people to respond to the requirelnents of the government. It was manifest that the banks could not be r-elied upon for that purpose with any degree of certainty or safety. There was, therefore, no other alternative but for Congress, by 170 ISSUED DURING THE REBELLION. virtue of the sovereigli prerogative iiiherent ill thle people, and as their representative duly authlorized by the Constitution, to issue full legal tender Treasury notes, not bearing interest. The reason of this is obvious. The chief endcl desired was to creacte ca circUtlati)' meditii of exchacgie, andc this end could be accomplished only by issuing Treasnry notes in a form that would enable them to perform the funcetions andi serve the purposes of money. TREASURY NOTE BEARING INTEREST AN') NOT A LEGAL TENDEI. And here it is proper to call attention to the difference between an ordinary Treasury note, bearing interest and not a legal tender, and a full legal tender Treasury note, not beaiing interest. They are both based on the wvealth and ("]edit of the nation, but there the similitude ends. A Treasurl'y note, bearing interest and not a legal tender, is simply an evidence or security of indebtedness, and differs from a bond only in form. It does not possess the attributes, nor can it perform the functions, of money. A creditor of the government may be obliged to take it at its face value or wait an indefinite time for his money; but, as it is not a legal tender, 1no one else is obliged to receive it at the value inscribed on its face. By its nature it is nothing more than a security ill which to invest money, and is not designied or calculated to serve the purposes of a medimn of exchange. The fact that it bears interest is a disadvantage to it as a mediumn of exchange, because in the ordinary transactions of life people cannot stop to reckon interest every tilme it (haniges hands; and the fact that it is a partial legal tender (payable for certain dues or taxes to the goverinment) leads those who have such duties to pay to decry its value in order that they may purichase it at a depreciation. It is on the 171 HISTORY OF THE PAPER MONEY same principle that the greenback is decried by the bullionists, because they have gold to sell, and it is to their advantage to buy greenbacks (with gold) as cheaply as possible. FULL LEGAL TENDERI TREASURPY NOTE, NOT BEARING INTEREST. On the other hand a Treasury note, not bearing interest, cannot be used as a security in which to invest money. Like money (made of gold or silver) it is of no use to the possessor until it is parted with.* If only a partial legal tender (receivable for certain dues to the government), it is to the interest of many, as already mentioned, to decry its value, in order to obtain it as cheaply as possible. If the government obliges its creditor:s to take it at its face value, and it is not a legal tender in payment of debts, no one else is obliged to receive it at the same value, or indeed to receive it at all. While it is then the same as money as between the government and its creditor, it is quite a different thing between the creditor and the public. This is manifestly unjust. Treasury notes are issued by the people in their collective capacity, through the agency of the government, and, unless simply intended as an interest bearing security, not designed to perform the functions of money, ought clearly to be made a legal tender for private debts as well as public dues, otherwise it places it in the power of the public to repudiate individually what they have done collectively, and the people do not all stand on the same platform with respect to the government or to each other. The Treasury note, therefore, in this form (a legal tender and not bearing interest) constitutes a peculiar form of indebtedness or credit, which serves all the purposes of a medium of exchange and enables the government to draw upon the resources of the people in advatce of taxation, See page 30. 172 ISSUEID DURING THE REBELLION. bearing equally upon every individual in the nation. The bullionists and their organs, in their efforts to decry the leg,al tender Treasury note and deceive the public, are constantly asserting that it costs the government nothing more than the expense of printing, and is, therefore, worthless. This is not a mere fallacy-it is a willful perversion of the truth. Every dollar of legal tender paper money issued by the government costs the people'jrecisely one dollar's worth of property or labor. A dollar greenback is put in circulation by the government for value received in property or services; it passes from hand to hand, commanding a dollar's worth of property or services every time it is used as a medium of exchange; until finally it is returned to the Federal Treasury in the shape of taxation or revenue. On the 5th of December, 1861, the Committee of Ways and Mleans was organized as follows: THADDEUS STEVENS, of Pennl., Chairman. JUSTIN S. MORRILL, of Vt. JOHN S. PHELPS, of Mo. E.G. SPAULDING, of N. Y. V. B. HORTON, of Ohio. ERASTUS CORNING, of N.Y. SAMUEL HIOOPER, of Mass. HORACE MiAYNARD, of Tenn. J. L. N. SHATTON, of N. Y. SECRETARY CHASE'S REPORT. On the o10th of Decelmber, 1861, the Secretary of the Treasury submitted his annual report to Congress. He set forth in strong terms the weakness and disadvantages of the banking system of the country, and expressed the belief that the emission of bills of credit by state banks was in violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of the Constitution. He said: "It has been well questioned by the most eminent statesmen whether a currency of bank notes, issued by local institutions under State laws, is not in fact prohibited by the national Constitution. Such emission certainly falls within the spirit, 0 1 7 o' HISTORY OF THE PAPER MONEY if not within the letter, of the constitutional prohibition of the emission of'bills of credit' by the States, and of the making by them of anything except gold and silver coin a legal tender in payment of debts. However this may be, it is too clear to be reasonably disputed, that Congress, under its constitutional power to lay taxes, to regulate commerce, and to regulate the value of coin, possesses ample authority to control the credit circulation which enrter.; so largely into the transactions of commerce, and affects in so imanay ways the value of coin. In the judgmnent of the Secretary, the time has arrived when Congiress should exercise this power. * * aTwo plans for effecting this object are suggested. The first contemplates the gradual withdrawal from circulation of the notes of private corporations, and for the issue, in their stead, of United States notes, payable in coin on demand, in amounts sufficient for the useful ends of a rpresentative currency. The second contemplates the preparation and delivery, to institutions and associations, of notes prepared for circulation under national direction, and to be secured, as to prompt convertibility into coin, by the pledge of United States bonds and other needful regulations." The Secretary then proceeds to say, that the first of these plans was partially adopted by Congress during the extra session in July and August, in authlorizing, the issue of $50,000,000 of demand notes, and aftelr suggesting solme of the advantages and disadvantages of the plan, concludes by declaring "that he feels himself constrained to forbear recommending its adoption." The principal features of the second plan are presented by the Secretary as follows: "First, a circulation of notes bearing a common impression and authenticated by a common authority: Second, the redemption of these notes by the associations and institutions to which they may be delivered for issue; and, third, the 6 174 ISSUED DUPING THE REBELILION. security of that redemptionl by the pledge of United States stocks, and all adequate provision of specie." After eulogizing the plan,* he adds: "The Secretary entertains the opinion that if a credit circulation in any form be desirable, it is most desirable in this." THEI LEGAL TEINDER ACTS. The Committee of Vays and Means appointed a subcommittee, consisting of Messrs. Spaulding, Hooper and Corningi, on the proposed National Bank currency, the issue of Treasury notes and bonds, and the mode of raising means to carry on the war. The chairman of the sub-committee, Mr. Spaulding, prepared a National Bank currency bill by the end of the month (December), and also drafted a legal tender Treasury note section, to be added to the bank bill, for the issue of Treasury notes to be used while the bank bill was being put in operation throughout the country. In his Financial history of the WVar, Mr. Spaulding says that, " lupon more mature consideration and further examination, hle came to the conclusion that the bank bill, containing sixty sections, could not, with the State Banks opposed to it, be passed through bothI Hlouses of Congress for several months, and that so long a delay would be fatal to the IUnion cause. l* He, therefore, changed the legal tender section intended originally to accompany the bank bill into.t separate bill, with alterations and additions, and on his own motion introduced it into thle House by unaniiions consent on the 30thl of December, 1861." The bill was duly considered by the Committee of Ways and Means, and, on the 7tli of January, 1862, was reported from the conmmittee to the House. The original bill offered by Mr. Spaulding authorized the Secretary of the Treasury "to issue on the credit of the 'See Chapter VII. on National Banks. 175 TIIE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Unlited States $100,000,000 of Treasury notes, not bearing interest, payable generally, without specifying any place or time of payment, and of such denominations as he may d(eem expedielnt, not less than five dollars each; and such notes, and all other Treasury notes payable on demand, not bearing interest, that have been heretofore authorized to be issued, shall be receivable for all debts and demands due to the United States, and for all salaries, dues, debts and demands owing by the United States to individuals, corporations and associations within the United States; and shall also be lawful money, and a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, within the United States, and shall be exchangeable in sums not less than one hundred dollars, at any time, at their par value, at the Treasury of the United States, * * for any of the six per cent. twenty years coupon or registered bonds which the Secretary of the Treasury is now, or may hereafter be, authorized to issue; and such Treasury notes shall be received the same as coin at their par value, in payment for any bonds that may be hereafter negotiated by the Secretary of the Treasury; and such Treasury notes may be re-issued from time to, time, as the exigency of the public service may require." This bill was no sooner made public, than delegations of bankers fromn New York, Boston and Philadelphia hurried to Washington to oppose it. They organized in a formal manner by the selection of.a chairman (S. A. Mlercer, of Philadelphia), and invited the Finance Committee of the Senate, and the Committee of Ways and M[eans of the IIouse, to meet them at the office of the Secretary of the Treasury, January 11, 1862. The invitation was accepted. At the meeting which followed, the bankers spoke in opposition to the bill, and submitted the following plan for raising money: 176 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. "1. A tax bill to raise $125,000,000 over and above duties on imports by taxation. 2. Not to issue any demand Treasury notes, except those authorized at the extra session in July last. 3. Issue $100,000,000 Treasury notes at two years, in sums of five dollars and upwards, to be receivable for public dues to the government, except duties onl imports. 4. A suspension of the Sub-Treasury act, so as to allow the banks to become depositories of the government of all loans, and to check on the banks froml time to time as the goverIinment miay want mIoney. 5. Issue six per cent. twenty year bonds, to be negotiated by the Secretary of the Treasury, and without anWy limitat io as to the piice he )c)may obtain' for thenm ii the m2arket. 6. That the Secretary of the Treasury be empowered to make temporary loans to the extent of any portion of the funded stock authorized by Congress, with power to hypothecate such stock, and if such loans are not paid at maturity, to sell the stock htylpothecated.for the best market prie that cat be obtained." Mr. Spaulding says that "these propositions having been read, the Secretary and Finance Coimmittees of the Senate and House expressed themiselves favorable to the first proposition to raise by taxation $125,000,000 a year, over and above duties onl imports. It will be observed that this plan (lid not include the national currency bank bill recommended by the Secretary of the Treasury in his annual report, and was not, therefore, in this respect satisfactory to him. The meeting was somewhat conversational in character, but there appeared to be a general dissent by the Secretary and coimmittees from all other propositioi]s.' * The only remarks that I (Mlr. Spaulding) can find reported as being 12 177 THIE L EGAL TEiNDLER ACTS. made by any inenihbe'. of the committees of the Senate and House are in tlhe New York Tributne, January 13, 1862, in substance as follows: "'The Sub-Colimmittee of Ways and MAeans, through Mr. Spaulding, objected to any and every form of "shinning" by government tl-hrougLh Wall or State streets, to begin witlh; objected to the knlocking down of government stocks to seventy-five or sixty cents on the dollar, the inevitable result of throwing a- new and large loan on the market, witl,oqtt limnitation as to p])ice; claimed for Treasury notes as much virtue of par value as the notes of banks whicll have suspended specie payments, but whichll yet circulated in the trade of the North; and finished with firmnly refusing to assent to any scheme which should permit a speculation by brokers, bankers, and others, in the government securities, and particularly any scheme which should double the public debt of the country, and double the expenses, by damaging the credit of the government to the extent of sending it to "shin" through the shaviing shops of New York,. Boston and Philadelphia. -Ie affirmed his conviction as a banker and legislator, that it was the laiwful policy, as well as the mnanifest dutyi of the government in the l)present exigency, to leg,alize as tender its fifty million issue of demand Treasury notes, authorized at the extra session in July last, and to add to this stock of legal tender immediately, etc.'" The conference adjourned without. agreeing upon any plan or arrangement. The banlk delegates, however, remnained ini Washingtoli, and held further consultations with Secretary Chase, extending through several days, which resulted in an arranlgement with him to the effect, amongst other things, that Cong'ress should be urged to pass the National Bank bill, and that tilhe amount of the demand notes should not be increased beyond the 178 THE LEGA.L TENDER ACTS. $50,000,000 authorized by the act of July, 1861, and also that Congress should be urged to extend the provisions of the existing loan acts, so as to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to exchange interest bearing Treasury notes for the demand notes, not bearing interest, and get them out of the way. Thus while the masses were exerting every energy to sustain the government, the money power was plotting to get control of its finances, in order that it might be enabled to prey upon the people in the hour of their extremity. How well it succeeded will duly appear. On the 22d of January the legal tender bill was again reported from the Committee of Ways and Means, with an additional section authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to issue, on the credit of the United States, coupon bonds or registered bonds to an amount not exceeding $500,000,000, and redeemable at the pleasure of the government, after twenty years from date, and bearing interest at six per cent. per annrum, payable semi-annually, to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to fund the Treasury notes and floating debt of the United States; and it was made the special order for the 28thl day of the month. The debate on the bill accordingly began on that day, and was opened by IMr. Spaulding in an able argument in its favor. The debate, which continued until the 6th dcay of February, when the bill passed the House, with some slight modifications, was characterized by unusual ability. It had never before, in the history of the government, been deemed necessary to issue Treasury notes, in the legal tender form, not bearing interest, to enable them to circulate as a mediulm of exchange and perform the functions of money, and there was naturally a great diversity of opinion upon the subject. Several substitutes and amendments were offered, most of them in the interest of the 179 THE LEGAL TENDEE ACTS. money power. The views held by those who advocated the use of Treasury notes, but honestly opposed the legal tender feature, as an infraction of the Constitution, were embodied in a substitute offered by MIr. Vallandighani, and were supported by able speeches, especially that delivered by,lr. Pendleton, of Ohio. Mr. Vallandiglhai's substitute provided for the same issue of notes as the original bill, but not made a legal tender, and instead of making them payable ill coin on demand, they were to be sinmply receivable for all public dues. In this particular (making themn receivable for public dues instead of payable in coin on demand), the substitute was preferable to the original bill. A Treasury note, properly understood, is " a promise to receive" and not " a promise to pay,"* and making it redeemable in coin could add nothing to its value, but under the circumstances was calculated only to depreciate its value, because it misled the public, specially professors of political economy. The following extracts from the speech of the Hon. Thaddeus Stevens in support of the bill, will sufficiently explain the nature and character of the substitutes and amendments offered, and, also, of the arguments employed for and against them, as well as the bill itself. MIr. Stevens said: "The Secretary of the Treasury, in his report, recommended a scheme to produce a uniform national currency, and furnish a market for government bonds. It proposes that the banks shall receive their circulation from the government to the amount of government bonds pledged, with the Treasury for their security; and that no more notes should be issued than the par value of such bonds, and should be redeemed by the banks. As a general system of banking in ordinary times, it nilght be very useful in regulating the currency, and by the sale of bonds the govern See pages 52 & 58. 180 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. ment might command coiln. But while tile banks are in suspension, it is not easy to see how it would relieve the government. If the notes were procured it must be by accepting payment by thle government in depreciated circulation. HIow would that be any better than the governmenit's own notes? The security of the government is equal to that of the banks, and would give as much currency. To thle banks I cain see its advantage. Tlhey would lhave tlie whole benefit of tllhe circulation without interest, and at tihe same time would draw interest on the government bonds from the time they got the notes. Now, it is very plain, tlhat if the UnLited States issued those notes direct, they would have the benefit of tlhe wh-lole circulation. Ia otlher words, it would be equal to a loan, without interest, to the full amount of the circulation. This project, therefore, however desirable as a banking system, could afford 1o immediate relief, especially as it would afford no sale for additional b)onds, as lIhe banks hav-e already as many as would form t]e basis of their operations. Hai-iin,, as I think, shown the impossibility of carrying on the government in any other way, let us briefly notice somie of the objections to it. First, is it constitutional? "The power to emit bills of credit and make them a legal tender is nowhere expressly given in the Constitution; b)ut it is known that but few of the acts wI ilic govermaent can perform are Specified in that instrumlellt. It would require a volume larger tlan the PIaiidects of Jtustilninll or thle Code of Napoleonl to make such enumeration, whereas our Constitution has but a few pag,es. But everything iineeessary to carry out thle granted powers of the governement is not only implied but expressly given to Congress. If nothing could be done by Congress except what is enumerated in the Constitution, the government could not live a week. 181 THE LEGAL TENDEP ACTS. "The States are prohibited from making anything but 'gold and silver coin a tender in the payment of debts;' but such prohibition does not extend to Congress. The Constitution is silent as to the power of Congress over that subject. The whole question of the right to emit bills of credit by Congress was considered in the convention that framed the Constitution. It was reported as a part of the power to 'borrow money.' It was objected to as tending to make a paper currency with legal tender, and a motion was made to strike it out and insert an express prohibition. This was resisted, because, as MAr. Malson said,'it could not be foreseen what the necessities of the government might at some time require.''The late wa-,' he said,' could not have been carried on had such prohibition existed.' It was finally agreed to strike out the express power, and not insert the prohibition, leaving it to the exigencies of the times to determine its necessity." * > "If constitutional, is it expedient? It is objected by the gentleman from Ohio that the legal tender clause would depreciate the notes. All admit the necessity of the issue. But some object to their being made monley. It is not easy to perceive how notes issued without being made immediately payable in specie can be made any worse by making them a legal tender. And yet that is the whole argument so far as expediency is concerned. Other gentlemen argued that this would impair contracts by making a debt payable in other money than that which existed at the time of the contract, and would so be unconstitutional. Where do gentlemen find any prohibition on Congress against passing laws impairing contracts? There is none, though it would be unjust to do it. But this impairs no contract. All contracts are made not only with a view to present laws, but subject to the future legislation of the country. We have 182 TIHE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. more than once changed the value of coin. Neither our gold nor silver coin is as valuable as it was fifty years ago. Congress in 1853, I believe, regulated the weight and value of silver. They debased it over seven per cent. and made it a legal tender. Who ever pretended that that was unconstitutional? The genltlemen from Vermont [MIr. -Iorrill] and Ohio [Mr. Pendleton] think it ani ex post facto law. It is not wTonderful that my distinguished colleague, not being a professional lawyer, should not be aware that the ex post fucto laws prohibited by the Constitution refer onlly to crimes and misdemeanors, and not to civil contracts. The gentleman fromn Ohio no doubt knew but forgot it.", "I know the ldager of grantiing to irresponsible institutioIs or individuals the right to issue paper currenc(y not iimie(liately colnlvertible, because their avarice would always abuse the privilege and over issue. PBut when the governmenlt thus issues, the fault and the crin)e is tlieil's if they do not restrain it witl-hin pl'oper boiinds. Is the proposed issue of $150,000,000 too muchl? It is believed that thle ordinary lusinless of the country, especially now, requires a circulation of $400,000,000. The bank circulation has been about 8200,000,000, with coin to the amounit of $250,000,000. The bank paper, now in suspension, would largTely disappear before this par paper; and during suspension, which means during the war, there will be but little coin circulation. If the whole 8.150,000,000 of United States notes could be kept circulating, I do not think the surviving bank paper would furnish a sufficient currency for commercial purposes -some coin must be added. But it is not probable that it could all be kept out; much would rest in banks, in the pockets of private individuals, or await investment temporarily, at least, for a while. "But my distinguishedl collea,gue from Vermont fears that 183 THE LEGAL TE:NDER ACTS. enormous issues would follow to supply tle expenses of the war. I do lnot think any more would be needed than the $150,000,000. The notes bear no interest. No one would seek them for investment. In the rapid circulation of money, $100 in a- year is turned so often as to purchase ten times its value. This money would soon lodge in large quantities witlh the capitalists and banks, who mqUst take them. lut the instinct of gain, perhaps I may call it avarice, would not allow them to keep it long unproductive. A dollar in a miser's safe unproductive is a sore disturbance. ,Where could they invest it? In United States loans at six per cent., redeemable in gold in twenty years, the best and most valuable permanent investment that could be desired. The governmenlt would thus agaill possess such notes in exchlange for bonds, and again reissue themy. I have no doubt that thus the $500,000,000 of bonds authorized would be absorbed in less time than would be needed by the government; and thus $150,000,000 would do the work of $500,000,000 of bonds. W'hen furthler loans are wanted, you need only authorize the sale of more bonds; the same $150,000,000 of notes will be ready to take tlhem. "I contend that this currency will be better tlhan any this country can produce. Ilanik notes are merely local. The holder of thlem in St. Louis, wisliigr to transmit to New York, must pay a discount of from o ne to ten per ceit. If lie has gold, the cost of transportation is considerable. If he travel, it is cumber]some. But if 1-ie has Uinited States par notes, hle can send them without cost all over the Union. "Gentlemen are clamorous in favor of those who have debts due them, lest the debtor should the more easily pay his debt. I do not much sympathize ith suc]ih importunate monev lenders. PBut widows and orphans aie interested, and in teiars lest their estate slouLld be badly invested. I 184 THE LEGAL TENDER, ACTS. pity no one who has his monoey invested il -United States bonds, payable in gold in twenty years, with interest semiannually. "But while these mien have agonized bowels over the rich man's cause, they have no pity for the p)oor widow, the suffering soldier, the wounded martyr to hlis country's good, who must receive these notes without leg,al ten-der or niothiing, and who must give half of it to the Shylocks to get the necessaries of life. Sir, I wish no iinjury to any, nor with ,our bill could any happen; but if any must lose, let it not be the soldier, tlhe mechanic, the laborer, and the farmer. "Let me restate thl various i:'ojects. Ol's prop)oses -United States notes, se',uired at ti.e eii(l of twen-lty yc's to be paid in coin, and the interest raised )by tiaxation, semiannually; such notes to be imoney, and of uniformi value throughout the Union. No better iivestimeut, in my judgment, can be had; no better currency can be invenlted. "The amendmenet of thle gentlelman f ioi Ohio [Mr. Vallandigham] proposes the same issue of notes, but objects to a legal tender; but does not provide for their redemption on demand in coin. I-e fears our notes would depreciate. Let himi who is sharp enoughl to see it instruct Tile how notes that every mian nst take are woirth less thaln tlhe same notes that n0o iman need take, and few would, being irredeemable on deitmand. IBut lie doubts its constitutionalit)-. ITe who admits our power to emuit bills of credit, nowhere expressly autliorized by t}he Constitution, is:t sharp an-d unreasonable doubter when lae denies te pon-wer( to alke them a legal tender. "The proposition of the gentlenman from New York [Mr. Roscoe Conkling] authorizes the issuing of seven per cent. bonds, payable in thirty one years, to be sold ($250,000,000 185 TIS LEGAL TENDEL' ACTS. of it) or exchanged for thle cetrre,e;-cy of the banks of Boston, New York and Philadelphia. "Sir, this proposition seems to me to lack every element, of wise legislation. Make a loan payable in irredeemable currency, and pay that in its depreciated condition to our contractors, soldiers, and creditors generally! The banks would issue unlimited amounts of what would become trash, and buy good hard money bonds of the nation. Was there ever such a tempation to swindle? "He further proposes to issue $200,000,000 United States notes, redeemable in coin in one year. Does not the gentleman know that such notes must be dishonored, and the plighted faith of the government broken? No one believes. that we could then pay them, and it would run down at once. If we are to use suspended notes to pay our expenses, why not use our own? Are they not as safe as bank notes? During the suspension the government would have the benfit of the whole circulation, without interest, until they were funded-that is, the interest of all we could keep out. would accrue to the government. If the $ 50,000,000 were constantly afloat, it would be a loan to the government, without interest, to that amount, 89,000,000 a year. But if we used the suspended paper of the banks our bonds would bear interest from the instant we got their notes-a good thing for the suspended banks. Besides, government would have the benefit of all the lost and destroyed notes-a considerable item. "Last comes the substitute of the minority of the committec. I look upon it as a curiosity. It proposes to issue United States notes, not a legal tender, bearing an interest of three and sixty-five hundredths per cent., and fundable; into seven and three-tenths per cent. bonds, but not payable: on demand, but at the pleasure of the United States. This, 186 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. gives one and three-tenths per cent. hi,gher interest than our loan, and not being redeemable on demand, would fare the fate of all non-specie paying notes not a legal tender. But the ingenious minority have invented a kind of currency never before known-a circutlatioyz beaci)g in)terest. Bonds or notes intended for investments bear interest, but no one expects they will be used as currency; whether in the shape of bonds or notes they will be used only as investments, or as pledges on which to procure loans. Suppose a tailor, shoemaker, or other mechanic or laborer, were to take one of these bills, and in a week he should wish to use it in market, or store, or elsewhere, he must sit down and calculate the interest on the days he has had it to find its value. This would be rather inconvenient in a frosty day. This currency would make it necessary for every man to carry an arithmetic or interest table with which to gauge the value of tie circulating medium. Gentleimen must see how ridiculous, if not impracticable, this schemie is. "IHere, thlen, in a few words lies vour choice. Throw bonds at six or seven per cect. on the market between this and December, enough to raise at least $600,000,000-about this sumi is already appropriated, $557,000,000-or issue United States notes, not redeemable in coin, but fundable in specie payilng bonds at twenty years; such notes either to be made a legal tender, or to take their chance of circulation by the voluntary act of the people. "I maintain that the ifighest sun you could sell your bonds at would be seventy-five per cent., payable ill currency itself at a discount. That would procduce a loss which no nation or individual doing a large business could stand a year. "I contend that I hlave shown that such issue, without being mrade inoney, must immediately depreciate, and would go on from bad to worse. I flatter niyself that 1 have dem 187 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. onstrated, both from reason and undoubted authority, that such notes, made a legal tender and not issued in excess of the demand, will remain at par and pass in all transactions, great an(d small, at the full value of their face; that we shall have one currency for all sections of the country and for every class of people, the poor as well as the rich. "Some gentlemen are as much fiightened as if this were an unwonited apparition, for the first timle lprowling forth to swallow the rich crde(itor and(l nurse the poor debtor. No nation, it is said, lhas ever tried anything like it." * "Mri. Chairman, let me say in conclusion that unlless this bill is to pass with the legal tender clause in it, it is not desirable to its friend,s, or to thlc administration that it should pass at all, and those A-iho think as I (do will have to vote against it if it shall b)e thus nitilited and emasculated. If it is to be defeated, I should 1)e glad if we hlad the power which they hlave in thle Britislt Parliament-to resirgn our places on the Committee of W::ays and Means and leave it to those whlo oppllose this bill to mature sonme other measure. So far as I am concerned, I shall be modest enough not to attempt any othier scheme. The Committee of WVays and MIeans have labored in the preparation of this measuxe anxiously and to the best of their poor abilities. We are not infallille. WVe do not comle near it. I am but poo1ly qualitfied for anything of this kind. B:ut we have given it our most anxious consideration, and l]ave consulted those whouL we believed to be the best qualified to advise us. Ve have sought to harmoniize conflicting, views in the substitute which the majority of the commnittee have prepared, and we hope it will pass. We believe that the credit of the country will be sustained by it, that under it all classes will be paid in money which all classes can use, and tlhat it will confer no advantage on the capitalist over the poor laboiring man. 188 THE LEGAL TENDEI ACTS. If this bill shall pass, I shall hail it as tile most auspicious measure of this Congress; if it should fail, the result will be more deplorable than any disaster which could befall us." Mir. Stevens' speech closed the debate, and the bill came lup for-final action in the House, February 6, 1862, and was adopted by a vote of 93 to 59. THE LEGAL TENDER BILL IN THE SENATE. On the 10th day of February, 1862, MSr. Fessendejl, Chairman of the Committee on Finallnce in the Senate, reported the House bill from the Finance Committee with aimendments. The important amendments were as follows: 1. That the legal tender notes should be receivable for all claims and demands against the United States of every kind whatever, "except for interest on boost(s 9tJi! ~,otes, wIhichI shall be paid in coin." 2. That the Secretary might dispose of United States bonds "at the market value thereof, for coin or Treasury notes." 3. A new section, No. 4, authorizing deposits in the SubTreasuries at five per cent., for not less than thirty days, to the amount of $25,000,000, for which certificates of deposit might be issued. 4. An additional section, No. 5, "that all duties on imported goods, and proceeds of the sale of public lands," etc., should be set apart to pay coin interest on the debt of the United States; and one per cent. for a sinking fund, etc. On the 12th day of February, 1862, the debate in the Senate was opened by Mr. Fessenlden in a lengthy speech. A motion was made by 3Ir. Collamer to strike out the legal tender clause, which was lost. On the 14th inst. the bill, as amended, passed the Senate by a vote of 30 to 7, and was returned to the House. 189 THE LEGAL TENDEP. ACTS THE BILL AGAIN IN TIIE HOUSE. On the 18th, Mr. Stevens reported the bill, as amended by the Senate, from the Committee of Ways and Means to the House, and said, "I have 1no purpose of considering the bill at this time. I des4re that it shall be referred to the Committee of the Whole, and be made the special order for to-morrow at one o'clock. I hope gentlemen of the House will read thie amendments. They ca(e ve)'y! importcatt, a)cd, i~) mIy jqtdgnmelt, vety pe9nicio)8s, but I hope the House will examine them." On Wednesday, the 19th, Mr. Spaulding opened the debate in opposition to some of the amendmets of the Senate. We quote as follows: "MIr. Chairman, I desire especially to oppose the amendments of the Senate which require the interest on bonds and notes to be paid it coiyt semi-annually, and which authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to sell six per cent. bonds at the market price for coin to pay the interest. "The Treasury note bill, as reported first from the Committee of Ways and Means as a necessary war measure, was simple and perspicuous in its terms, and easily understood. It was so plain that everybody could understand that it authorized the issue of $150,000,000 of legal tender demand notes, to circulate as a national currency among the people in all parts of the United States, and that they migiht, at any time, be funded in six per cent. twenty years' bonds. The passage of the measure in this house was hailed with satisfaction by the great mass of the people all over the country. It received the hearty endorsement of such bodies as thle Chambers of Commerce of New York, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago, Buffalo, Milwaukee, and other places. I have never known any measure reeeive a more hearty approval from the people. 190 t. THE LEIGAL TENDER ACTS. "Nearly every amendnment to the bill since it was matured has rendered it more complex and difficult of executioln. I regret to say that some of the amenedments of the Senate render the bill incongruous, and tend to defeat its great object, inamely-to prevent all forcing of the Governmlent to sell its bonds in the market to the highest bidder for coin. It might be very pleasant for the holders of the seven and three-tenths Treasury notes and s'x per cent. bonds, to receive their interest in coin semi-annually, but very disastrous to the government to be compelled to sell its bonds, at lruinotus rates of discount, every six months to pay them gold and silver, while it would pay only Treasury notes to the soldier, sailor, and all other creditors of the government. "I am opposed to all those amnendmnents of the Senate which make unjust discriminations between the creditors of the government. A soldier or sailor who performs service in the army or navy is a creditor of the government. The man who sells food, clothing, and the material of war, for the use of the army and navy, is a creditor of the ovenment. The capitalist whlo holds your seven and tlree-tentlihs Treasury notes, or your six per cent. coupon bonds, is a creditor of the government. All are creditors of the governmeint on an equal footing,, and all are equally entitled to their pay in gold and silver. "I amn opposed to all those amendments of the Senate which discriminate in favor of the holders of bonds and notes by compelling the government to go into the streets every six months to sell bonds at the'market price,' to purchase gold and silver in order to pay the interest in coin' to the capitalists who now hold United States stocks and Treasury notes heretofore issued, or that may hold bonds and notes hereafter to be issued; while all persons in the United States (including the army and navy and all who 191 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. supply them with food and clothing) are compelled to receive legal tender Treasury notes in payment of demands due them froml tihe government. "WVhy make this discriminiation? Who asks to have one class of creditors placed on a better footing than another class? Do the people of New Eingland, the Midd(le States, or the people of the West and Northwest, or anywhere else in the rural districts, ask to have any such discrimination made in their favor? Does the soldier, the farmer, the mechanic, or the merchant ask to have any such discrimination made in his favoir? No, sir; no such unjust preference is asked for by this class of nmen. They ask for the legal tender note bill pure and simple. They ask for a national currency which shall be of equal value in all parts of the country. They want a t currency that shall pass from hand to hand among all the people in every State, county, city, town and village in the United States. They want a currency secured by adequate taxation upon the whole property of the country, which will pay the soldier, the farmer, the mechanic, and the banker alike for all debt due. They ask that the government shall stand upon its own responsibility, its own riglts, and exert its vast powers, preserve its own credit, and carry us safely through this gigantic rebellion, in the shortest time, and with the least possible sacrifice. They intend to foot all the bills, and ultimately pay the whole amount, principal and interest, in gold and silver. "Who, then, are they that ask to have a preference given to them over other creditors of the governmenet? Sir, it is a very respectable class of gentlemen, but a class of lnen who are very sharp in all money transactions. They are not generally among the producing classes-not among those who, by their labor and skill, make the wealth of the country; but a class of men that have accumulated wealth, 192 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. men who are willing to lend money to the government if you will make the security beyond all question, give them a high rate of interest, and make it payable in coin. Yes, sir, the men who are asking these extravagant terms, who want to be preferred creditors, are perfectly willing to lend money to the government in her present embarrassments, if you will only make them perfectly secure, give them extra interest, and put your bonds on the market at the' market price,' to purchase gold and silver to pay them interest every six months. Yes, sir, entirely Willing to loan money on these terms! Safe, no hazard, secure, and the interest payable 'in coin!' Who would not be willing to loan money on such terms? Sir, the legal tender Treasury note bill was intended to avoid all such financiering and protect tile government, and people who pay the taxes, from all such hard bargains. It was intended as a shield in the hands of the patriotic people of the country against all forced sales of bonds, ancl all extravagant rates of interest. "The legal tender note bill is a great measure of equality It proposes a currency for the people which is based upon the great faitlh of the people and all their taxable property. All are obliged to receive and pass it as money, and all are obliged to submit to heavy taxation to provide for its ultimate redemption in gold and silver. Every attempt on the part of any class of citizens to create distinctions and secure a legal preference, mnars the simplicity and success of the whole plan. The very discrimination proposed carries on its face notice to everybody, that although the notes are declared to be'lawful money and a legal tender in payment of debts,' yet that there is something of higher value, that must be sought after at a sacrifice to the government, to pay a peculiar class of creditors to whom it owes money-a kind of absurldity and self-stultification which does not appear well 13 193 THE LE GAL TENDER ACTS. on the face of the bill. It is an unjust discrimination which does not appear well now, and will not look well in history. You will, if the Senate's amendment is adopted, depreciate, by your own acts, your own bonds and notes, alud effectually destroy the symmetryv and hlarmnonious workings of the whole plani." ( (Mr. Spaulding, in his Financial History of the War, calls attention to the fact that "aIt the time the above remarks were made by himi tlie dctties o,) it'Io) t,s were, as the bill then stood, payable in leg,al tender notes; but this was after-wards chranged in the committee of conference, making those duties payable i~b coiol), so that the interest milit be paid in'coin, without being- obliged to force the bonds on the market to obtain coin for that purpose.") During the discussion in the Committee of the Whole an amendment to the Senate aimendmient requiring interest on bonds and notes to be paid in coin, was offered by Mr. Pendleton to the effect, "'that the officers, soldiers, seamen and marines, engaged in the military service of the United States," should also be paid in coin, which was not agreed to. On the 20th the House resumed consideration of the Senate amendments. Mr. Stevens closed the debate. We quote firom his speech as follows: "Mr. Speaker, I lhave a very few woirds to say. I approach the subject with more depression of spirits than I ever before approached any question. No personal motive orfeeling influences me. I hope not, at least. I ihae a mielancholy foreboding that we are about to consummate a cunningly devised schemie, which will carry great injury and great loss to all classes of the people throughout this Union, except one. With my colleague, I believe that no act of legislation of this governmnent was ever hailed with as much delight throughout the whole length and breadth 194 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. of this Union, by every class of people, without any excep tion, as the bill we passed and sent to the Senate. Congrat ulations from all classes-merchants, traders, manufacturers, mechanics and laborers-poured in upon us from all quarters. The Board of Trade from Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis, Chicago and Milwaukee approved its provisions, and urged its passage as it was. "I have a dispatch from the Chamber of Commerce of Cincinnati, sent to the Secretary of the Treasury, and by him to me, urging the speedy passage of the bill as it passed the House. It is true there was a doleful sound came up from the caverns of bullion brokers, and from the saloons of the associated banks. Their cashiers and agents were soon on the ground, and persuaded the Senate, with but little deliberation, to mangle and destroy what it had cost the House months to digest, consider, and pass. They fell upon the bill in hot haste, and so disfigured and deformed it, that its very father would not know it. Instead of being a beneficent and invigorating measure, it is now positively mischievous. It has all the bad qualities which its enemies charged on the original bill, and none of its benefits. It now creates money, and by its very terlnms declares it a depreciated currency. It makes two classes of money-one for the banks and brokers, and another for the people. It discriminates between the rilghts of different classes of creditors, allowing the rich capitalist to demand gold, and compelling the ordinary lender of money on individual security to receive notes which the government had purposely discredited. "Let us examine the principal amendments separately, and see their effect. The first important one (being the fifth) makes the notes issued under the law of July 17th a legal tender, equally with those authorized by this bill. 195 TIIE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. There can be but little wisdom in putting these two classes on an equality. The notes of July bear seven and threetenths per cent. interest, and are payable ill three years. This gives them a sufficient adlvantage over notes bearing no interest and payable virtually in tweilty years, with six per cent. interest. Why give them this additional advantage? Simply because the $100,000,000 issued are all held by the associated ballks, and this is their amended bill. They would displace $100,000,000 of this ioneoy in the circulation, and render it impossible to use any considerable amount of these tnited States notes as:t curren(yv.'l'hese notes have served their purpose. Why allow tlhein to b)lock up the market against furt-e relief to tle governmicint? "The banks took $50,000,000 of six per)' cent. bo(ds, anid shaved the government $5,500,000 on themn, and now ask to shave the government fifteen or twelenty )e cent. half yearly, to pay themselves tlhe interest on these very bonds. They paid for the $50,000,000 in demand notes, not specie, and now demand the specie for them. Yet geiitlelien talk about our mnakiig othler loans in these tiimes. Thely aire crazy or sleeping, one or the other, I do not know which." * * "The notes, by another amendment, are authorized to be invested in notes or bonds payable in two years, and bearing an interest of seven and three-tenths. One of the great objects was to iinduce capitalists to invest in six ler cent. bonds or lose their interest, and thus to furnish a continually recurring currency by the sale of these six per cent. bonds. This provision would effectually prevent the funding a, dollar in those bonds. They would all go in preference into seven and tlhree-tenthls bonds, due in two years, whlen no one believes we can pay them. "But thllis is not the worst. The tenth amendment provides that any holder of thle Uttnited States legal tender notes, 196 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. if he have $100 and upwards, shall draw five or six per cent. interest on tlhem until he choses to use thlem. The poor who have less than $100 shall draw no interest. It is plain that, by these two contrivances, not o]1e dollar of these Uniited States notes will ever be funded in six per cent. bonds. "But now comes the miain clause. All classes of people shctll take these notes at par for every article of trade or contract unless they have moiey ernoglgh to buy Unlited States bonds, and then tley shall be paid in gold. Who is that favored class? The banks and brokers, and nobody else. They have already $250,000,000 of State debt, and their commnissioners woul.dl soon take all the rest that mig,ht be issued. " But ho-v is tlhis gold to b)e raised? TI'le duties and public lands are to be pa.id for iin Urnited.St.ates notes, an(l they or bonds,lre to be put up tat atuction to get coin for these vervy T)brokers who would fiurnish the coinl to pay tlheiselves, by getting twenty per cent. discount on the notes tllhus b)ought. "-Now, in less thaia' year, taking the public debt at what my colleague miakes it-I make it more-$1,200,000,000, what will the interest b)e u)pon it at seven and t]hree-tenlths per cent., for it will all (enter in that rate of interest? It will 1)e $88,000,000, and oe-li-tlIf of that amount, $4'3,500,000, imust be raised every six monthlls for the paying of this interest, and is to be raised in coin, which nobody holds but the larg,e capitalists. Does anybody sup)pose thlat they are going to give that coin for such notes as we are now about to issue, at par? They will sell the gold for what their conscience will allow, and they will compel the government to give anything they choose, unless the government coInsents to become dlishonored. The first purchase of gold by the government will fix the value of these notes which we 197 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. issue and declare to be a legal tender. That sale will fix their value at tell, fifteen, or twenty-five per cent. discount.,, and then every poor man, when he buys his beef, his pork, and his supplies, mnlust submit to this fifteen or twenty-five per cent. discount, because you hlave said that that shall be the value of the very notes which you have made a legal tender to him, but not a legal tender to those who fix the value of these very notes. Does any one believe that anybody but banrkers and brokers fixes the depreciation of currency? So you will thus have fixed the market value of your notes at seventy-five or eighty per cent., and yet they are a legal tender to the poor of the country, while they are no legal tender to those who hold the coin of the country. "By the original bill the Secretary of the Treasury was allowed to sell these bonds at their value for lawful money -that is, for these legal tender notes. But now, by the provisions of this bill, after the market value has been fixed and they are depreciated, the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to go into the market and sell them for coin, not at par, but at the market value therefor. Was there ever a more convenient contrivance got up, into which blind mice run, to catch them? Was ever before such a machine got up for swindling the government and making the fortunes of the gold bullionists in one single year? '"13But as if this accumulated folly were not quite enough, another amendment provides that these notes, when presented in sums not less than $100, may be transferred in;to seven and three-tenths notes payable in two years. Parties may buy these notes at.a discount anl(l put them into notes payable in bullion at two years, at seven and three-tenths interest, for that is a part of the whole system. "Now, sir, does any mian here believe that, notwithlstanding the victories we are gaining, the governnient will be 198 THIE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. able to redeem these notes in two years? If not, they will be shoved upon the market and sold for coin at whatever discount may be delllanded." Ir. Stevens also offered an amendment to pay the army and navy in specie, the saime as the bondholders' interest ill coin, which was voted down. The Senate alnendments were concurred in only in part, wliichl rendered tle al-)pointment of a committee of conferenee necessary. The conferenlce committee appointed by the Senate consisted of M-essrs. Fessenden, Sherman and Carlisle, and the c(onfercn(e commnittee of the House of Mfessrs. Stevens, ITorton andi Sedgwick. The conference committee were in session two or three days, and finally reported the bill with several alterations, the most important of which was that the dluties on impsports slAotul( bep (ai( it coi;,,* so,s to do away with the necessity of forcing the bonds on thle market to procure coin topayt i:,terest in coin onJ the bondce(1 debt of the government. On the 24th of February, 1862, the action of the conference committee was agreed to by the House by a vote of 97 to 22. On the 25th the Senate concurred in the action of the conference committee, and the same (lay the legal tender act was approved by the President.t TIIP GREENBACK. Thus were the minost sacred interests of the people, especially of the producing classes-the farmer, the lmechanic, the mianufactiurer anid the laboring man, grossly and wickedly betrayed into the hands of the money power by the Senate of the IUnited States. The Senate at thlat time was a small body, but twenty-four States being represented, with but three or four members whose ability rose above miediocrity. ,Sce speechl of Hon. Thladdens Stevens i tlhe Appendix. tthe Legatl Tender Act as finally passed will be found in the Appendix. 199 I THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. The occupants of seats once filled by statesmen, whose ability and eloquence had made the Senate of the United States famous throughout the world, they became puffed up with ideas of self-importance, which, with the venality of the Shermans of the body, rendered them easy prey for the sharks of Wall street. It will be observed that the points contended for, so strenuously and successfully, by the conference committee of the Senate, which represented the sentiment of the majority of that body, were, in substance and effect, the same as those contained in the plan of the bankers, offered at their meeting, which convened in Washington immediately after the introduction of the legal tender bill in the House.* That the Senate was controlled, in its action in regard to the legal tender bill, by improper influences is not a matter ,of conjecture, but of history. In his speech at Philadelphia, January 15, 1876, Judge Kelley says: "I remember the grand'Old Commoner' (Thaddeus Stevens) with his hlat in his hand and his cane under his arm, when lie returned to the Hlouse after the final conference, and sheddingi bitter tears over the result.'Yes,' said he,'we have had to yield; the Senate was stubborn. We did not yield until we found that the coq,tr')y nst be lost or tie bctnks be,qrat?ied, and we have sought to save the country in spite of the cupidity of its wealthier citizens." IHere begins one of the darklest chlapteis in American history. It will be found that every step taklen by Congress from this on, in matters pertaining to the finances of the nation, has been dictated by the money power. Foreign capitalists, such as the Rothschilds, became deeply interested in the scheme of robbery inaugurated by the passage of the first legal tender act, and through their agents, such as August Belmont, banker and whilom chairman of the Dem'see page 177. 200 TIIE LEGAL TENDEIi ACTS. ,)cratic National Committee, have aided the money power here materially in controlling the policy of both of the great political parties. The anoulit stolen from the people durilng the war by the financial policy tllen adopted, and which now encumbers tlhe nation ill the slial)e of a bonded debt, payable principal and interest ill gold, is estimated by such writers upon the subject of finance as J. S. Gibbons (contributor to Johnson's Univerisal Cyclop.edia) at over one thousand millions of dollars,* to say nothing of the thousands of millions of which the peopl)e have beenll robbed indirectly, by means of the pernicious liionetalry system then foisted upon the country. Thle first legal tender liotes (greenbacks) issued under the act of Congess of Fel)bruary 25, 1862, were issued bearing (late MIarch 10, 1862, andl ol the back of themi was-s printed these words: "This note is:: le,gal tender f(or all debts, public and private, except duties oli imports and ilterest onI the public debt, and is exclllinieable for United States six per cent. bonds, redeemable it ilie pleasure of the United States after five years." Notwithstanding thie miutilated forim in which the greenbacks were sent out b)y the Treasuiry department, they performed a marvellous work. Thle producing forces of the nation were set at work, and there was no loiuger any difficulty in renderinig the resources of the people available to the goverinilment. In sl)eakiig of thiis period, Judge Kelley, in his Philadelphia speech of January last, thus graphically and eloquently pictures the wonderful change which followed the passage of this legal tender act. ie says: "But the patriots, (Lincoln, Stevens, etc.,) to whom I have referred, had studied thl-e Constitution of the United States. They *'Letter of J. S. Gibbons: Spaulding's Financial History oj the War. 201 THE LEGAL- TTEXDER ACTs. knew that it imposed upon them the duty of saving the nation. They knew that money is the sinew of war, and that it must be had. They knew tlhat tle Constitution authorized the coining of t]e public( credit into money. They'smiote the rock of public credit,' and p)ower and prosperity gushed forth.'Sniote the rock of l)u)lic credit!' What does thatmean.? 1 ]hy, they call]e(i into existence 'the riag-baby!' Tliey sai(d to every Iman tliat would w-olrk'Ihere are wages for you; this ra —bal)y will pay you.' They said to ship-owners,'unfurl your rotting sasils and open youe. hatchways; we have brought you groin from the f'iii, carry it abroad to buy us clothing andi(l arms; for oul iIndlustries have beeni stricken, and we c(- l(iot provide,clothling ol arms for the army that is to sustatin the Ulnioii.' Th-e' lag-baby' showered greenbacks upon them4, and tlhe ships sl)readl their sails, and carried rich c.:',goes to foieign lands, which weie exchanged for clothilng, larniis and inmuitions of war. Industry was rife throughout the land. The farimers, who had been without an adequate oi ]remuinerative 1ia-ll'et for years, were getting good prices for their grain, we'e l~aing their debts to the local merchant, who in turn paid his to those of the great cities. A marvellous child was that'Irag-baby.' WVhile not yet a month old, its name,'gIreenback,' not yet familiar to the people, it lighted thle fires in every forge and furnace of the countlry; it hired ships, and bought others; it blockaded the whlole southern coast; it rallied ali army of 75,000 men, and we soon after heard ringing, throughl the streets the shout of well paid and well clad soldiers,'we're coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more! The'rag-baby' was welcomed by every conlimissary, quartermaster and paymaster. It furnished transportation; it met all demands, and the American people-at least those of the free States —with the great war on their hands, were prosper 202 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. ous as they had never been before, thanks to the miarvellous power of the'r ag-baby.', * * I name it not the' rag-baby;' I take the derisive term from the door of the Presidential mansion. I cannot imply a want of respect for the constitutional legal tender money of the country, the Treasury note, which did all that I have attributed to the'rag-b)aby.'" The premium on gold, which was 315 per cent. when the legal tender act was passed, February 25, 1862, immediately began to decline, and did not go lip again until the latter part of May. UnLited States bonds immediately went up fronl 90 to 102. TEMPORARY DEPOSITS IN TIlE SUB-TREASURY. By the fourth section of the legal tender act, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to receive deposits in the Sub-Treasury to the aimount of $25,000,000, in. sums of nlot less than $100, at five per cent. interest, wvith the privilege of drawing it out again on ten days' notice after thirty days. On the 17th day of MAarch, 1862, the luthority to ireceive these deposits was increased to $50,000,000. On the 11th of July, 1862, it was still further extended to $100,000,000; and by the act of January 30, 1864, to $150,000,000, and the Secretary wals authorized to pay as high as six per cent. interest. These depositsreached the sum of $120,176,196. CERTIFICATES OF INDEBTEDNESS. By the act of Marich 1, 1862, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to issue to public creditors "who may be desirous to receive the samie in satisfaction of audited and settled demands against the United States," certificates of indebtedness in suims not less than $1,000 each, payable in one year, with interest at six per cent. And by the act of March 17, 1862, this power was enlarged, so as to embrace checks drawn in favor of creditors by disbursing officers 203 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. upon sums placed to their credit oil the books of the Treasurer. These certificates were issued ill tihe form of bank notes and circulated to a large extent as currency. The amount of eertificates of indebtedness in circulation Novembher, 1864, was $238,593,000. THIIE SECOND LEGAL TENDER ACT. Onl the 7th clay of June, 1862, Secretary Chase sent a communication to the Committee of Ways and Means of the House asking for authority to issue $150,000,000 more legal tender Treasury notes, and that $35,000,000 of this sum should be of a less denomination than five dollars. On the 11th of June a bill was reported to the House from the Committee of WNays aind Means. The bill was made the special order for tlre 17th inlst. On that day tile debate was opened by MIr. Spaulding illn speech ill favor of the bill. A vote was reached June''4th, when the bill passed, sutbstantially as recommended by the Secretary, by a vote of 76 to 47. On the 28th of June the Finance Committee of the Senate reported it to that body with amendments. On the 2d of July it passed the Senate, as amended, by a vote of 22 to 13. The IHouse refused to agree to the amendments; the farce of a conference committee was again gone thlroughi with; the report of the conference committee was agreed to on the 8th of July, and on the 11th the bill was approved by the President SECOND ANNUAL REPORT OF SECRETARY CHASE. Congress convened in regular session December 1, 1862. On the 4th Secretary Chase submitted his second annual report. After an elaborate review of the revenues and expenditures of the government, lhe discussed the financial affairs of the nation at large. ie reiterated his objections to the State banks and declared that, as between a currency .,2 04 TIlE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. furnished by numerous and unconnected banks in various, States and a currency furnished by the government, he unhesitatingly gave his "preference for a circulation authorized and issued by national authority." IHe took issue with those who entertained the opinion that the rise in the price of gold was due to the redundancy of the currency, and supported his views with great force,* but it did not occur to him to suggest the true reason, viz: because coin was the only currency that was a full legal tender. I-Ie again took occasion to renew his recommendation of the National Banking system. He said: "While the Secretary thus repeats the preference he has, heretofore expressed for a United States note circulation,, even when issued directly by the government and dependent on the action of the government for regulation and final redemption, over the note circulation of the numerous and variously organized and variously responsible banks now existing in the country; and while he now sets forth, more fully than heretofore, the grounds of that preference, he still adheres to the opinion expressed in his last report, that a circulation fiirgished by the governnzenet, but issued by ba)tkigg associations organized under a general act of Congress, is to be pi'referred to either." The amount to be provided for by Congress for the current year hlie estimated at about $300,000,000, and for the next fiscal year, (beginning July ist,) $600,000,000, and recommended that the chief dependence ot the government to secure that amount be placed on the negotiation of bonds. * Congress was then urged by the Secretary to repeal that portion of the act of Congress of February 25, 1862, which 9-estricted the sale of bonds to their narketprice, and See Report of the Secretary of the Treasury: Appendix to the Congressional Globe, 1862-7G3. 205, THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. also the clatuseprovi(diig,for the convertibility of bo)ids asd Treasury notes, (yreenbacks.) In conclusion he said: "The general views of the Secretary may, therefore, be thus briefly summed: He recommends that whatever amount may be needed beyond the sumis supplied by revenue and through other indicated modes, be obtained by loans, without ilncreasing the issue of United States notes beyond the amount fixed by law, unless a clear public exigency shall demand it. Hle recommends, also, the organization of banking associations for the improvement of the public credit, and for the supply to the people of a safe and uniform currency. And he recomminends no change in the law providing for the negotiation of bonds except the necessary increase of iamount, and the repeal of the absolute restriction to ma'rket value ancd of the cla?tses act,thorizi')t convertibility at will." THE THIRD LEGAL TENDER ACT-$900,000,000 I,OAN ACT. Early in the session the IIon. Thaddeus Stevens irttroduced a bill "to provide means to defray the expenses of the government," which, in his own language, "produced a howl among the money changers as hideous as that sent up by their Jewish cousins when they were kicked out of the temple." This bill was in substance the same as the legal tender bill, as it orifginally passed the House and before it was mutilated by the Senate in the manner above explained. It was intended to bring the government back to the full legal tender money system, "the simplicity and harmony of which had been mangled and destroyed by the Senate." In a brief, but powerful speech, (December 23, 1862) Mr. Stevens pointed out the injustice and danger of the financial policy which was then being pursued, and closed with this prophetic warning: "But I ought perhaps to say, before I close, to my country banking friends that they need not be 206 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. aarmed. There is no great prospect that we shall return to the system I hlave indicated, nor do much to protect the people from their own eager speculations. Wien, a fetc yea-s Pience, thec people shall have bee) brougAt to ,qyeteeral bankrte)tcy by their unregulated enterprise, I shall have the satisfaction to know that I attempted to prevent it." (Mr. Stevens' speech will be found in full in the Appendix.) On the 8th of January, 1863, the Committee of WVays and Means reported a bill entitled, "A bill to provide Ways and Means for the Support of the Government," afterwards known as the $900,000,000 loan act. The bill reported contained no provision for the repeal of the clause in the act of February 25, 1862, restricting the Secretary of the Treasury in the sale of bonds to their " market value," or of the clause allowing the holders of legal tender notes to convert them at any time into 5-20 six per cent. bonds. On the 12th of January the bill was taken up in the House, and Mr. Spaulding opened the debate in a lengthy speech in support of the bill, in which he discussed the National Banking scheme, recommended by the Secretary, arg,uing in its favor. On the 17th of January, 1863, a joint resolution was passed "to provide for the immediate payment of the army and navy of the United States," autllhorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to issue $100,000,000 legal tender Treasury notes, to be covered by the bill then pending ($900,000,000 loan act.) On the 26th of January, 1863, the bill was passed-a substitute offered by Mir. IIooper, and one by MIr. Stevens, having been first decided in the negative-without a division. On the 13th of February, 1863, the bill, after being amended, passed the Senate by a vote of 32 to 4. The usual routine of a conference committee was gone throu,gh with, with the usual result, and the bill was 207 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. finally agreed to as amended by the Senate, and approved by the President March 3, 1863. The following is a synopsis of the bill as given by Mr. Spaulding:* "1. The first section authorizes a loan of $300,000,000 for the then current year, and $600,000,000 for the then next fiscal year, and to issue bonds therefor at not less than ten nor more than forty years, at not exceeding six per cent. interest, in coin, not exceeding, in all $900,000,000. "2. By section second of the same act the Secretary, in lieu of an equal amount of said bond(ls, was authorized to issue $400,000,000 of Treasury notes, bearing interest not exceeding six per cent., payable in lawful money, which notes, payable at periods expressed on their face, migyht be made a legal te)nder at their face valete. "3. By the third section $150,000,000 in amount of United States notes, made a legal tender, might be issued. The restriction in the sale of bonds to' market valctIe was repealed.'And the holders of 5tlited States ),otes isstue(t under former acts, shall presenit the s8ame for the pltrpose of exchanyigiq them f or bonds as thereib)provided, on or before thefirst of Jtely, 1863, and( thereafter the right to exchan)ge the same shall cease a(,,d deteri)bie.' "4. This section imposed a tax of one per cent. each half year, on a graduated scale of StAate bank circetlation,, according to the capital stock of each bank." Making the interest of the bonds payable in gold and declaring that the legal tender Treasury note (greeiback) should not be receivable for duties on imports, was a gross betrayal of the interests of the peoplle by the Senate of the United States. But that body was capable of still greater perfidy. It will be observed by the synopsis of the $900,000,000 loan act, given above, that the convertibility of the lFinaiicial Hlistory of thie ar, page i$0. 208 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. greenback with United States six per cenit. bonds, as provided by the act of February 25, 1862, was repealed By the terms of the act of February 25, 1862, under which the greenback was issued, the right to exchange it for United States bonds was distinctly guaranteed, and was in the nature of a cont,act, mnade bythe government with the holder, and to abrogate this right was an act of repudiation. The motive which inspired tile act, was to still further depreciate the paper of the government. It is a fact worthy of note, that when Congress perpetrated this act of repudiation, "n(> doleful sound came up fiom the caverns of the bullion brokers or the saloons of the associated banks," nor was there ally howl heard from the gentlemen of the press, who were so quick to detect repudiation in MIr. Stevens' bill to restore the legal tender act to the condition in which it first passed the House.* NATION'A:I B: AAN K BILL. OnI the 2(1 of February, 1863, the National Bank bill, as prepared by MIr. Spaulding in December, 1861, was reported, with alterations and amiendiments, from the Finance Committee to the Senate bv Air. Sherman. The debate upon it began in the Senate on the 9thl, and on the 12th (three days after) the bill passed by a vote of 23 to 21. It was taken up in the house onl the 19th, and passed the next day by a vote of 78 to 64; and received the President's signature Marich 25, 1863. (See Chapter on National Bankls.) hle money power now had matters all its own way, and was in a situation to prey upon the govermnent and people at its pleasure. Duties on imports were payable in gold; interest on the bonds of the IUnited States were payable in gold; the exchangeability of the greenback with bonds liad ~,ee Speechl of Tlon. Thladdeuls Stevens in the Appendix. 14 209 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. been abrogated; the country was flooded with evidences of indebtedness of the government in all forms and shapes, such as demand notes, Treasury notes bearing interest, mutilated legal tender notes, certificates of deposit, certificates of indebtedness, etc.; and a banking bill, authorizing the issue of $300,000,000 in bank notes had been passed. The following statement of the public debt (January 2, 1863) will show exactly the amount and character of the indebtedness of the government at this time: Loan of 1842........................... $2,883,364 11 " 18 4 7........................... 9,415,250 00 " 1848........................... 8,908,341 80 A' 1858........................... 20,000,000 00 1860........................... 7,022,000 00 ' 1861, act of February 8, 1860..... 18,415,000 00 " 1861, act of July 18, 1861........ 50,002,000 00 " 1862, five-twenty six per cent......25,050,850 00 Texas indemnity........................ 3,461,000 00 Ore gon wa r debt........................ 1,026,600 00 Texas d e b t............................. 112,092 69 'Old fundedand unfunded debt........... 114,115 48 Treasury notes under acts prior to 1857.... 104,561 64 ~6" " " subsequent...... 2,750,350 00 Treasury notes seven-thirty per cent. interest 139,998,000 00 Temporary deposits at four per cent.......38,458,008 50 ~~" " five per cent........41,777,628 16 United States notes, legal tender and receiv able for customs....................14,913,315 25 United States notes, legal tender.......... 223,108,000 00 Postal currency less than one dollar...... 6,844,936 00 Certificates of indebtedness, six per cent... 110,321,241 65 Requisitions on the Treasurer for soldiers' pay and other creditors, due but not paid 59,117,597 46 Total funded and unfunded debt to January 2, 1863, according to the books in the Treasury Department............... $783,804,252 64 The time had now arrived to put the $500,000,000 of '210 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. UTnited States bonds authorized by the act of February 25, 1862, on the market. Notwithstanding the ulgent need of the government during this time, Secretary Chase had held these bonds back for over a year on the pretence that the restriction to a sale at "market value" prevented him from negotiating their sale to any considerable amount. Mr. Gurley, of Ohio, effectually disposed of this plea in the course of his speech on the nine hundhed million loan act. He said: "He did not agree with the Secretary in several things contained in his report; the banking scheme, which the Secretary admits would not afford any immediate relief, should be rejected; we need a sensible, practicable plan that will furnish immediate means to pay the army and navy. I-e insisted that Congress, by the act of February 25, 1862, authorized the Secretary to sell $500,000,000 six per cent. 5-20 bonds at'the market value thereof,' witich Ate :atd not do7e, as itte),aded by Congress, and the consequence was that the soldiers and sailors were not paid, as they ought to have been before this time. * * The words 4market value' do not mean par value, nor any specified time or sums. The market value was the price they would bring when offered in the market. There has been no business day or week since the law was passed, when any of the many agents of the Secretary in New York could not have placed one million, or several millions, in the market, and sold them somewhere near par, to raise money to pay the army and navy." In MIay, 1863, Jay Cooke, "an enterprising banker" of Philadelphia, was employed to dispose of the five-twenty bonds. The Secretary of the Treasury, up to this time, had put out only about $25,000,000, leaving $415,000,000 yet to be sold. No effort was made by Mr. Cooke to negotiate these bonds with bankers or capitalists, but (to quote from 211 THE LEGAL TENDER A(.TS. Spaulding), "the editors of newspapers and others were enlisted to bring the advantages of the loan before the people, in order to make it a great popular loan, to be taken by them in large and small sums in all the loyal States. Mr. Cooke succeeded admirably in this undertaking. The loan became very popular, and was taken extensively by farmers, mechanics and laboring people, in all the towns, villages and cities over the country. By the first of July,. 1863, the amount of $168,880,250 of these bonds were taken; and by the first of October following, $278,511,500 had been taken uip; and by the 21st of January following the whole sumi of $500,000,000 had been taken at par, and the rush was so great near the closing out of the loan, that nearly $11,000,000 extra had been subscribed and paid for before notice could be given to sub-agents that the amount authorized by that act had been taken up. Congress, however, soon after authorized this extra sumi to be issued." IHugh MIcCulloch also bears testimony as to what class of people took the 5-20 bonds. In a letter to the New York Tribune, dated at London in September last, he said "I recollect the time when subscribers for United States bonds were regarded as patriots, and I happen to know to what class they belonged. With rare exception they were not capitalists. * * The purchasers of our bonds were the patriotic men of all parties, chiefly men of moderate means,. who were resolved that the Union should be saved, no matter at what cost of money or blood." It may be interesting to state that Mr. AIMeCulloch was not one of those who were resolved that the Union should be saved, no matter at what cost, etc. At the time he refers to, he was a country banker "of moderate means," somewhere in the State of Indiana, and was solicited, we believe, by the Sub 212 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Treasurer of the United States, Mr. Cisco, to have his bank take and dispose of some of "our bonds." Ile treated the request with contempt. This matter was so well known at the time of his apI)ointment as Secretary of the Treasury, as to be talked of on the streets of Washington, and was hushed up by his friends only with great difficulty. The )artial legal tender Treasury note (greenback), issued by the government, now constituted the medium of exchange of the nation. Its legal tender property gave it the power and functions of money, to measure and exchange values. The legal tender money of a country is the measure of all values and the basis of all money contracts among its people; consequently prices in the iUnited States came to be regulated by the greenback and inot by gold. Any one can satisfy himself on this point by comparing the market prices of any of the leading products of the country for a given time with the fluctuations in the price of gold. Secretary Chase referred to this fact in his second annual report, in which he said: "That such is the case (no redundancy of the currency) may be reasonably inferred from the fact that the prices of many of the most important articles of consumption have declined or not materially advanced during the year. Wheat, quoted at $1.38 to $1.45 per bushel on the first of November, 1861, was quoted at $1.45 to $1.50 on the first of November, 1862. Prime mess pork on the first of November, 1861, was quoted at $15 to $15.50 per barrel, and on the first of November, 1862, at $12.50 to $13. Corn sold on the first of November, 1861, at 62 to 63 cents per bushel, and on the first of November, 1862, at 71 to 73 cents. A comparison between the prices of hay, beef, and some other staples of domestic produce, at the two dates, exhibits similar conditions of actual depression in price or moderate 213 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. rise." Products rise and fall in price according to the. laws of supply and demand. Foreign goods, however, the duties on which have to be paid in gold, are subject to a. different standard of payment, and are governed in price largely by the price of gold. The price of gold is regulated by the laws of supply and demand, supplemented by the arts and efforts of speculators and gold gamblers. As long as the greenback was convertible at the will of the holder into a six per cent. gold interest bond, there was no danger of its becoming redundant, or in any way affecting the priceof domestic products. But, as we have seen, this convertibility was taken away, in the face of the plighted faith of the government, after July 1, 1863. On March 3, 1864, an act of Congress was passed giving Secretary Chase still further discretionary power. It authorized him to issue $200,000,000 of bonds, bearing date March 1,, 1864, or any subsequent date, redeemable after five years and payable in forty years, in coin, bearing interest not exceeding six per cent., subsequently known as 10-40 bonds. UnLder authority of this act, Secretary Chase, immediately after the 5-20 bonds bearing six per cent. interest had been disposed of, put 10-40 bonds bearing only.five per cent. interest on the market. Very naturally the loan did not prove a suc — cess, and by the 1st of July, 1864, the sum realized from 10-40 bonds amounted to only $73,337,750. In order to. defray the expenses of the government, the Secretary continued to issue evidences of indebtedness of the government in various forms calculated to circulate as a currency. By this time National Bank notes began to swell the volume of' the currency. The following statement shows the amount and kinds of paper in circulation June 30, 1864: 214 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. U. S. notes, greenbacks................ Postal, fractional currency............. Interest beaiingr legal tender Treasury note Certificates of Indebtedness............ National Bank notes.....................9 State Bank circulation about........... Seven-thirty Treasury notes............ Temporary deposits for which certificate were issued...................... 1 72,330,191 44 $1,125,877,034 53; From the above table it will be seen that the country was flooded with paper securities of the government of every description, mostly bearing interest and issued in a form to circulate as currency. Now take into consideration the fact that over $700,000,000 of bonds bearing interest payable it yold lhad just been issued, m-id also that the military situation was very critical, and no one can fail to see into, what a wretched condition the finances of the country had been brought. The'"bulls" and "bears" of WSall street fairly rioted in the speculation and gold gambling which ensued. The premium on gold began to go up. On the 15th of Januatry, 1864, it was 1.55; on the 15th of February, 1.59; on the 15th of April, 1.78; on the 15th of June, 1.79; on the 30th of June, 2.50; and on the 11th of July, 2.85w. The business affairs of the country were of course greatly deranged, and distrust became general. The credit of the, government suffered enormously-worse than if it had sustained a dozen defeats in the field. But the game had been carried too far, and it was no longer possible to deceive the public, so somnething, had to be done to allay public feeling and restore confidence. Secretary Chase was compelled to resign June 30, 1864. No change, however, was made in 215; $431,178,670 84 22,894,877 25 168,571,450 00 160,720,000 0(> 25,825,695 00, 135,000,000 00' 109,356,150 0(, THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. the policy of the Treasury Department, and matters went on from bad to worse. BONDS, ETC., EXEMPTED FP,OM TAXATION.-GREENBACKS LII'TED TO $400,000,000. By the act of June 30, 1864, the amount of greenbacks issued or to be issued, was limited to $400,000,000, and "such additional sum, not exceeding $50,000,000, as may be temporarily required for the redemption of telmporary loans." The Secretary was authorized to issue $200,000,000 legal tender Treasury notes bearing interest, payable in three years. By the same act all bonds, coupons, national currency, United States notes, Treasury notes, fractional notes, certificates of indebtedness, certificates of deposit, etc., were declared to be exemnpt fron taxation by or under State or mmunicipal authority. SENATOR FESSENDEN APPOINTEI) SECRETARY OF THE TREASULPY. William P. Fessenden, TUnited States Senator from Maine, was appointed to succeed Secretary Chase, and entered upon the duties of his office July 5, 1864. Secretary Fessenden raised the means to carry on the government to March 4, 1865, by issuing greenbacks, 7-30 Treasurr notes, interest bearing Treasury notes, certificates of indebtedness, 5-20 bonds, etc. Secretary Fessenden, while in the United States Senate, hadcl played a conspicuous part in mutilating the greenback, and the following paragraph from his annual report, in December, 1864, in view of his course, cannot fall to strike the reader as a singular admission. He said: "The experience of the past few months cannot have failedl to convince the most careless observer that, whatever may be the effect of a redundant circulation upon the price of coin, other causes have exercised a greater andcl more deleterious 216 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. influence. In the course of a few days the price of this article rose from $1.50 to $2.85 in paper for $1.00 in specie, -and subsequently fell, in as short a period, to $1.87, and then again rose as rapidly to $2.50; and all wvithout any assign,able cause, traceable to a, increase or decrease in circulation of paper mnoney, or an expansion or con,traction of credit or other similar influence onl the market, tending to occasion a fluctuation so violent. It is quite :apparent that the 8olution of the roble ay be foutd ,in tlee uznpatriotic and criminal efforts of s2eculators, .and probably of secret enemies, to raise the price of coin, regardless of tihe injury inflicted upon the counitry,-or desiringi to inflict it." No man living, except John Sherman of Ohio, was better able to explain how and tlhrough whose instrumentality these rascally speculators were enabled to prosecute their "unpatriotic and criminal efforts" tlhani Mr. .Fessenden himself. Under the circumstances ]lr. Fessen-den did not find the position of Secretary of the Treasury .a very comfortable one; and at the beginniing of Mr. Lincoln's second term he surrendered it with feelings of great relief. M'CULLOCII APPOINTED SECRETAIiY OF TIlE TRASUPY. Immediately after President Lincoln entered upon his ,secoind teria of office Ihugh McCulloch, a banker, of the State of Indiaina, was appointed Secretary of the Treasury. Mr. MIcCulloch was unknown to the public, but it was hoped that, being a banker and of course familiar with the manner in which the government and people were being :robbed by the money power, and not identified with the corrupt political ring at Washington through which it ,operated, hlie would endeavor to restore the finances of the country to a more healthy condition. Never were a people 217 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. doomed to be more bitterly disappointed. M'cCulloch not only entered into the designs of the imoney plower, but becameits most subservient tool, an-d rietired with the reputation of being the first Secretary of the Treasu'y of the United States who had ever prostituted his high office for the purpose of enrichinig himiself and his associates. I-enr-y C. Carey, who had a conversation with himi iiimmediately after' his accession to office, say-s that hle expressed hii:self then as unfavorable to contraction, and quotes him as sayilig, that he "shlould gladly see it (gold) at 1.75," mieaning tlhat lie would not favor contraction for the purpose of reducilng tlle premnium on gold. "Three monthls later," says 1lr. Carey, "lie was instructing his rel)presentatives abroad to give assurances tlhat we should lave resumed specie payments. before tle 7-O-30's became d(ie. Two months yet later caime the destructive Fort Wayne de(cree (a letter from MeCullocli in which lie expressed hinself in favor of the policy of coitraction), and from that llour did the Secretary persist in the absurd and injurious pI)olicy therein alnnounced." Mr1. MIcCullochl, at the same tinme that he was giving' instructions to Mis representatives abroad tha-t wve shlould have resumied specie payments before the 7-30's becamei due, was issuiing 7-30 Treasury notes and compound interest bearing Treasury notes, made a tender at their face value, to an enormous amount. Tlhe payment of thle army, which was mustered out of service during this period, alonerequired an imimense sum, which was obtained by selliing 7-30 Treasury notes through the agency of Jay Cooke. The, amnount of 7-30 Treasury notes outstanding October, 1865, which were convertible in less than three years into 5-20 six per cent. bonds, was $830,000,000. The following is a statement of the debt and circulation. of the United States, as it stood October 31, 1865: 218 TI.IE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Bonds, 10-40's, five per cent., due in 1904.. Bonds, Pacific R. R., 6 per cent., due in 1895 Bonds, 5-20's, 6 per cent., due in 1882,'84,'85 Bonds, 6 per cent., due ill 1881.......... Bonds, 5 per cent., due ill 1880.......... Bonds, 5 per cent., due in 1874.......... Bonds, 5 per cent., due iu 1871.......... Bonds, 6 per cent., due in 1868.......... Bonds, 6 per cent., due in 1867.......... Bonds, Texas indeminity, part due........ Bonds, Treasury notes, etc., part due...... Total Bond s....................$1,163,769,611 89 Compound interest notes, due in 1867-'68.......$173,012,141 00 7-30 Treasury notes, due in 1867 and 1868...... 830,000,000 00 Temporary loans, 10 days' notice............... 99,107,745 46 Certificates of indebted ness, due in 1866.... 55,905,000 00 Treasury n-otes, 5 per cent., Dec. 1, 1865......... 32,536,901 00 United States notes..... 428,160,569 00 Fractional currency..... 26,057,469 20-1,644,779,825 66 Total debt October 31, 1865......$. 2,808,549,437 55 National Bank notes issued............. $185,000,000 00. State Bank notes issued.................. 65,000,000 00 Treasury notes, greenbacks etc.......... 1,644,779,825 66 Total circulation*.............. $1,894,779,825 66 M'CULLOCII'S CONTRACTION POLICY. Secretary AIcCulloch, in hlis first annual report, December 4, 1865, argued that the legal tender acts were war measures and only temporary in character, and "ougiht not to remain in force a day longer than would be necessary to enable the people to prepare for a return to the gold standard; and that 'See table of circulation, Sept. 1, 1865, pagre 16. 219 2172,770,100 00 1,258,000 00 659,259,600 00 265,347,400 0O. 18,415,000 0(, 20,000,000 00 7,022,000 00 8,908,341 80 9,415,250 00 760,000 00 613,920 09 20THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. the work of retiring the noates which have been issued should be commenced without delay, and carefully and persistently continued until all are retired." On the 18th of December, 1865, Congress adopted,a resolutionr "cordially concurring 'in the views of the Secretary -of the Treasury, in relation to a contraction of the currenlcy," by a vote of 144 to 6. This was followed by an act of Congress, approved April 12, 1866, :authorizing the Secretary to sell 5-20 bonds, and with the I)roceeds to retire six petr cent. compound interest notes and legal tender notes (greenbacks), and other evidences of indebtedness of the government, but not to retire more than four millions of dollars of greenbacks a month, or forty-eight millions of dollars in a year, but without restriction as to the amount of compound sixes and seven-thirties. This act gave Secretary AIcCulloch unlimited control over the monetary affairs of the country. The banks and shaarks of Wall street and their kind, at home and abroad, held hundreds of millions of securities of the government, which they had p)urchased at various prices -Tanging from thirty-five cents on the dollar upwards. During the war whilst these securities were being emitted, it was the policy of the money power to depreciate their value in every way possible, in order that they might be bought in at a sacifice. Hence it was that interest on the bonds and duties on imports were -made payable in gold, and subsequently, that the convertibility of legal tender notes into bonds was abrogated. It was for the same reason, too, that Congress, instead of adopting a plain, simple system, easily understood by the public, such as the legal tender Treasury note susrained by an interest bearing bond, persisted in authorizing -the Secretary of the Treasury to issue government securities, bearing interest, and mostly payable in three years, in all sorts of forms and shapes. Government obligations were :220 TIHE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. issued dluring the war by the Treasury Department infifteee, diferent forms. It was of course iimpossible for the generai public to keep the run of, much less to understand, all these various forms of indebtediiess, nor was it designed that they should. It need scarcely be added, that issuing the securities of the government in these peculiar forms furnished the banks an additional opportunity to prey upon the people. As soon as the last batch of 7-30 Treasury notes was disposed of by lIcCulloch to ra.ise means to pay off the army on the eve of its disbandment, fthe money l)ower changed: its policy. It was now to, the advantag,e of the holders of government securities to do everything hi their power to enhance their value. Accordingly from this time on the efforts of the money power wvill be found turned in that direction. Secretary ieCtilIoch, who had informced Mr.. Carey that hle would like to see gold stay at $1.75, as we have seen, was soon brought to terms, and was now a zealous champion of contraction, for the purpl?ose of bringilng the country back to "1honest nLoniey." The Treasury notess purposely made payable in three years, and which were convertible into 5-20 bonds, constituted the greater part okF the public debt held at holme These notes were payable in lawvful money (greenbacks),' and it became an important object to have them converted into long time bonds, so that the money power might have ample time to secure sucli legislation as would result in the principal as well as thl interest being paid inI gold. Mr. MIcCulloch entered into this method of liquidating the outstanding obligations of the governlment with great zeal. The following items taken from his report of December, 1866, exhibit the character and extent of the contraction which took place (by substitUting 5-20 bonds for Treasury notes, etc.,) from August 31, 1865, to October 31, 1866: 221 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. 'Tempo Febr 'Certific of MN 'Treasur years 'Treasu] ,Compo July 'Treasul and S -lfited and United Febr $62,146,714 27 84,911,000 00 31,000,000 00 295,100 00 68,512,020 00 105,985,700 00 134,610 00 uary 25, 1862, and Alarch 3, 1863... 42,830,174 00 Amount retired first year.......... $395,815,318 27 This policy was persisted in until all evidences of indebtedness of the government bearing currency interest, and having but a short time to run, were converted into gold interest long bonds. The following synopsis of thle public debt statement contained in Secretary MeCulloch's annual report of December 1, 1868, will exhibit the progress made by him on the 1st day of July, 1868: DEBT BEARIING COIN INTEREST. 5 per cent. bonds...... $221,588,400 00 6 per cent. bonds......1,848,415,241 80 Navy Pension fund.... 13,000,000 00-$2,083,003,641 80 DEBT BEARING CURRENCY INTEREST. 6 per cent. bonds...... $29,089,000 00 3 year comp'nd imt. notes 21,604,890 00 3 year 7-30 notes........ 25,534,900 00 3 per cent. certificates.. 50,000,000 00- $126,228,790 00 MATURED DEBT NOT PRESENTED FOR PAYMENT. Treasury notes, conmpound int'st notes, etc. 20,527,302 64 DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. IU. S. notes (greenbacks) $356,141,723 00 Fractional currency.... 32,626,951 75 Gold certific's of deposit 17,678,740 00- $406,447,414 75 Total debt............ $2,636,207,149 19 '222 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. In the meantime contraction had done its work. Business men began to suffer and the industries of the country to decline. "Hugh McCulloch had tapped a great artery and let nearly all the blood flow from the body politic." Besides the hundreds of millions of evidences of indebtedness of the government, used as currency, taken from the channels of trade, the greenback circulation was contracted from August, 1865, to July, 1868, $70,736,636.76. The public began to realize, though only partially, the cause of the great change -that was going on in the business affairs of the country, and called a halt. Mr. J. A. Stevens, President of the Chamber of Commerce of New York City, in a letter to thle New York Times in 1873, thus refers to this period: "The country at large had felt the pressure of the screw, but had not been able to discover precisely from what quarter the pinch came, the contraction being confined to those outside forms of Treasury obligations which, though not currency in the strict acceptation of the word, were still used as such in the larger transactions of trade and financial exchange. When, in a time of general pressure, the currency itself became the subject of the pruning knife, the country not only felt the knife, but saw how it was handled, and refused to submit to the'heroic treatment.'" Congress was compelled, in January, 1868, by the force of public sentiment, to pass a law declaring "that from and after its passage, the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to make any reduction of the currency by retiring For cancelling United States notes (greenbacks) shall be and is hereby suspended." But the mischief had already been done. The greenback, however, was saved to the people. In 1865 and 1866, after the termination of the war, industry, by reason of the abundance of money in circulation, was rife throughout the country, and production went on as it 223 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. had never done before. During the years 1863,'64,'65 and 66 the failures throughout the country, as reported in Hunt's Magazine, averaged only 545 a year. In 1867 they run up to 2,386, and continued above that number until 1873, when they reached 5,181, with liabilities to the amount of $228,490,000. In 1865 general prosperity prevailed, and as McCulloch h'imself has since admitted, the people were individually out of debt. Business then was donefor cash. But as money grew scarce business men were obliged, as in days before the war, to resort to the banks and borrow bank credit. Business was no longer done on cash principles. As like causes produce like effects, so the use of bank credit, rendered niecessary by the scarcity of money, brought the business affairs of the nation back to the same condition in which they had been for sixty years prior to the war. A commercial crash was only a question of time, and accordingly it came in 1873. AN- ACT TO STRENGTtIEN TIlE PUBLIC CREDIT OF TIlE UNITED STATES. Every act of Congress relating to the financial measures of the government during the war was passed with a wlew todepreciating the public credit. So, now, after the war was' over, and the money power had obtained possession of all the outstanding obligations of the government, every act that was passed was passed with a view to increasing theirvalue. The 5-20 bonds of the government were payable in lawful money of the United States. It will be remembered that when the first legal tender act was passed, February 25,. 1862, the chief bone of contention between the Senate and House was the payment of the interest on the bonds in gold. Legal tender notes were made a tender for "alI claims and demands a,gainst {he Uited States of every 224 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. kind whatsoever, except for itetreest tuto bo)tds atd ntotes, which shall be paid in coin, and shall also be lawful money and a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, within the United States, except duties on imports and interest as aforesaid." This laitguage is perfectly plain and explicit and leaves no room for doubt. When the bill was pending ill the Senate, MNr. Collamer, of Vermont, offered an amendment deprivingl the greenback of its legal tender quality so far as the public debt was concerned, and, at the same timle, said that if the bill l did not mean that bonds were payable in greenbacks, it mieaint nothing. His amendment was voted down. Senator WVilson, of Massachusetts, declared that greenbacks ought to be a legal tender for the payment of the public debt, and that if they were not he would vote ag-ainst the bill. The lHon. Thaddeus Stevens subsequently declared, that "when the bill was on its final passage, the question was expressly asked of the chairman of the Committee on W~ays and Means, and as expressly answered by him, thlat ogtly the izteerest was payable in coin. If I knew," he added, "that any party in this country would go for paying in coinl that which is payable ill money, thus enhancing it one-half; if I knew there was such a platform, and such a determination on the part of any party, I would vote on the other side. I would vote for no such swindle upon the tax payers of this country; I would vote for no such speculation in favor of the large bondholders-the millionaires who took advantage of our folly in granting thenm coin payment of interest." The first move made by the bullionists and bondholder,s was to educate public sentiment, through the press, in regard to the "sacredness of the public faitli." The leading newspapers of the principal cities took up the song, and before a great whlile the gentlemen of the country press, who are 225 T2 T J LEGAL TFL,1)Et: AC TS. quick to learn whliclh way the windl eblows, ee ]hear:d, together with the demagogues of both parties, joining in the chorus. In many of the WVestern States, whose people are not so completely enslaved by the money power as their brethren of the east, public opinion manifested a disposition to demand that the five4-twenity bonds should be paid agreeably to the terms of the acts providing for their issuein greenbacks. This was not confinedl to any particular party. Accordingly w-e find Senator Shermian, ini a speech in the Senate, February 27, 186$, uttering the following selltiments. He said: "I say that equity a-td justice are amply satisfied if we redeem these bonds at the end of five years in the same kind of imoney, of the'~:le intrinsic value it bore at the time they were issued. Gentlemen may reason about the matter over aind over again, and they cannot come to any other conclusion; at least, that has been my conclusion after the most careful deliberation. Senators are sometimes in the habit, in order to defeat the argument of an antagonist, to say that this is repudiation. Wvhy, sir, every citizen of the United States has conformed his business to the legal tender clause. * Every State iii the Union, without exception, has made its contracts, since the legal tender clause, in currency ancd paid theii in curren cy." And Senator Morton declared that, "wev should do foul injustice to the government and the people of the UTnited States, after we have sold these bonds on al average for not more than sixty cents on tlhe dollar, now to propose to make a new contract for the benefit of the bondholder." The Presidential campaign of 1868 was impending, and it became necessary for the money power to resort to extraordinary efforts to obtain the direction of political affairs. The Rothschilds were in possession of several hundred millions of 5-20 bonds, purchased at about sixty cents on 226 THSE L,EGAL TENDER ACTS. the dollar or less, and were particularly interested. Their agent, August Belmont, who had secured the position of chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was instructed by Baron James Rothschild as early as March 13, 1868, that unless the Democratic party went in for paying the 5-20 bonds in gold, it must be defeated. The first step was to have the national convention held in New York City. It accordingly convened there on the 4th of July, 1868. Belmont and his satellites were unable to control the convention, at least in the matter of the platform. After a stormy session the platform was promulgated on the 7th of July, and contained the following plank: "Resolved, Third: WAhen t4he obligations of the government do not expressly state upon their face, or the law under which they were issued does not provide that they shall be paid in coin, they ought in right to be paid in the lawful money of the United States." This resolution doomed the party to defeat. At this time Mr. Belmont owned a large interest in the New York TVorcld, generally regarded as the leading Democratic newspaper in the country. About the first of October this interest is believed to have been transferred to Manton Marble, editor and part proprietor of the paper. On the 15th day of October, a few weeks before the general election, the TVorld, to the consternation of the democracy througho-ut the country, came out in a leading editorial denouncing HIoratio Seymour, the candidate of the party for the Presidlency, as unfit and unavailable, and advising his withdrawal. This act of treachery has never been equaled in the annals of politics; and, strange to say, the World, under the same corrupt influence, continues to occupy the position of a leading Democratic newspaper. The money power was more successful with the leaders of the Republican party. Through its aid Grant was triumphantly elected. President 227 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Grant was duly inaugurated on the 4thl of March, 1869, and in pursuance of the programme marked out for him, thus alluded to' the sacredness of the public faith" in his inaugural message. He said: "Let it be understood that no repudiator of one farthing of our public debt will be trusted in public place, algil it will go far toward strengthening a credit which oulght to be the best in the world, and will ultimately enable us to replace the debt with bonds bearing less interest than we now pay." This was intended as a warning to all those who might desire to stand well with the administration. Onl the 12th of March a bill was introduced in the House by MIr. Schenck, of Ohio, entitled "An act to strengthenii the public credit of the United States." In due tim.e it passed both branches of Congress, and was approved by the President March 18, 1869. It was the first act of Congress that received his official sanction. This act provides as follows: "Be it enxacted, etc., That, in order to remove any doubt as to the purpose of the government to discharge all its obligations to the public creditors, and to settle conlflicting questions and interpretations of the law, by virtue of whicl such obligations have been contracted, it is hereby provided and declared that the faith of the United States is solemnly pledged to the payment in coin, or its equivalent, of all the obligations of the United States not bearing interest, known as United States notes, and of all the interest bearing obligations, except in cases where the law authorizing the issue of any such obligations has expressly provided that the same mnay be paid in lawful money, or in other currency than gold and silver; but none of the said interest bearing obligations, not already due, shall be redeemed or paid before maturity, unless at such times as United States notes shall be convertible into coin at the option of the holder, or unless at such time 228 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. bonds of the United States, bearing a lower rate of interest than the bonds to be redeemed, can be sold at par in coin. And the United States also solemnly pledges its faith to make provision at the earliest practicable period for the redemption of the United States notes in coin." To show conclusively that the 5-20 six per cent. bonds of the United States were not regarded either at home or abroad as payable in coin, MAr. Lawrelnce, of Ohio, called attention to the fact that, "on the 30th day of November, 1867, (over two years after the war was over) our five-twenty six per cent. bonds sold in Lonidon at 70-:- cents, while New Brunswick and Cape of GCood Hope six pelr cents sold at 105; I-lussian five l)er ents at 85.tnid Brazili.aii five per cents at 75." Congress and the President had done everything inl their; power to miake the 5-20's payable in gold, but the Rothschilds and the money power generally were apprehensive as to the future, inasmiuchl as the act of Conglress of Mlarch 18, 1869, was inl violation of the terms of the contract under which tl-te bonds had been issued, and might be repealed. No time was lost, therefore, in inducineg the Secretary of the Treasury to pay off these bonds in gold. By means best known to themselves, M4cCullochl had been induced to redeem about $150,000,000 of these bonds, during his administration of the Treasury, and the process was continlued under Boutwell and his successors, until the 5-20 bonds, issued under the original act of Februarv 25, 1862, were all redeemed in gold or its equivalelit.* This single act of robbery, for it is only one of the many acts of robbery which have been perpetrated by the imoney power during the past few years under the guise of law, will foot up about as follows: *See public debt statement, page 231. 229 TIlE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Amount of 5-20 six per cent. bonds........$500,000,0o00 00 Interest in gold at six per cent., compounded semi-annually, for ten years............. 403,096,132 71 Total............... $903,096,132 71 Cost of $500,000,000 bonds at say sixty cents on the dollar......................... 300,000,000 00 Net profit in ten years, in gold...... $603,096,132 71 REFUNDING THE PUBLIC DEBT. The next move of the money power was to have the public debt refunded, in order to place its payment in coin beyond all question. Accordingly an act entitled "An act to authorize the refunding of the national debt," was passed and approved July 14, 1870. This act provided, "That the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue, in a stum or sums not exceeding in the axggregate $200,000,000, coupon or registered bonds of the United States, in such for]ms as he may prescribe, and of denominations of fifty dollars, orl some multiple of that sum, redeemable i, coiot of the present standard value, at the pleasure of the United Stat>c, after ten years from the date of their issue, and bearinginterest, payable semi-annually in such coin, at the rate of five per cent. per annum." $300,000,000 of like bonds, bearing four and a half per cent. interest, redeemable after fifteen years, and also a sum of bonds bearing four per cent. interest, redeemable after thirty years in all not to exceed $1,000,000,000, were also authorized. The Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to sell these bonds at par for coin, and with the proceeds to redeem any-of the bonds of the United States outstanding, known as five-twenty bonds, "or he may exchange the same for sucth five-twenty bonds, par for par." By the act of January 20, 1871, the act last recited was 230 TIlE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. amended so as to illcrease the amount of five pel- cent. gold bonds authorized to be issued to $500,000,000,:edi to make the interest on the bonds paya-ble, at the discretion of the Secretary, "gar ter yearly." TUnder these tw,o acts gold boll(ds to the amount of $465,558,450 were issued up to November, 1875; and a bill, of a like chllaracter, iintroduced by Sleirmani in the Senate, is now pending in Conigoiess, to colal)lete the job. When it shall have passed Coingress, tlhe entire public debt, contracted in lawful money at a time wliei it was greatly depreciated as compared withl gold, wvill 1b)e transforned into a debt payable, principal and interest, in gold. The following table exhibits the amount and character of thel public debt, beai-iiig interest, on the 30th day of November, 1875. It will be observed that the greater part of the debt of the United States, incurred during the war, is now represented by bonds issued since thle war: Loan of 1858, act of June 14, 1858, 5 per cent.,$260,000 Loan of February, 1861, (81's) act of Febru'y 8, 1861, 6 per cent...................... 18,415,000 Oregon War Debt, act of March 2,'61,6 per c. 945,000 Loan of July and August, 1861, (81's) act of July 17, and Aug. 5, 1861, 6 per cent...... 189,321,350 Loan of 1863, (81's), act of March 3,'63,6 p.c. 75,000,000 Ten-forties of 1864, act of March 3,'64,5 p.c. 194,566,300 Five-twenties of June, 1864, act of June 30, 1864, 6 per cent........................ 46,891,100 Five-twenties of 1865, act of March 3,'65, 6 p.c. 152,534,250 Consols of 1865, act of March 3, 1865, 6 p. c. 202,663,100 Consols of 1867, act of March 3, 1865, 6 p.c. 310,622,750 Consols of 1868, act of March 3, 1865, 6 p. c. 37,474,000 Fiunded Loan of 1881, acts of July 14, 1870, and January 20, 1871, 5 per cent.......... 465,558,450 Total........................ $1,694,251,300 231 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. SPECIE RESUMIPTION. It now only remains for the money power to bring about a resumption of specie payments and it will have accomplished all its ends; and the American people will once again be completely under its domination. From the day that the old State banks suspended specie payments until the present time, that object has never been lost sight of for a momlent. No system of money has ever been devised that confers such absolute control over the currency, and through it over the property and business affairs of a nation, upon the money power, as banks of issue; and hence the adoption of the National Banking scheme. But the greenback interferes very materially with the workings of the system, and it is important that it should be got out of the way. There is also another great incentive to cause the money power to seek a return to specie payments. By a single stroke the bondholdingi and creditor class will be enriched to the amount of hundreds of miillions of dollars. In January, 1875, the bullionists found themselves strong enough in Congress to pass a law decreeing specie resumption January 1, 1879. Thle composition of the IHouse of Representatives, at this time, is worthy of note, and should open the eyes of the people to the necessity of sendillng a different class of men to represent them in that body. The Hon. Moses Wy. Field, of Michigan, in a recent speech gives a detailed statement of the professions and callings of the members of the 43rd House, of which hlie was a member, as follows: "The forty-third Congress, to which I belonged, was composed of 379 members. In this number there were six lumbernien, thirteen manufacturers, seven doctors, fourteen merchants, thirteen farmers, three millers, one land surveyor, one priest, one professor of latin, one doctor of laws, one barber, on;e mechanic, ninety-nine lawyers, and one 232 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. hundred and eighty-ninme bankers, which includes stockholders ill NationIal Banks." Alhnost a clear majority of memnbers were either bankers or interested in National Banks. The specie riesumption act then passed rests like an incubus uponI the industrial interests of the country. Everything, however, is working to the satisfaction of the bullionists and the bondholders. As industry and production languish, property of all kinds depreciates in value, and when resumption takes place, the inoley power will be enabled to gather it in, to the timount of hundreds of millions imore, o(i its owli terms. It seenis hard indeed that the farmer, the mechanic, thle mannfactu-reir, and the producing classes generally, who bear almost the entire biuriden of taxati()i, should thus be oppressed by legslatio n, and millions of industrious people be deprived o)f the opportunity of even earning their bread, for no other purpose than to further enrich a single class, which contributes not one iota to the general wealth of the country. But the iiiasses, as long as they sink the duties iand privileges of freemen iin' blind i)artisanship,,and permnit themselves to be manipulated by demiagogues thlirough the instrumentality of party miachinery, can expect no better fate. The question of resumptioni is one of such vital importance that it is deserving of more than a passing notice. It will, therefore, receive nmore pairticular attention in a separate chapter, (Chaptei VIII.) A BLmIEF IETROSPECT. In 1861iSI, whenI the Federal Government, unable to borrow money at home or abroad, was obliged to appeal to the masses, who were botlh able and willing to respond, the great questionl was as to how the resources of the people were to be rendered available to the goverinmlent. Taxation was impracticable in the beginning, because the government did not possess the machinery for laying and collecting 233 TIEl:EC,.kL TEN,-DER'AC,CT. taxes, and, moreover, thlere was not a sufficienl't amnt of money in circulation at that time to enable the people to meet the extraordinary delands of the occasion. Products and labor the people possessed in abunldalnce, but they could be rendered available only through the instrumentality of.: medium of exclhangie. Besides it was necessaly to establish new forms of production, requiring capital to a large:lilloullt in the form of money. The first requisite, thereforc, was manifestly a medium of exchange. This could be Su1il)plie(i only by the Federal Government; for all l)ower over tlhe currency of the nation is vested in the Federal Goverunlent by the Constitution. The Federal Goverinment wanted gulls, ships, food, clothing, transportation, etc. The farneri could furnish food; the inallufacturer, guns, wagons, etc.; and the shliip builder, ships. Other classes did not possess such things as the governmient required, but they did possess propertyn of various kinds and labor, which were vwanted by the spl builder, the gun-iiiaker and the farmer. The people collectively desired the gun-maker, the ship builder anId tile falmer to furnish the Federal Government with such articles aSs it required and they were able to supply, and were willing in turn to supply the gun-i maker, the ship builder and the farmer with such property or labor as they might desire, to whatever amount they might be entitled. But how could this interchange be effected? In no better way than by a medium of exchange representing tile property of the nation. The people in their collective capacity, through the government, could issue public notes, representing the entire property of the nation, including gold, silver-everything in al word that could be reached by a tax warrant. The public note, of the value of say one dollar, if paid by the government to the gun-maker, would entitle him to receive one dollars ' 234 'TilE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. worth of property, neither imore nor less. But suppose that the people, after they had tmade this arrangemeilt with the gun-maker, thle farmier and thle ship buildelr, in their collective capacity, through thle agenicy of the goveniment, should refuse individually to receive this palpe (lollalr, iepresentilng the property of the nation oil which it is a lien, what thein?' This would clearly be acting ill bad faithl with thle gunmnaker, the farmer and the ship builder, and would be tantamrount to thle people repudiating iicindividually what they had done collectively. Hence it is nothing more than a matter of equity and fair dealing that the public note should be made a legal tenider; ill fact ill no other way could the farmer, the guii-maker and tlhe ship builder 1) be reimbursed fromn tlhe property of the rest of the people for the gunlls,, food, etc., furnished to the governimlent. As is generally understood by lawyers, if,iot by political ecoiioiuists, tihe legal tender money of a country is the basis of all money contracts amongi its people and the meiasiure of all values; and necessarily conforms to the unit of value fixed in thl(e minds of the people by usage a'd education. By miakiing the public note a legal tender, it is clothed with all the functions of mioney. It possesses value (the value of the propeity which it riepresents), and by virtue of its legal tender quality the power to measure and exchange value. A public note, based onil sound principles, it will be observed, therefore, is capable of performing a two-fold service. In the first place it enables the governmnent which issues it. to draw upon the resources of the people in advance of taxatioln. Thle government pays it out for property or services, and receives it again for taxes. In the second place, whlilst in circulation, it performs all the functions of' money, and in the end furnishes the means for the tax payer to meet his obligations to the government. The amnount of -285 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. greenbacks now in circulation is over $360,000,000. The annual revenues of the government amount to about $300,000,000. It is apparent, therefore, that the greenback circulation could all be redeemed in the revenues of the government in a little over a year. From this it is evident that the clamor of the bullionists for the redemption of greenbacks in gold, or the fundiing of thelm in bonds payable in gold, is only for the purpose of enablingi them to swindle the government and people to the extent of thie premium which the government would be obliged to pay to obtain gold for that purpose. It is clear, then, that the first step for the governlmenlt to take at the breaking out of the rebellion, to enable it to draw upon the resources of the people, was to issue a legal tender public, or Treasury note. But no more nmoney can be used by a people than is required by the legitimate operations of trade. Professor Bonamy Price, whom we are glad to find right occasionally, illustrates the point in this way: "Carts and imoney are both tools-instruments of conveyance, endowed with the same nature and subject to the same general laws. The question for each is the same-how many are wanted for the work which they were invented to do. In the case of money, how much gold (or legal tender paper money) can a nation use? How much can it find employment for? The answer, as with carts, must be sought from the special work mloney has to perform-that is, from the amount of exchanging which calls for the agencey of this tool, the quantity of property of which the ownership has to be transferred by this instrument. A cart transfers weight; money, ownership; and all the world knows that the carta(re to be done determines the number of carts. In the same way, the ownership of property which requires to be transferred by the actual employment of money itself, determines 236 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. how much money there oulght to be in a nation. No other answer is possible, unless it is denied that money is only a tool; if so, another explanation of the nature of money must be produced." For the government to issue legal tender notes in return for property to an indefinite amount after the channels of circulation had been supplied, would be contrary to all sound principles of finance, as well as political economy. The next step for the government to have pursued was to draw upon the resources of the people by taxation. But as it was manifest at the time that the extraordinary expenses of the war could not be wholly defrayed by taxation-iin other words, that the government could not, under the circumstances, act upon the principle-"pay as you go "-without causing oppression and interfering materially with the producing ability of the nation, the third and last step was to issue a bond bearing interest, in order that the governmernt might avail itself of the surplus capital of individuals. No more perfect system of money or finance than this has ever been devised. It is, moreover, simple and easily understood by the people. This system was embodied in the original legal tender act, as framned by the Iton. E.G. Spaulding, an able financier and statesman. It was ardently supported by the Hion. Thaddeus Stevens, who had thoroughly acquainted himself with all the systems of money and finance of ancient and modern times, with all his powerful ability. It met with the hearty endorsement of the Boards of Trade and Chambers of Commerce of all the principal cities of the North and West. Its adoption by the House of Representatives was hailed with marks of approbation and satisfaction bythe intelligent classes everywhere throughout the country. That it would have worked admirably in practice is abundantly demonstrated by the performances of the greenback in the most trying period of the nation's his 237 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. tory, and by the manner in which the people took the loai of $500,000,000 of five-twenty bonds. But through the machinations of the money power, and the weakness and venality of the United States Senate, a full legal tender money system was rejected, and in its stead was adopted a policy, which would have bankrupted, in a short time, any nation not possessing the boundless resources of the United States. During the war every act and measure relating to finances was calculated to depreciate the public credit; but as sooni as the war was over an entire change of policy ensued, calculated tol render the burdens of the people doubly oppressive. 'That this may be seen at a glance, we give below a recapitulation of the leading incidents and mneasures.which marked the two periods-during and after the war, as follows: FIRST PERIOD-DURING( THE WAIR. 1. The banks of New York, Boston and Philadelphia pro cured the suspension of the Sub-Treasury act, Aug. 5, 1861. 2. The banks of New York, Boston and Philadelphia coin bined to prevent the passage of the legal tender act, and sent delegates to Washington City for that purpose, Jan uary, 1862. 3. The representatives of the banks of New York, Boston and Philadelphia effected an arrangement with the Secre tary of the Treasury and leading members of the Senate to oppose a full legal tender bill, and to urge the passage of a National Banking law. 4. The legal tender act passed in a, mutilated form-interest on bonds and duties on imports made payable in gold, February 25, 1862. 5. Paper emissions authorized by Congress and issued by the Secretary of the Treasury, to an enormous amounlt, in fifteen different forms. 238 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. 6. The $500,000,000 of 5-20 six per cent. bonds held by the Secretary of the Treasury for over a year, until the country was flooded with paper emissions of all kinds, and then put out as a popular loan at par amongst the people, to be bought in by the bullionists at fifty cents or less on the dollar. 7. Legal tender Treasury nlotes (greenbacks) further mutila ted (March 3, 1863) by repealing thle clause in the original act which made them interchangeable with 5-20 bonds. 8. Immense sums of Treasury notes, bearing interest, paya ble in one, two and three years, issued, when it was well known that the Treasury Department was unable to make any provision for their payment at maturity. 9. A bill passed (Feb'ry 25, 1863,) authorizing the establish ment of National Banks, which could render no aid to the government, and whose currency tended to swell the volume of paper in circulation. 10. The $500,000,000 loan of six per cent. bonds no sooner taken than the Secretary attempted to put out a new loan bearing only five per cent. interest. 11. The failure to float tile five per cent. bonds made an excuse for emitting additional sums of Treasury notes, bearing interest, and other forms of paper suitable for a. circulating medium. 12. The emission at the close of the war of immense sums of 7-30 Treasury notes, payable in three years, and con vertible at the option of the holder into long bonds bear ing gold interest. SECOND PERIOD-AFTER THE WAR. 1. "All bonds, Treasury notes and other obligations of the government shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal authority." (Act of June 80, 1864. 239 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. Although passed before the tel'rination of the war, this act belongs to this period. Like the National Banking law, it simply anticipated events.) 2. MIcCulloch issued his Fort Wayne decree, announcing his determination to contract the currency. 3. IcCulloch submitted his annual report, December, 1865, in which he recommended contraction. 4. Congress passed a resolution, December 18, 1865, con curring in the views of the Secretary of the Treasury in relation to the niecessity of contracting the currency. 5. Congress passed an act, April 12, 1866, authorizilng a contraction of the currency. 6. MIcCulloch beganl to pay off the 5-20 bonds ill gold or its equivalent. 7. MIcCullochl substituted( long bo(nds bearing gold interest for Treasury notes, etc., to the amount of about $1,200,000,000, which operated as a contraction of the medium of exchange of the country to that amount, occasiolning, great financial derangement. Also retired over $70,000,000 of greenbacks between August, 1865, and July, 1868. 8. Congress, conmpelled by public sentiment, repealed (Jan uary, 1868) so much of tile act of April 12, 1866, as provided for the retirement of greenbacks, but took no note of the contraction in other forms of the currency. 9. The people of both political parties began to protest against the payment of the 5-20 bonds in gold, as a viola tion of the spirit and letter of the act under which they were issued. 10. The money power selected a President of the United States (1868.) 11. The President of the United States, in his inaugural message, March 4, 1869, notified the public that he would regard all who did not favor the payment of 5-20 bonds 240 THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. in gold as repudiators, who need expect no favors from his administration. 12. Coingress passed a credit strengthening, act, Mfarqh 18, 1869, the first act which received President Grant's official sanction. 13. Thle original loan of 5-20 bonds paid off in full ill gold or its equivalent. 14. Congr,ess passed a law, July 14, 1870, authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to refund $500,000,000 of the public debt in bonds payable, prilncipal and interest, in gold. 15. MIeCulloch's contraction policy bore its legitimate fruits, and thle country was 5 visited by an old fashioned commier cial crash and inoilcy t)lpanic, September, 1873. 16. The people demlanded relief, and Congress, at its next session, passed a bill a ulthoiizing the reissue of the green backs which lhad i)eeni retired (44,000,000), and fixing the amount of the greenl)back circulation at $400,000,000. This bill was denounced by the money power as an "inflation" measure, and accordingly was vetoed by Pres ident Gra,it, April 22, 1874. 17. The people rebauked tlhe action of the President by electing, at the next gene(ral election, ill the fall of 1874,, a Democratic Itouse of Representatives. 18. At its next session, Congress (the old Congress), under the pretense of affording relief to the oppressed industries of t-e country, made National Bankini, free to bond holders, by act of January 14, 1875. 19. And at the sa.me time decreed specie resumption, to take place Jaii.a ry 1, 1879. 20. An act to complete tlhe ]refundilng of the public (lebt in gold boads is lnow pending, before Congress. 21. Bonds of the United States, which during tlhe war were botughlt and s,old at as lowv as thirty-five cents on the dollar' 1 ~; e *I 241 -THE LEGAL TENDER ACTS. in gold, now sell for over $1.18, or at a premium of over five per cent. in gold. In 1865, when the Rebellion terminated, the producing forces of the Northern and Western States, the workingmen, the land, the machinery, the mines, the water power, etc., were developing wealth in every possible direction, and the people, individually free from debt, were in the enjoyment of unparalleled prosperity. The wealth of the nation, in spite of the ravages of war, had increased as it had never done before. The assessed valuation of the property of the nation in 1870, notwithstanding the ruined condition of the South, was over $30,000,000,000, as against $16,000,000,000 in 1860. Out of the abundance of their productions the people were enabled to meet all the demands of the government with ease. The Federal Government, indeed, began to pay off the public debt rapidly. But in carrying out the policy of the money power, it first paid off, by substituting bonds, all those forms of indebtedness of the government which served the purposes of money, thus depriving the producing forces of the nation of their most important tool. At this time the South, with all her magnificent resources, had been restored to the Union. Money was necessary to set the producing forces of that section at work. Instead of wisely taking this fact into consideration, and making some provision that would enable the people of that section to recover from the disasters of the war, and contribute their share towards bearing the burdens of government, an entirely opposite policy was pursued. The production of cotton, the chief staple of the South, in 1870 amounted to only 3,011,996 bales, or a little over 50 per cent. of the amount raised in 1860. Now the American people are poor and in debt. Nearly all forms of productive industry are paralyzed, and the ?- *..e ~. '242 THE LEGAL TEND)ER ACTS. channels of trade are stagnant or sluggish. Real estate is rapidly depreciating in value, which will inevitably result in a general foreclosure of mortgages and transfer of property from the debtor to the creditor class throughout the country. Instead of a million of nonl-producers carrying muskets, as was the case during the war, there are now several millions of people, who would gladly work for a mere sublsistence, in a state of enforced idleness, living on the bitter bread of public or private charity. In a country possessing boundless natural wealth, tramps and paupers have become common. The nation is scarcely producing more now than the necessities of life. And yet the people are told that the present condition of affairs is due to over production and like causes. The only over production troubling the nation just now is an over production of fools and rascals-rascals who teach such nonsense, to divert the public mind from the true source of the trouble, and fools who believe it. Since the attempt to re-establish a false monetary system by means of contraction has worked such wide spread ruin, it would seem to be but the part of common wisdom, on the part of the people, to demand a different policy, if not from conviction, at least as an experiment. It certainly could not make matters worse. 243 CIIAPTE VII. TIlE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM, SECRETARY CHASE, soon after hlie entered upon the dis charge of the duties of Secretary of the Treasury, became enlisted in a scheme to destroy the old State banlks and erect in their stead a system of Natioaal Banks whose circulation would be uniform throughout the country. In his first rel)port to Congress, in December, 1861, le recommendled the p)assag,e of a law to accomplish this end. Ai bill was itiiimediately prepared by the lion. E.G. Spaulding, clhairman of the Sub-Comnmittee of VWays antd Mleans, but it became manifest that tlhe machinery of such a systeim coutld n-ot be put into operation in time to meet the deltand(s unpon th( government, and Congiress was obliged to pass a,t. law auitholizing the Secretary of the Treasurvy to isslue rtresslt y no)tes (greenbacks.) The admirable mananer i;n wlichi thie greeill)ack performed tlhe uses of a medium of exchainge au(d its great popularity rendered it tolera)ly ceirttin that th]e people would never willingly ab:lldlon it to retulli to the use of State bank currency. The moneoiy power was quick to p-erceive this, and also tliat in ino otlih(r wlay than thlrough the instrumentality of si:tcl a schnc s tlthat proposed byi Secretary Chlase and his advisers could it hope to again obtain its formner control ovel the curreicy of thle country. The National Banking slcheme, therefore, which at first excited some opposition on the part of th-e old State banks, soon came to be regarded by thle majoiity of theme as of the I 'TIHE NATIO.AL B1A.NKIN(- S'YSTEM. highest importance. In December, 1862, Secretary Chase, in his second annual report, again urged the passage of a National Banking law, for the purpose of establishing "one sound, uniform circulation of equal value throughout the country, upon the foundation of national credit, combined with private capital." There was no expectation or even pretense that the system could aid the government in any way in the wvar then pending. On the 2d of February, 1863, Senator Sherman reported -a National Currency Bank bill from the Finance Committee to the Senate. It was taken up in the Senate on the 9th, and passed on the 12th by a vote of 22 to 21. On the 13th it was sent to the House, but was not referred to the Committee on Ways and Means. On the 19th it was taken up for consideration in the Hlouse, and was passed on the 20th by a vote of 78 to 64. It was approved by the President and became al law Febnruary 25, 1863. The brief time giveni to the consideration of this important act, establishing. consolidation in the interest of the money power, compared with which the monster that Jackson slew i(the United States B'ank) was a mAere pigmy, cannot escape notice. The people weret atbsorbed in the war, and the money power had full sway in Congress. The Hon. W. P. Noble, one of the few members who protested against the passage of the act, alluded to this fact in the opening of his speech against the bill in these terms: "Mr. Speaker, it is not because I expect, by anything I can say, to change a single vote upon this bill, that I now claim the attention of the House. On the contrary I am satisfied, from the great and untiring efforts that are being made by the Secretary of the Treasury in its favor, that the passage of this bill is a -foregone conclusion; not because it, or anything like it, is 245 THIE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. demanded by the people, but simply because it is a pet measure of the present head of that department." THE NATIONAL BANKING LAW. The National Banking law provides: First: That any number of persons not less than five may form an association for carrying on the business of banking. Second: That any such association shall have corporate power, to have succession for the period of twenty years, to make contracts, to sue and be sued, etc. Third: The capital of such associations shall be not less than $50,000 in places whose population does not exceed six thousand; not less than $100,000 in places whose population exceeds six thousand; and not less than $200,000 in places whose population exceeds fifty thousand. Fourth:* The aggregate amount of circulation is fixed at $354,000,000, to be apportioned as follows: $150,000,000 among the several States and territories according to replresentative population; $150,000,000 to be distributed by the Secretary of the Treasury according to his discretion; arid the remaining $54,000,000t to such States and territories, having less than their share, as may make application prior to July 12, 1871. Fifth: No association is authorized to commeclee business until it shall have deposited United States bonds to the amount of $30,000 with the Treasurer of the United States Sixth: Every such association is entitled to receive from the Comptroller of the Currency circulating notes to the amount of ninety per cent. of the capital stock, if it does not exceed $500,000; eighty per cent. if it exceeds $500,000, but does not exceed $1,000,000; seventy-five per cent. if it exceeds $1,000,000, but does not exceed $3,000,000; and sixty per cent. if it exceeds $3,000,000. By the act of January 14,1875, this section was repealed. t$54,000.00(O additional bank notes were authorized by the act of July, 1870. 246 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTE3If. No National 13Bak currency was issued until about the beginning of 1864. It will be remembered that the $500,000,000 of 5-20 bonds were not sold until the latter part of' 1863; conisequently matters were not yet ripe for the bullionists and bankers. Ini 1864, however, their plans were sufficiently maitured to enable them to run gold up to aii enormous premium, ill what Mr. Fessenden, who was then. Secretary of tihe Treasury, considered a very "unpatriotic" manner. For more than a year gold fluctuated betweens about 1.50 and 2.50, according to the success which attended the efforts of the gold operators in controlling the market.. Bonds of the government were bought during this period at as low a price as thirty-five cents on the dollar in gold.. This gave the bullionists and bankers anI excellent opportunity to lay in, at low figures, all the bonds that were needed to establish National Banks. The amount of National Banlk notes in circulation on, January 1, 1864, was 8280,000; on July 1, 1864, it was $31,234,420; and on July 1, 1865, it was $146,336,030. Shortly after this the whole amount authorized by law was taken, and National Bank stock began to command a premium. Thus was the National Banking system foisted upon the country at a time when it was neither needed nor desired, solely for the purpose of enabling the money power to again usurp the right of supplying the nation with a medium of exclhange. It only remains now to retire the; greenback and resunLie specie payments, and the money power of the United States will be clothed with a more. absolute control over the monetary affairs of the country than it ever had before. OF THE OR(-ANIZATION OF NATIONAL BANKS. National Banks are established on the theory of combining private capital with public credit. It will be found on 247 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. examination, however, that this is purely a delusion. Private capital is not an essential element in the establishment of a National Bank; private credit will do as well. This may be illustrated in various ways. Suppose A. owns $100,000 in 6 per cent. United States bonds. B., C., D1)., E. and F., five persons, jointly borrow these bonds from A., agreeing to pay him the interest regularly as it matures, and return the same or like bonds at some specified time, say in five or ten years. B., C., D., E. and F. orgaInize:t National Bank, deposit the bonds with the Treasurer of the United States, and obtain $90,000 of National Bank currency from the Comptroller. So far as the bank or its currency is concerned, there is no element of private capital involved in the matter. Its corporators or stockholders have not paid hi a dollar for the capital stock of the concern. A.'s bonds are not capital, because the people have already borrowed A.'s capital and are paying him six per cent. interest in gold for it. Upon what capital then is the bank established? Upon no other capital clearly than the public credit represented by the $90,000 of bank currency lent to B., C., I)., E. ftnd F., without interest, on the stengllth of what the government owes A. There are of course innumerable ways in which individuals can utilize their capital or credit in the establishment of National Banks. The Hon. S.S. Marshall, of Illinois, in a speech on the floor of Congress, July 21, 1868, mentioned the following instance: "An association of gentlemen (in an Eastern State) raised $300,000 in currency. They went to the office of the Register of the Treasury and exchanged their currency for $300,000 in six per cent. gold bearing bonds. They then went to the office of the Comptroller of the Currency, in the same building, organized a National 248 THE NATION'AL BAN'KIN(;'SYSTEM. .Bank, deposited their $300,000 in bonds and received for their bank 8270,000 in national currency. They had let the government have $30,000 in currency more than they received for bankinlg purposes, and l}ad o1) dcel)osit $300,000, )11 which they receive(l as iliterest from the government 4;18,000 a year in gold(i (and exemipt fromn t..txation.) This -was pretty good inaziiiieri~i, for tlhese bankers to receive $18,000 a year iil gol(l oi tlhe $30,000 ii 1urre11(ny which they had thus loaiied to tile g(overn)iiernt. lBut this is inot thle whole story. TlleT y had tlie(ir balk ima.l(le a.- ptibli( depository. 'They soonl discoveredi(( that tlle(e was scaIceely ever less thait $1,00%0,000 of (roverlinelnt (lle y l(e)osite( wit hin their vaults. The) did nlOt like to see tllis vstlt sum- lie idle. *l~hey, therefoire, took $1,000,0()00 of tiis i er)lleIlt l1noiey and(l boui(hit $1,00,000 of 0 i0e-twe0it ods witi i t. In otlier words they loai)e(d 81,000,000 of tie( goverlniiienit's owI) money to the governiiel-it, and deposited the bonds received in the vaults of their banuk, on wh1ich thev received from the ;same ovenrllllelt $00,000:t year in gold a.s interest. Thuis for the $ 30,000 in culrireneny, whiich they originally loianed the goverInml-ent, they received annually in all $78,000 in gold." 13ut this was by 1no ieas tle limit to tlhe legalizedt robbery which these,gentleineni were c'pable of p)erpetrating under the Nattional B3aiiking law. Since thley had no scruples about investing b the rgovernlilellt deposit of $1,000,000 in 5-20 bonds and appropriatingr the inlterest to their own use, it is not at all likely that they would stop there, when, by simply depositilig the $1,000,000 in 5-20 bonds with the Comptroller of the Currency, instead of ill their bank vaults, they could draw eighty per cent. more currency, or by starting two new banks of $500,000 each, thley could draw ninety per cent. more currency, to substitute for that amount of the ori,inal deposit of the goveriment used by them. 249 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. The following table exhibits the number, nominal capital, etc., of the National Banks in existence September 1, 1873, together with the amount of their earnings, from Mlar(hi,. 18 7 3, to September, 18 7 3: Io. Banks. Capital. 3Surplus. Tet Earnings. New England States, 496 - $157,014,832 $38,303,887 $10,103,73C~ Middle States, 591 192,234,009 53,431,089 12,565,331 Southern States, 161 33,259,530 3,600,607 2,246,024Western States, 707 105,592,580 22,778,265 8,206,909! Totals, 1955 $488,100,951 $118,113,848 $33,122,000 At this time, September, 1873, the National Bank circulation was as follows: Amouiit of Circilatioti Circulatioii. )er Cal)ita. New Englandl States.............. $110,489,996 831.68 Middle States................... 124,608,139 12.82; Southern States................. 38,160,308 2.91 Western States.................. 78,785,148 7.09 Pacific States and Teritories..... 1,924,688 1.82 Total for States and Territories...$353,968,279 $9.18 The profits of tlhe National Banks, according to their owni reports, as set forth in the foregoing tables, are enormous. This will appear fronm the following: Nominal capital of National Banks in 1873...-$488,,100,951 Bank note circulation furnished by the goverli ment, witlhout interest.................. 35 3,968,279, Real capital........................ $134,132,67 2 Surplus earnings.................... i 18,11]3,848 Total real capital and surplus earnings........ $252,246,52 Net earnings from March to September, 1873, (six months) $33,122,000. The net earnings consequently amounted to 251 per cent., or 51 per cent. a year onl the real capital ($134,132,672); or 13 per cent., or 26 per cenlt. a year on the real capital and surplus earnings added tog,ether ($252,246,520.) These enormous profits operate as a tax on the medium 250 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. of exchange of the nation, and enter into the price of all commodities. They also enable the banks to control the circulating medium of the country, and explain why it is that periodically money leaves the channels of trade and becomes concentrated in the vaults of the banks. THE PANIC OF 1873. The enormous contraction of the circulating medium of exchange and evidences of indebtedness of the government, which were used as such, inaugurated and carried on by MIcCulloch, together with the operations of the National Banking system, began to affect the industries of the country injuriously as early as 1867. M[r. Spaulcling estimated the amount of paper issues which served the purposes of currency, oil the 30th of January, 1864, at $1,125,877,034, and to this amount is to be added several hundred millions of 7-30 Treasury notes issued in 1864 and 1865. The greater part of this vast sum was called in by the government prior to 1868, and its place supplied in part by bank note currency and bank credit. Business could no longer be done for cash, as was the case when the channels of trade were fully supplied with a medium of exchange, and business men were compelled, by reason of the growing scarcity of money, to resort, as in days before the war, to the banks and borrow bank credit. During the year 1866 the banks increased their loans (inflated their credit) $107,600,000. As contractionI went on, bank loans increased, and it was only a question of time,is to when the bubble of inflated bank credit would burst.* That McCulloch and the bankers generally anticipated financial distress amongst the people, and probably a commercial crash and money panic, is clear from the correspondence between LIr. Spaulding and Secretary McCulloch, *See page 20. 251 THE NATIONAL B*ANKING SYSTEM. in December,.1866, from which we take the following extracts: Mr. Spaulding, in a letter dated at his banking hlouse in Buffalo, December 4, 1866, to McCulloch, says: 'You have no doubt now, to a large extent, control of the finances of the country (by virtue of the contraction act of April 12, 1866), and I think that you will, of necessity, contract moderately, so as to preserve a tolerably easy money market, in order to be able to fund the compound( 6's and 7-30's into long gold bearing bonds between this and the 15th of July, 1868. There may be occasional spasms and tightness for money with the speculators, but generally I shall look for plenty of money for legitimate business for at least a yuea to come." To this McCulloch replied, December 7, 1866: "What we need is an increase of labor. If we could have the productive industry of the country in full exercise, we could return to specie payments without any very large curtailment of United States notes. My object has been to keep the market steady, and to work back to specie payments'tithotet Ca ffiaicial collapse." Whilst thus prating about "having the productive industry of the country in full exercise," McICulloch was straining his authority as Secretary of the Treasury to deprive the productive industry of the country of its most essential tool, a medium of exchange, and give to the banks the entire control of its monetary affairs. That a financial collapse or commercial crash did not immediately follow the sudden and complete retirement of the various forms of indebtedness of the government used as a currency, was due, first, to the productive strength of the country which had been enormously developed during and after the war, by reason of the abundance of money in circulation; second, to the large increase of bank note circulation, and the great inflation of bank credit which followed; and, third, to the large volume of 252 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. greenback nioniey in the hands of the people, which, not being burdened with interest, was as yet beyond the control of the banks. In 1866 the best 60 day paper ruled ill New York City at 5 to 7 per cent. In January, 1867, the same paper rated at 8 to 10 per cent., and during the following summer a great many failures occurred. The effects of -iicCulloch's policy of contraction began to be seriously felt throughout the country. In obedience to public sentiment, Congress was compelled, in January, 1868, to suspend the law authorizing the retirement of the legal tender notes (greenbacks.) The amount of greenbacks outstanding at this time was $356,000,000. Congress, howeveir took nio action in reference to the enormous contraction of paper emissions in other forms. The amount of paper emissions of the government which were actively employed as a tool of industry in the production and distribution of wealth in 1865 and 1866 was about $1,800,000,000.;hlen McICulloch, tuder tlhe flimsy pretense of bringing the country back to "honest muonley," set out to retire this vast voluIme( of currency, iwhat provisionz had bee, miade by the goveri,meyt to supplyl its place?. Xoge wanatever, except the establishme,t of Xational lBaiks, authorized to issue bank currency to the amount of $300,000,000. The practical effect of MIeCullochi's policy, therefore, was simiply tO deprive the nation of any other circulating riediui)i than bank currency. In view of these cir(cunistaiees it is iimpossible to arrive at any other conclusionI tlha that MIcCulloch had deliberately conspired with the money power to enrich the bondholders and to give the National B-anks control of the monetary affairs of the nation. The history of the world furnishes no parallel to this gigantic scheme, having for its object the robbery of a nation under cover of law, so stuceessfully carried out by McCulloeh and his associates. 253 THE NATIOXAL B3ANKING SYSTEM. The policy of contraction and the National Banking system together soon wrought a complete revolution in the business affairs of the country. In 1865-66 the producing forces of the nation were in active operation, producing wealth as it had never been produced before. "The Amelncan people waked up each new morning to feel that there were great duties before them." Labor was fully employed at the very time that McCulloch was hypocritically prating about "the need of an increase of labor" and the necessity of having "the productive industry of the country in full exercise." Business was everywhere done cheaply, because it was done for cash, and, as McCulloch himself has since admitted, the people, "individually, were free from debt."' The enormous productive strength of tile country was in full exercise, and the immense burden of taxation imposed by the war was scarcely felt. Indeed, the revenues of the government were so large during this period that the public debt was extinguished to the amount of about $500,000,000. We now turn to what followed. All evidences of indebtedness of the government used as a currency, except the greenback, had been retired-paid off or converted into long bonds bearing gold interest. The National Banking system was in the full tide of successful operation. By the act of July, 1870, an additional issue of bank notes, to the amount of $54,000,000, was authorized, making in all $354,000,000. The entire issue authorized by law was in active employment, and bank stock commanded a high premium. The circulating medium of the country in 1869 consisted of lawful money and bank currency as follows: Legal tender notes........................ $356,000,000 National Bank Currency................... 300,000,000 Fractional Currency about................ 37,000,000 $693,000,000 To this add amount of National Bank currency authorized by act of July, 1870........ 54,000,000 $747,000,000 254 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. The National Banks of the principal cities were required by law to keep on hand ill lawful money of the United States an amount equal to at least twenty-five per cent. .of the aggregate amount of their notes in circulation and their deposits; and other associations fifteen per cent. As .bank deposits and loans increased, requiring a proportionate increase of the reserve of lawful money, it is manifest that a further contraction of the circulating medium followed. "The following table exhibits the inflation of bank credit that took place from 1866 to 1873: DATE. CIRCULATION. Jan. 1, 1866................. $213, 00,000 1867................. 291,000,000 " 1868................. 294,300,000 July 1, 1868................. 294,900,000 Jan. 1, 1869.................. 294,400,000 July 1, 1869................. 292,700,000 Jan. 1, 1870................. 292,800,000 July 1, 1870................. 291,100,000 Jan. 1, 1871................. 302,200,000 July 1, 1871................. 307,700,000 Oct. 1, 1872................ 333,400,000 Sep. 12, 1873................. 339,000,000 Instead of $1,800,000,000 of paper currency, a large portion of which bore interest in the hands of the holders, filling the channels of trade, the business of the country was now carried on with bank currency and bank credit (about $1,000,000,000), involving the payment of an enormous tribute to the National Banks for its use. The business of the country was no longer done for cash. Money became scarce and commanded a high price, and the price of property fell in a corresponding ratio. New business enterprises were no longer thought of. Those already established, yielding small profits and requiring ready money for their successful operation, were obliged to succumb. The ability of the nation to produce wealth was enormously diminished. Taxes, which before were scarcely felt, now became a great 255 LOANS. '$498,800,000 608,400,000 616,600,000 655,700,000 644,900,000 686,300,000 688,800,000 719,300,000 768,300,000 789,400,000 872,500,000 940,200,000 DEPOSITS. $513,600,000 555,100,000 531,800,000 575,800,000 568,500,000 574,300,000 546,200,000 542,100,000 561,900,000 602,100,000 625,700,000 622,600,000 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEMS. burden. MierchanIts and manufacturers who were obliged to pay interest for money and bank credit added the amount to the cost of their goods. The retail dealer was obliged to do the same, and the cost of bank (currency acnd bank credit, several timies miultipllied, had to be paid in the end by the consumier, whose ahiliity to pay had, for tlhe samie reasons, been greatly diminished. Suc h is the natural course of' affairs under a sstem of currency furnished and controlled by banks of issue. The same system had been tried for over sixty years prior to the witr and had proved utterly unsound. It had inrflicted ulpon the couiitiy:t colImlercial crash onl an average every six years. And the manrvelous thing is, that l(twitstanding all tlleir bitter experience, the people of tlhe United States sliould suffer such a, system to be re-esttl)lislied itn a niore p' owerful and dangerous form than ever. Duri-g, thlis l)eriodI the industries of the country were sustained and buoyed up ini a iiianner that is worthy of special iiierntioni. Coiiiress lhad girauted. a larg(e number of subsidies in the shap)e of lantds to aid in the con.structionI of railroads. l)otids secured l-)y mortgages on the lands granted by Conre,t-ss had been negotiated, miostly abroad, to the anmouiit of mallny hundreds of millions of dollars. The funds tltus acquired contributed largely to the support of mlinty ilidutstrics, wlhichl- otherwise wvould( have beein obliged to s(uccunill) to M(CU, Cllo(h's policy. Among other corporations tlhus siil)sidized was the Northern Pacific Railroad Compi)any, ) iiwed ld contr olle(d by the l)anking Ihouse of Jay Cooke l(T Ciomlpainy. It wa:s confidently expected, by Jay Cooke an(l Comipainy that tlie bonds of the Northerni Pacific Railroad Comipany could b)e negotiated abroad. The Austrian and Germani bankers, to whomn they were offered, however, sent over two experts to' examinie the road and the country through which it extended, They replorted adversely 256 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. to taking the bonds. Jay Cooke and Company then attempted to dispose of their bonds to the American public, through the aid of the religious press and the clergy of the country. Their plan was only partially successful. The times had become too stringent, and on the 18tlh of September, 1873, the banking house of Jay Cooke and Company failed. The country had been ripe for a commercial crash for some time, and this brought matters to a crisis. The failure of Jay Cooke and Company was immediately followed by the failure of a number of leading banks in New York City. The Stock Exchange of that city also closed its doors for a period of ten days. The premiinm on gold began to decline, and fell during the month to 7;L per cent. Greenbacks commanded a premium over certified checks of from i to 3 per cent. The suspension of payments by the banks of New York soon extended to all the principal cities and towns throughout the country. Exchange on New York, which usually commanded a premium, was at a discount, if not entirely unavailable. The suspensioln lasted about forty days, and the industrial interests of the country received a shock from which they have not yet recovered. To the great mass of the people, who judge of the prosperity of the country by the activity observable in its business affairs, the panic of 1873 was wholly unexpected and came like a clap of thunder from a cloudless sky. The harvest of the year was about over, and the crops were good. The mining and manufacturing interests seemed to be flourishing, and to all external appearances there was abundant evidence of general prosperity. But, beneath the surface, matters presented a very different appearance. The industries of the country had been laboring from year to year since 1866 under an increasing burden imposed by the banks. Business had ceased to be done for cash, and business men 17 257 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. everywhere were carrying a load, more or less, of creditstruggling oni from year to year in the hope that the coming spring or the coming fall would in some way bring a chancrge that would afford relief. A temporary spurt in business might relieve an individual here and there; but under such a system of money there could be no general relief. A commercial crash was inevitable. The reasoll of this is easily explained. The average growthl of national wealth is about three and one-half per cent. per annum. Individual wealth cannot increase more rapidly than that. The higher gains of some are counterbalanced by the lower gains or absolute losses of others. As money is an essential tool in the production and distribution of wealth, it is important that it should be abundant and rule at low l'ates of interest. But under a system of banks of issue money scarcely circulates at all. It is locked up in bank vaults, and ill its stead the public is obliged to use bank currency. Bank currency can only be obtained by the payment of a high rate of interest. It is, therefore, far more expensive thani even gold and silver. These metals simply cost their equivalent in labor or products. When once obtained they will circulate in the channels of trade, whilst they remain in the country, unburdened with interest. Individuals may acquire a surplus and lend it to others, but this is an individual transaction., The gold or silver thus lent is put to use by the borrowers and passes into the channels of circulation free of interest. The same is true of legal tender paper money issued by the government. It costs its face value in labor or products to obtain it from the government. It enters into circulation unencumbered by interest. Individuals may acquire a surplus of legal tender paper money and lend it to others. As in the case of gold or silver, this is purely an individual transaction. Neither gold nor legal tender paper 258 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. money can accumulate value except when employed. But bank currency constitutes a peculiar medium of exchange very different in its nature from gold money or legal tender paper money. Bank currency is not monoey. Banilk notesare simply evidences of indebtedness of the banks which issue them-promises to pay money. They enter into'irculation encumbered with interest, and continue to accumulate value for the bank which issues them, whether they are perfolrmning the uses of money or not. For the sake of illustration, say that A., a manufacturer, borrows a $100 bank note from a National Bank for sixty days at six per cent. interest. He uses this note in the prosecution of his business, and adds the interest which he is obliged to pay to the bank to the cost of the article manufactured by him. At the expiration of sixty days, A., unable to return the identical note borrowed by him, pays the bank with a $100 greenback. This in turn is lent by the bank to B., and so on indefinitely. The bank is thus enabled to realize compound interest indefinitely on the original note lent to A., which was not money but simply credit no matter what becomes of it; whether it is occupying the channels of circulation or rottilng at the bottom of the ocean. It is apparent, therefore, that when the nation uses a medium of exchange consisting of bank currency it is obliged to pay compound interest for its use. As must be manifest this is a great burden upon the industries of the nation. The more this kind of currency is inflated the heavier will be the burden imposed upon the industries of the country. A great deal is said by the money power and their organs in regard to the evils of inflation, whenever it is proposed to increase the issue of legal tender paper money, but nothing is ever said about the real danger, which invariably attends the inflation of bank currency and bank credit. By reference to the table given on page 255; 59 TlHE NATIONAL BAN'KING SYSTEM. showing thie deposits and loanis of the b 187 3, it will be seen that the banks inflatd $498,800,000 in 1866 to $940,200,000 in 1 T sum of inflated credit, beariing comrpoun into and ranified all the industries of added immensely to the cost of )producti The following table exhibits the discol notes for a termn of sixty years. We copy following explanatory renmarks, front Kel] dollars in money are taklen, and with this at six months is discounte(d. When the second note having six months to run is proceeds, and a third note with the proce This calculation is continued on six mont years. The table shows the accumulat sixty years, at the various rates of 1, 2, 3, 24 and 30 per cent. per annumn, taking of always done by banks and brokers. 5 PER. CENT. 10years...... $1,659 24 20 "..... 2,753 06 30 "...... 4,567 97 40 7".. 7,579 33 50 ~'......t 12,575 87 60'...... 20,866 35 6 PER CENT. 10 years...... $1,838 93 20 "...... 3,381 66 30 "........ 6,218 65 40 ".......11,435 67 50 "..... 21,029 39 60..... 38,671 58 1 PER C 35T. I0 years...... $1,105 45 20 ".... 1,'222 02 30 ".... 1,350 87 40 ".... ],493 L3 ,50 ".... 1,650 78 60 ".... 1,824 87 2 PBR CI.NT. 10 years...... $1,222 64 20 "...... 1,494 83 30 *'...... 1,827 63 40 ".2..... 2,234 52 50 "...... 2.732 00 60 3...... 3,340 23 12 PRR CENT. 10 years.... 447 13 20 ".... 11,881.90 30 ".... 40,957 07 40 "'.... 141,177 95 50 ".... 486,644 91 60 ".....1,677,481 45 18 PER CEFT. l0 years... $6,594 35 20 ".... 43,4&5 48 30 ", 286,758 62 40 "....1 890,988 71 50 "...12 469,831 63 60 "...82,230,494 79 24 PER c-zT. 10 years.... $12,892 78 20 ".... 166,223 76 30 ".... 2,143,086 39 40 "...27,630,338 24 50 "..356,231,914 13 60 " 4,592,819,317 86 30 PFr CENT. 10 years, $25,800 11 20 " 665,645 68 30 " 17,173,731 66 40 " 443,084,165 99 50 " 11,431,620,222 06 60 "294,936,059,207 37 7 PER CENT. 10 years..... $2,039 17 20 "........ 4,158 22 30 "...... 8 479 32 40 "...... 17,290 79 50 "...... 35,258 90 60 6...... 71,898 92 8 PE.R CENT. 10lyears...... $2,262 43 20 "....... - 5,118 59 30 ".......11,580 46 40 "........26,199 97 50 "........ 59,275 70 60 "......134,107 05 260 3 PER CEINT. 10 years...... $1,352 93 20 ".......1,#30 46 30 "........ 2,476 43 40 "....... 3,350 44 50'"...... 4,532 91 60 "..... 6,132 73 4 PEIR C1ENIT. 10 years...... $1,497 89 20 ". 2 2,243 6V :, "..... 3,360 75 40".... 5,034 01 50 "-'..... 7,540 36 60 "... 11,294 60 'THE iNATIONAL BANKIN-G SYSTEM. "The highest rate calculated is thirty per cents per annum, or two and a half per month, a rate not nearly so high as is often paid in Wall street. "In the foregoing table it appears that interest at one per cent. would transfer $824 worth of the products of labor to the capitalists to pay for the use of $1,000 for the sixty years; at six per cent., $37,671.58; at sevene per cent., $70,898.92; and at thirty per cent., $294,956,058,207.37. In any community the rise of the rate of interest on all the money used, whether for a longer or a shorter period, transfers from producers to capitalists a sumin proportioned to the increase of the rate per cent., as demonstrated in this table." The power of money -tt interest to accumulate value is not fully understood or appreciated by the public. The following extract, which will further serve to illustrate this point, is taken from an able lecture delivered by Wallace P. Groom, Esq., editor anid publisher of the New York Mercantile Journal, on the subject of the "Currency Needs of Commerce:" "Many carelessly infer that the increase of money at six per cent. is just twice as rapid as at three per cent.; but ill reality the increase is vastly more rapid than this. In one hundred years, at six per cent., the increase on any given sumn is about eighteen times as much as at three per cent. "If one dollar be invested and the interest added to the principal annually, at the rates jiamed, we shall have the following result as the accumulation of one hundred years: One dollar, 100 years, at 1 ier cent, $2d One dollar, 100 y'rs, at 7 per cejt., $ 888 2. 7Y4' 2,903 .... 2 ~'e 11~..s. 9 5,543 .....) 3 ]9~ ~'t19~ T o1 13,809 11X' 8,675 '"' "' 4; i - 1,174,405 " " i5i "' ~ $11.... ];S - 15,i145,007 A' ~ 5 my Lils..i L2'i 2,551,799,404 ....i-* 6140 / 261 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. "There are probably few, however familiar with the subject of the rapid increase of capital put out at interest, who would not be startled at the statement that the cost of the outfit of Cristopher Columbus in his first voyage of discovery, put at interest at six per cent., would by this time have amounted to nmore than the entire money value of this continent, together with the accumulations from the industry of those who ha{ve lived on it. If aniy doubt this, let them reckon the amount, estimating the entire outfit to have cost only the smniall sumn of five thousand dollars, and remembering that money doubles, at six per cent., in a little less than twelve years-or accurately in eleven years, ten months and twentyonie days. Allowing it to double every twelve years, this five thousand dollars at interest at six per cent-, since 1492, it will be found, will have amounted to $17,895,700OO,OOO,OOO; which, estimating the population of the entire continent of America (North and South) to be eighty-five millions, or seventeen million families (averaging five melbers each), would give more than a million dollars as the possession of every one of these. The interest upon a million of dollars at six per cent. is sixty thousand dollars, which would new be the princely annual income of each of these seventeen million families from the accumulations up to this time upon so small a sum as that named for the outfit of the discoverer." But it must not be forgotten that banks of issue do not lend capital or money, but simply credit; and in this consists the great injustice of the system. A single class is clothed with authority to emit bills of credit, and compel all other classes to use them as a circulating medium and pay compound interest for their use. The fact that the government issues the National Bank notes to the banks does not change their nature. It is simply equivalent to the government guaranteeing their payment. The notes thlem 262 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. selves represent the credit of the institutions which issue them. There is no sound reason why the government should confer this privilege upon the bondholder and the banker, and not upon the farmer, thie merchant or the manufacturer. On the other hand it is in violation of the plainest principles of equity, as well as public policy, for the government to bestow such a privilege upon any class. How long it takes the money power, through the machinery of banks of issue, to rob the people of their annual increase of wealth (3. per cent.) is not a matter of speculation. The experience of sixty years demonstrates that the system will bring about a commercial crash on an average every six years. A commercial crash is sinmply a general settlement and a re-distribution of property rendered necessary by the natural operations of the system —by the manner in which the people are obliged to conduct their affairs. The enormous cost of a medium of exchange, consisting of bank currency and bank credit, may be arrived at approximately in several ways. On the 1st of September, 1875,there were in operation 2,087 National Banks. The net earnings of the banks for the previous six months amounted to about $30,000,000, or $60,000,000 for the year. The officers of the banks, including presidents cashiers, tellers, bookkeepers, clerks, attorneys, notaries, etc., constitute an army of nonproducers. Averaging the number at ten for each bank would give 20,000 persons. The chief officers of a bank are usually large stockholders, and the subordinate positions are mostly filled by their relatives, and in no other business, perhaps, do salaries rate so high. Averaging the salaries at $2,000 per year each for 20,000 persons will give a total of $40,000,000, which, added to the net earnings, gives a grand total of $100,000,000 a year. Or, again, the aggregate loans and discounts of the National Banks on the first day of October, 1875, amounted to $980,222,951. At ten per cent. interest the amount paid for this sum would be over $98,000.000. To this add the interest paid by the people 263 ~ THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTXM. on the bonds deposited with the Treasurer of the United States-about $390,000,000-at six per cent. in gold-about $27,000,000, and it will give a grand total of $127,000,000. From this it appears that the people are paying annually to the banks the enormous sum of about $127,000,000, a sum greater than the interest on the public debt, for the use of some $350,000,000 of bank currency. This burden is entirely unnecessary. A medium of exchange could and ought to be furnished by the government; or, in the language of Jefferson, "bank currency should be suppressed and the circulation restored to the nation to whom it belongs." The people would then have a medium of exchange unencumbered with interest, and, what is vastly more important, one that would occupy the channels of circulation, subject only to the natural laws of trade. TIIE PROSTRATION OF INDUfTRY. The prostration of all formis of indastry which followed the panic of 1873 still continues. Indeed, matters are growing worse. The following table exhibits the number of failures, with the aggregate amount of liabilities, which have taken place since 1863: IN THIlE NORTHERE STATES. Number of Aggregate Year. Failures & Liabll-t 1863....................495.............. $7,899,000 1864....................520............ 8,579,000 1865....................530............. 17,625,000 1866....................632.47,333,000 1867................... 2,386.............86,218,000 1868...............2,................ 57,275,000 1869...................2,411............. 65,246,000 IN THtE WHOLE COUNTRY. 1870....................3,551............. 88,242,000 1871................... 2,915.............85,252,000 1872.................4,069............. 121,056,000 1873................... 5181.............228,490,000 1874...................5,695............. 151,689,000 1875................... 7,404............ 195,289,000 1876 (first quarter)...... 2,806............. 64,644,000 264 THE NATIONAL BANING SYSTEM. The failures during 1875, it will be seen, numbered 7,404. The failures for the first quarter of 1875 numbered 1,733; and for the first quarter of 1876, 2,806, or an increase of over 60 per cent. over the corresponding quarter of last year. At the same rate the failures this year will reach about 12,000. In times prior to the war, when bank currency was nominally redeemable in specie, the balrnks did not hesitate to expand their circulation as soon as a general settlement had been effected and "confidence had been restored" thriough the instrumentality of the Sheriff, which usually took about one year. Business then began to improve, and the banks and the people together soon started on another era of inflation and speculation, only to wind up in a few years in another crash. But now a different condition of affairs exists. Gold bears a premium over the lawful money of the country, because it is a full leg,al tender, whilst lawful money (greenbacks) is only a partial tender. It is true in ante-war times bank currency was at a discount as compared with gold, but then it was issued at par and the loss fell upon the people. Now, however, specie payments have been decreed to take place January 1, 1879, and the banks do not intend to redeem their notes in specie until the govertiment has first furnished them with the specie. Consequently they are calling in their circulation. This contributes largely to the general depression All transactions, since the passage of the law decreeing forced specie resumption, except of the most limited character, both in respect to time and amount, have naturally ceased. Money is appreciating in value by operation of law, and property of all kinds is depreciating in a corresponding ratio. No one,with forced specie resumption in view, will invest either in property or business. Money is borrowed only in cases of great urgency, or for a short period 265 THE NATIONAL BANKILG SYSTEM. for purposes of speculation. As production diminishes the people grow poorer and failures multiply. The producing forces of the nation are paralyzed for the want of a healthy circulation of money, and general bankruptcy and ruin are inevitable. As for the money power, it awaits the final convulsion with serene composure. The fall in the price of all commodities renders living cheap to all who have an income. As their investments are mostly exempt from. taxation, they are not concerned about the burdens of government. The appreciation in the value of money and bonds, as compared with property of all kinds, which is silently going on, is adding enormously to their wealth, and when the crisis arrives they will be enabled to reap where they have not sown and gather in a rich harvest. EXTRAVAGANCE. When the panic of 1873 occurred the bullionists and the money power generally raised the old cry of extravagance and over production. The same cry has been used to account for every crash that has occurred during the present centuryThe charge of extravagance scarcely requires refutation. The producing classes as a rule are anything but extravagant. The farmers, with the help of their wives, sons and dgughters, as is well known, are enabled only by hard labor and strict economy to come out ahead at the end of each year. The same is true of the mechanics, the trades people, the laborers, and the toiling masses generally. The only extravagance that has developed itself to any extent in the Unitedl States is among those who, by means of corrupt legislation and a false monetary system, are enabled to riot in wealth stolen from the people. OVER PRODUCTION. The cry of over production is equally groundless. HIuman ingenuity is being constantly taxed to increase and cheapen 266 -THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. production, in order that the good things of life may be within the reach of all. The production of commodities is governed entirely by the laws of supply and demand. When it happens, as at the present time, that productive industry in many forms becomes paralyzed, on account of the want of a healthy circulation of money in the channels of trade, large classes are deprived of the means of supplying their wants, and the markets become suddenly gorged with certain commodities. For the sake of illustration we give the following table exhibiting the comparative production of five staple articles in 1860 and 1870, five years after the termination of the war: 1s. 1870. Decrease. Cotton, 2,200,000,000 lbs. 1,200,000,000 lbs. 49 per cent. Hemp, 149,000,000 " 25,000,000 " 8S " Rice, 187,000,000 " 73,000,000 " 60 " Silk, 12,000' 4,000'" 66 Tobacco, 434,000,000" 262,000,000 " 40 Total, 2,970,012,000 1,560,004,000 52 During this period the manufacturing establishments of the country increased in number fromn 140,433 to 252,148, and their products fromnt $1,885,861,676 to $4,232,325,442; and the population of the country increased froIn 31,443,321 to 38,558,371. That over production can produce a commercial crash is now acknowledged by all political economists, whose opinions are entitled to any weight, to be an exploded fallacy. John Stuart Mill, in his work on political economy, says: "A general over-supply or excess of all commodities above the demand, so far as demand consists in means of payment, is thus shown to be an impossibility. I have already described the state of the markets for commodities which accompanies what is termed a commercial crisis. At such .267 T[HE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTNM. times there is really an excess of all commodities above the money demand-in other words, there is an under-supply of money. But it is a great errot to suppose that a commercial crisis is the result of a general excess of production." And E. Peshine Smith, a distinguished American political economist, disposes of the question as follows: "In treating of supply and demand, no reference has been made to the notion, by which some writers have been bewildered, of a general over production in commodities. The proposition that any good thing has ever been produced in excess of the wants of humanity will not bear a moment's examination; nor is there the slightest reason to apprehend that such an event is likely to occur. The truth of the ,matter may be quite as correctly rendered by the statement that the supply of other commodities is deficient, as that any particular one is redundant. Where has it been, in any community, sufficiently numerous to permit the application of the general considerations in which political economy deals, that any product of industry has been offered in such a quantity as to surpass what the comfort of all its member would require? The trouble is, that many of those who would gladly be consumers have not produced enough to enable them to be. The true remedy for what is called over production in any article is an increased production of other things." When Congress convened in December, 1873, there was a strong public sentiment in favor of increasing the amount of legal tender paper money. The people as a body have never failed, when an opportunity offered, to signify their preference for legal tender Treasury notes. This is undoubtedly to be attributed to "the instinctive sagacity of the people," to use Benton's language, "which is an overmatch for book-learning; and which being the result of common 268 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. sense, is usually right; and being disinterested, is always honest." In obedience to this sentiment Congress passed a hill authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to reissue $44,000,000 of legal tender Treasury notes which had been retired under the policy of contraction. This step would undoubtedly have afforded great relief to the oppressed industries of the country, but it would have been only temporary. In a short time the whole amount would have been absorbed by the banks. Individuals here and there would have been benefited, but in the end the nation would have been as poorly off as ever. The money power, however, was unwilling to have its plans interfered with to even this extent; a howl was at once set up by their organs against inflation, and a large delegation of bankers, requiring a special train of cars, at once proceeded to Washington to induce the President to interpose his veto. They succeeded as usual, and on the 22d of April, 1874, the bill was returned to Congress with the President's veto. Five months prior to this President Grant, in his annual message, argued that the panic was due to the great contraction of the currency that had taken place, and referred to the greenback in the following eulogistic terms. Ile said: "The expelience of the present panic has proved that the currency of the country, based as it is upon the credit of the country, is the best that has ever been devised. Usually in times of such trials, currency has become worthless, or so much depreciated in value as to inflate the values of all the necessaries of life as compared with the currency. Every one holding it has been anxious to dispose of it on any terms. Now we witness the reverse. Holders of currency hoard it as they did gold in former experiences of a like nature." Public indignation at this betrayal of the interests of the people by the President found venit at the polls at the next 269 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. general election, and a Democratic House of Representatives was elected by an overwhelming majority. When Congress met in December, 1874, it was apparent that some measure, looking to the relief of the oppressed industries of the country, must be adopted. The result of the election also occasioned great consternation among the bullionists and bondholders. Their plans had not been fully carried out. Specie resumption had not yet been attained. They could manage Congress as it was then constituted, but their influence with a new Congress was not so well assured. An act to force specie resumption was at once prepared and entrusted to that subservient tool of the money) power, Senator Sherman. It was introduced in the Senate at an early period in the session, was passed by both houses and was signed by the President on the 14th of January, 1875. In order to deceive the public, banking was made free, a measure that had been contemplated from the beginning, and which, as has since been fully demonstrated, could contribute nothing to the relief of the public. The banks at the time had abundance of currency, and there were several millions of bank note circulation assigned to States having less than their quota, not yet taken. It is now possible for the bondholders to inflate the bank currency of the country to the full amount of the bonded indebtedness of the Federal Government, about $1,700,000,000. That advantage is not taken of this act to increase the bank note circulation is due entirely to the specie resumption act. Banks, on the contrary, are withdrawing their circulation and going out of business. Two hundred National Banks have already withdrawn their circulation, as is disclosed by the records of the office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and four hundred more are engaged in doing the same. The amount of National Bank note circulation withdrawn during the past 270 THIE NAT?IONAL BANKING SYSTEM. year is $13,482,546, and the legal tender notes held on deposit for the redemption of National Bank notes in process of retirement amount to $27,098,429, making in all a contraction of $40,580,975. During the same period the greenback circulation has been contracted $11,244,752, and the fractional currency $2,758,278. AN EXTRAORDIXARY ACT. The specie resumption act, passed in January, 1875, provided for the retirement of the fractional currency issued by the government. Longl before specie payments are Tesumed the nation will be deprived of a circulating medium o)f any kind. Under the specie basis system of bankirng, as it existed before the war, the people were frequently driven, in times of great stringency, to use the notes of individuals, firms and corporations, which circulated under the name of shinplasters, and cities, towns and boroughs were obliged to issue promises to pay, which were commonly known as scrip. To prevent the people, in the approaching stringency, from availing themselves of even this method of relief and to give the National Banks absolute control over the circulating medium of the country, an act, approved February 8, 1875, was passed by Congress, which imposes a penalty of ten per cent. on any individual, firm, association, city, town or municipal corporation, except National Banks, that shall issue or use such notes. This bill was smuggled through Congress under the title of an act "To amend existing customs and internal revenue laws and for other purposes," and reads as follows: "Section 19. That every person, firm, association other than NationaM Bank associations, and every corporation, State bank, or State banking association, shall pay a tax of ten per centurn on the amount of their own notes used for circulation and paid out by them." "Section 20. That every such person, firm, association, 271 THE NATIONAL BANKING SYSTEM. corporation, State bank, or State banking association, and. also every National Banking association, shall pay a like tax of ten per centum on the amount of notes of any person, firm, association other than a National Banking association, or of any corporation, State bank, or State banking association, or of any town, city, or municipal corporation, used for circulation and paid out by them." The National Banks evidently expect, in due time, to furnish the entire circulation of the nation, including fractional currency. When specie resumption takes place it will be found that the greenbacks will all bc in the possession of the banks. The reserve held by the National Banks, on the first day of October, 1875, amounted to $235,000,000. They have still over two years to gather in the greenbacks that are still outstanding. On the 1st of January, 1879, the government will be called upon to pay the sum of $300,000,000 in specie to redeem the greenbacks. The banks will then be in posses sion of abundant specie, furnished at the expense of the people, to enable them to begin banking on a genuine specie basis, in the manner in which banking was conducted prior to the war. In the meantime the nation will be entirely stripped of a medium of exchange, involving an almost entire cessation of production, attended by general ruin and bankruptcy. The suffering, want and misery, which the people of the UnLited States will be called upon to endure, during the next few years, on account of the machinations of the: money power, will be terrible beyond that experienced by any nation inl modern times, not even excepting the experience of the people of Great Britain, under like circumstances, in 1819-25. (See next chapter.) Beyond that it is idle to speculate, for then there will probably be no National Banks, unless the liberties of the American people shall, in the meantimue, have been entirely subverted. 272 CHAPTER VIII. THIE RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. A PREMIUM was placed on gold by the first legal tender act, passed February 25, 1862, which declared that interest on United States bonds and duties on imports should be paid in coin. This was not only unllnecessary, but was in violation of the plainest principles of public policy. The people were obliged to respond to the requirements of the governmenit, and a medium of exchange was absolutely necessal'y to enable tlhem to render their resources available to the government. It was manifest that this medium of exchange had to be supplied by the government, and it could be done only by issuing public notes, made a full legal tender. In no other way than by mraking the public note a full legal tender was it possible to place the people all on the same platform with respect to the government ad to each other, and compel each individual in the nation to bear his proportionate share of the public burden. These principles were fully embodied in the original legal tender act as it passed the IHouse of Representatives, but the sharks of Wall street and the money power generally percived, that if it became a law they would be deprived of all power to shave either the government or the people. The passage of the bill, therefore, met with a desperate opposition in the Senate. In the conference between the committees of the Senate and thie House which followed, the Senate committee was stubborn and the IHouse committee was obliged to yield. The Hion Thaddeus Stevens declared, whilst shedding bitter tears over the result, that the Hiouse committee did not yield, 18 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. until it found that either the banks must be gratified or the country be lost.* The only plea or justification offered for making the interest on the bonds payable in gold was that it would induce capitalists to invest ill them. Subsequent events have wholly disproved the necessity of any such step. As a matter of fact the war was carried on for over a year with partial legal tender paper money (greenbacks), and the $500,000,000 of bonds authorized by Congress were in the end taken at pal by thie people (not capitalists or bankers) out of a spirit of patriotism. If further proof is required it is to be found in the fact tlhat the currency bonds of the governiment to-day command a hiigher preminum than the gold bonds, simply because they have a lol(ger time to run. Having made the interest on the bonds payable in gold, duties on imports were made payable in gold in oelder to obtain the gold to pay the interest on the bonds. This s also entirely unnecessary. No bonds, as we have mentioned, were issued for over a year, and as the interest would not fall due until six months after they were issued, the government would then have had ample time to devise a way to obtain the necessary gold. The effect of making the interest on government bonds and duties oni imports payable in gold was to impose a tax ,on all foreign commodities for the benefit of the bankers, bullionists and bondholders, and to gre-tly disarrange the monetary affairs of the country. A great many people are partially reconciled to the payment of this tax under the mistaken belief that it inures in some way to the advantage of the government. Such is not the fact. Commodities are purchased abroad with American products; and the price of American products abroad is regulated solely by the laws of *See page 200. 274 REDSUMPTIOIq OF SPECIE PAY]M[ENTS. supply and demand. The total imports and exports of the United States for the years 1873 and 1874 were as follows: Imports in 1873.............. $642,136,210 Exports "............... 575,227,017 Balance against United States.. Exports in 1.8 74.............. $633,339,368 Imports "............... 567,406,342 Balance in favor of United States $65,933,026 Balance against the United States in two years, $976,167 It appears, therefore, that the imports and exports of the United States during the two years (1873 and 1874) balanced each other to within less than one million of dollars. The exchange of commodities between different nations is effected principally by mteans of bills of exchange. The manner in which this is done is thus referred to by Colwell: "If the United States and Great Britain have mutually exported to each other commodities to the value of $100,000,000, the amount is adjusted by the familiar process of bills of exchange. Hie who has exported commodities to the value of $10,000 is paid when he sells a bill for the amount. The adjustmnent proceeds afterwards without any further trouble on his part. The bills are concentrated in a few hands in each country. If a house in London purchases in each week a million of dollars of American paper, and a house in New York with which it is in business relations purchases a million of dollars each week in bills on London, it is easy to see that it requires no money to pay to each other the two millions. As business is generally conducted, the bills are forwarded from this country, and the respective claims are balanced and extinguished on the books of the London house." After an adjustment is thus effected the balance is 275 $66,909,193 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. paid in bullion. As this process is going on constantly, bullion (gold and silver) will flow into the country when the exports exceed the imports, and out of the country when the imports exceed the exports. In order to cause gold to flow into and remain in the country, it is manifest, therefore, that the thing to do is to develop the producing forces of the country to such an extent as will enable it to export more than it imports. Thiis fact was fully recog,nize(i and endorsed by President Grant in his aninual message ill 1873. He said: "My own jtud,gmeint is * * thatt a specie basis cannot be reached and maintained until our exports, exclusive of gold, pay for our imports, interest due abroad, and other specie obligations, or so nearly so as to leave an appreciable accumulation of the precious metals in the country from the products of our mines." When foreign commodities are received in the United States the merchant to whom they are consigned is obliged to pay the customi duties, established by law, in gold. Bankers and brokers deal in gold, and sell it at the highest price that they can get. D)uring the war it will be remembered that the bullionists succeeded in running up the premium on gold to as high as $1.85~ over the lawful money of the country, while the volume of the currency and the price of domestic products remaineduncl:alnged. This of course added greatly to the cost of all imported articles. The premium on gold, which was paid by the merchant in the first place and by the people in the end, was a clear profit to the bullionists. Until 1864 no gold was required by the government to pay interest on bonds, consequently the burden thus imposed on the people was entirely unnecessary, and inured to the advantage of no one except the dealers in gold. If the war had terminated in the early part of 1863, there would have been no necessity for issuing any gold 276 IESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS.f, interest bonds at all. The total funded and unfunided debt of the government then was only $783,804,252, consisting chiefly of legal tender notes, 7-30 Treasury notes and cetificates of indebtedness, all of which could have been called in, or provided for, by tatxation in two years, if desired. But the bullionists had their plans well laid. The Treasury notes bearing interest were purposely made payable in one, two andl thlre~ years, in order tlhat, as soon as the gold interest bonds were issued, they could be advantageously converted into money and the proceeds invested in bonds. With the gold of the country atud the bonds both ill their possession, the business of selling gold was wonderfully simplified. The bankers and bullicoists sold their gold to the merchant to pay the governmient, and the government immediately returned it in the shape of interest on bonds to the banker and bullionist. UTnder this:ai'angement it was not even necessary to transfer the gold from the vaults of the banks. The whole matter could be adjusted by means of gold certificates and chlecks. The amotint of gold held by the National Banks, at any one time during the past ten years, would scarcely have sufficed to pay the duties on imports at New York City alone for two weeks. On the 1st of Octobel, 1875, the gold held by the'National banks of News York City was $4,955,624, of which sniii $4,201,720 was in. US. gold certificates and only $753,904 in coiln. Thle'amount received by the government for duties on imlports (111ing the past ten years has averaged $180,000,000 a yeal, or in all $1,800,000,000; the interest on the public debt for the same period has been about $100,000,000 a year, or in all $1,000,000,000. It is manifest, therefore, that if the payment of duties on imports and interest on bonds in gold was not a pure fiction, the government could have accumulated $800,000,000 of gold in the past ten years. 277 0 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENT!. Since specie resumption became desirable to the bullionists and bankers, it is common to hear it asserted that the difference between paper money and gold compels the people of the United States to trade with the rest of the world at a disadvantage. This would imply that foreigners are enabled to reap some advantage on account of the premium on gold in the United States. iA momnent's consider.tion will satisfy any one that this is not true. Foreign commodities, as we have seen, are purchased with Americani products. The premium paid by Americans on gold and for bills of exchange is not an essential part of tlhe transaction. The products of America are sold in foreign markets at the iuliing price there, and with the proceeds commiodities are purchased in turn. To say that American products sell for any more or less in foreign markets because of the premium on gold in the United States is simply absurd. As has already been suggested, not even the interest on the bonds held abroad is paid in gold. It is paid in products, against which bills of exchange are drawn. When the exports of the United States fall short the balance is paid in bullion, the product of our mines; and this would be done just the same whether there were any bonds held abroad or not. The same is true of the bonds held at home. Interest on them is paid in current money at gold rates. The conclusion, then, is unavoidable that the only persons who are benefited by the premium on gold, established by the legal tender act, are the bullionists and bondholders of the United States. The bankers and bullionists having secured possession of the bonds, their convertibility with greenbacks was then taken away, and they were also exempted from taxation. The original loan of $500,000,000 of 5-20 bonds has been retired or converted into gold bonds. By the act of March 18, 1869, the Secretary of the Treasury is 278 0 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMTENTS. forbidden to redeemn any of the 5-20 bonds, payable in lawful money, still outstanding (some several hundred mill.ions) unitil greenbacks are on a par with gold. The bonds of the United States now eomimand a high premium. The following is a list of the quotatiolns of United States bonds on the 26th of April, 1876: U, S. 6 per cent. bonds of 1881..................... 122 U.S. 5-20 bonds of 1865, Nov.................... 118 U.S. 5-20 bonds of 1865, Jul.................... 119 U.S. 5-20 bonds of 1867, July..................... 1214 U.S. 5-20 bonds of 1868, July.................... 122w U. S. 5 per cent. 10-40 bonds....................... 118$ U. S. 5 per cent. funded loan bonds................ 117~ U.. S. 6 per cent. currency bonds................... 126* The money power having thus succeeded ion robbing the peopUle to the utmost extent in this direction, it is now proposed to continue the process by means of specie resumption. The action of the bullionists andl bankers, in this particular was hastened, as we have seen, by the result of the elections in 1874. SPECI REiSUMPTION. Soon after Congress convened in December, 1874, a specie resumption act was hurried through that body and was approved by the President, January 14, 1875. The act provides as follows: The first section requires the Secretary of the Treasury, as rapidly as practicable, to cause to be coined, silver coins of the denominations of ten, twenty-five and flfty cents, of standard value, and to issue them in redemption of an equal number and amount of fractional currency, until the whlole amount of such fractional currency outstanding shall be redeemed. The second section repeals the authority to charge a per cenitage for coining bullion. The third section repeals so much of the National Bank 279, RESUMFPTION OF SPECIE PiAYMENTS. ing law as limits the aggregate circulation of the banks to $354,000,000, and makes banking free to bondholders. It also provides that "on and after the 1st day of January, 1879, the Secretary of the Treasury shall redeem in coin the United States legal tender notes then outstanding, on their presentation for redemption in sums of not less than fifty dollars." The greenback, although issued in a mutilated form, (not payable for interest on bonds and duties on imnpol) was made a legal tender for private debts. It was not, therefore, simply an evidence of indebtedness of the governmentsa mere promise to pay money; it was something more than that. It became the measure of all values, the basis of all money contracts, and the standard of all payments among the people. For fourteen years it has constituted the lawful money of the country. All exchanges of pI)operty, during this period, have been made and all existing debts have been cointracted on the basis of greenback money. If the standard of payment is changed, all existing in-debtedness will change with it. Foi example if A. owes B. $10,000 and hle is compelled to pay the amount in gold, which rules at say $1.12, he is obliged to pay $11,200 instead of $10,000. WYlhen the entire indebtedness of the country, individual, corporate,and municipal, is taken into consideration, it will be seen that thie amount thus added by changing the standaird of l)ayment is enormous. Estimating the aggregate indebtedness of the country, of individuals, towns, cities, townships, counties, states, railroads and other corporations, at $10,000,000,000, the amount would be increased $1,200,000,000. The alteration of the coinage of a nation is universally regarded as a matter of the greatest delicacy, only to be attempted when absolutely required by the highest considerations of public policy. When the legal tender act was PESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAY-E1 S. pending the only plausible argument offered by the money power against its passage, was that it would work injustice to the creditor class, by enabling debtors to pay their debts in a depreciated money. The specie resumption law, however, comrpels the debtor class to pay one-eighth more than it contracted to pay, and the debtor class, owing to the workings of contraction and the National Banking system, now embraces all the industrial classes of the country. No alteration of the coinage was ever attempted by any nation that would at all compare with this. (The bondholders have provided against any alteration of the coinage so far as they are concerned. The act of Congress of July 14, 1870, for refunding the public debt provides that the bonds shall be redeemed "in coin of the 2presett standard value.") Th amount of gold in the ountry, in view of the resumption of specie payments, has become a matter of serious importance, because the circulation of the country, whether the gold is actually used as a medium of exchange, or made the basis of a bank note currency, as in times prior to the war will necessarily be limited by the amount of gold on hand. On the 27th of February, 1876, the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to a resolution passed by the Hlouse of Representatives calling for a statement of the gold coin in the possession of the government, submitted the followingi, report: Coin coupons........................... $1,547,402 06 Coin certificates........................ 1,427,200 00 Sinking fund and interest................ 1,873,825 00 Bonds redeemed and interest............. 13,832,553 65 Interest due and unpaid................... 9,254,634 50 Outstanding bonds called for sinking fund. 2,548,000 00 Outstanding coin certificates...............33,968,300 00 Silver coin and bullion...................14,193,61.8 70 l'~~~~~~~~ $78,645,533 91 Actual gold coin available............... 13,341,423 76 Total........................ $91,986,957 67 281 REUSMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. By the terms of the specie resumption act the government will be required to redeem the le,ga-l tender notes outstanding on the first of January, 1879, (.300,000,000) in coin. This will take nearly $290,000,00()0 more coiii than there is available gold in the Treasury. WVhere all(d how is this immense amount of gold to be obtaiined? The estimated product of the mines of the United States for the past three years has been about $50,000,U00 a year. The ainnual interest on the public debt, one-l:tlf of which, it is estimated, is held abroad, is about $100,00,000(). As long as t-ec implorts of the country exceed the exports, the differene will have to be made up in specie. The imports. of the UnLited States as a rule have exceeded the exports for maiiy years past, and to such an extent, that notwithstanding the enormous yield of American mines, there is not ait the present time $1,OOO000,000 of specie in'the country. And now that the productive ability of the nation has been greatly diminished, and is still diminishing under the operations o)f contraction and of the National Banking system, the excess of imports over exports must naturally increase, and thus augment the necessity for sending the product of American mines to foreign countries. It is clear, therefore, that until the producing forces of the nation are sufficiently developed to enable it to export more than it imports, there can be no accumulation of gold obtained fir om the mines of the country. The amount required to resume specie payments then, if obtained at all, must come from other nations. The demand for gold at the present time abroad is unusually great on account of the demonetization of silver in Gelmany- and other countries. The government of the TUnitedl States has already had some experience in trying to obtain gold in Europe. When the gold bonds of the United States were put on the market in Europe, $21,000,000, resulting fromn their sale, accumulated 282 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. in the Bank of England. The Bank of England objected to the transfer of this sum to the United States, and the government was forced to turn round and invest it in other bonds, which had been purchased probably at less than 60 cents on the dollar. Senator Boutwell detailed the facts in this case, in a speech in the United States Senate, January 22, 1874, as follows: "WVhen the negotiations were going on in London for the sale of the largest amount of United States bonds that have ever been sold there at one time, it was foreseen by the Bank of England that a quantity of coin would accumulate as the proceeds of these bonds to the credit of the government of thie United States. As a matter of fact, there was an accumulation of about $21,000, 000. The Bank of England, foreseeing that there would be an accumulation of coin to the credit of the United States which might be taken away bodily in specie, gave notice to the officers of the Treasury Department of the United States that the power of that institution would be arrayed against the whole proceeding unless we gave a pledge that the coin should not be removed, and that we would reinvest it in the bonds of the United States as they were offered in the markets of London. We were compelled to do it." Mr. Boutwell also mentioned another case in point, which is equally significant, as follows: "There is another fact, known to all. We recovered at Geneva an award against Great Britain of $15,500,000. When this claim was maturing, the banking and comm-ercial classes of Great Britain induced the governmenlt to inte)rpose, and by diplomatic aiTangeiments through the State Department here, operating upon the Treasury Department, secured the transfer of secu'rities and thus avoided the transfer of coin. In the presence of these facts, is it to be assumed for a moment that we can go into the markets of the world and purchase coin with 283 R8ESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. which we can redeem one, two, three or four hundred millions of outstanding legal tender notes." If any further argument is required to show that it is not only utterly impossible for the government of the United States to obtain the requisite amount of gold to resume specie payment at a fixed time, but that it is also undesirable, even if it were possible, because it would disturb all the industrial and social relations of thile world, it will be found in the following extract from an able speech delivered on the 26th of April, 1876, by Senator Jones in thle Senate of the United States, in favor of placing silver on an equality with gold as a medium of exchange. He said: "The world's stock of coin is $5,700,000,000, of which nearly one-half is silver. Of this sum Europe America, and the rest of the Occidental world employ about $3,600,000,000. Previous to the late demonetizations of silver in the Latin union, and in Germany and the United States, these $3,600,000,000 consisted of, let us say, $2,000,000,000 of gold and $1,600,000,000 of silver. They now consist of about $2,600,000,000 gold and $1,000,000,000 silver. By continuing to exclude silver from equal participation with gold in the currency of the United States and attempting to resume specie payments, we occasion a demand for say $350,000,000 of gold wherewith to pay off the greenbacks and furnish bank reserves, and $50,000000 of silver in lieu of the fractional notes. If we could obtain these $400,000,000 of metal without drawing it from other countries in Europe or America, they would add so much to the stock of coin in the Occidental world, which would then be $2,950,000,000 of gold and $1,050,000,000 of silver. This is the answer to the question so far as the Occidental world is concerned The quantity of the precious metals needed for money and the basis of credit in the Occidental world-that is to say, 284 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMEMTS. the quantity needed to maintain prices at their present level -is at least $4,000,000,000. Of this sum the United States, if it succeeds in resuming specie payments, will hold about $400,000,000, of which $350,000,000 must be in gold. Where is it to come from? "'Anticipatiin the argument that no10 such sum is necessary to specie resumption, because prior to suspension in 1862 our entire stock of coin included not more than $225,000,000 of gold, he reminded thec Senate that population since then had increased per 50 cent., and that in 1861 our whole circulating medium consisted of $300,000,000 in coin and $200,000,000 in bank notes, which circulated within limited areas at nearly par; whereas now it consists of not more than $100,000,000 of coin and some $850,000,000 of governnent and bank paper, the latter circulating (throughout nearly the whole country) at about 87~ cents on the dollar; say total circulation at par equal to $850,000,000. This is 70 per cent. more than the par circulation of 1861, an incontestible proof that the exchanges have increased in volume at least 70 per cent. It cannot be doubted that the bulk of to-day's exchanges in this country is at least double that of a COlTesponding day in 1862.' Put it at only 70 per cent higher; then, in order to resume specie payments upon at least as firm a footing as specie payments in 1861, we shall require at least 70 per cent more specie than we employed in 1861. Add 70 per cent to $300,000,000 and you have $510,000,000 Allow $100,000,0c0 for specie already in the country; in the baanks, in private hands, and in the vaults of the Treasury, and you will need $410,000,000 in order to resume, say, for round figures, $400,000,000 of specie, of which, under the operation of the act of 1873, about $350,000,000 must be gold. "I warn gentlemen to beware of making a mistake in 285 RESUMPTION )OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. respect to this mnatter, for a mistake will set us back niany years. T'he British government tried to resume in 1817, :fitei a suspension of 20 years, but it failed, and suspension was deferred until 1823. If we tliy to resume in 1879 with $10(,000,000 and fail, we may be set back a quarter of a century. Moreover, if we fail, some clique of stock gamblers will make 15 or 20 per cent. out of the operation. Knowing that $100,000,000 was the limit of the government's ability to pay, they could easily make arrangements with the banks and depositories throughout the country to withdraw $100,000,000 of greenbacks on the eve of the day of resumptionI, and present them for payment at the Treasury After havinl, drawn the last dollar of specie out of the latter, they could, by presenting an additional note, compel it to suspend again. Then gold would go up once more, perhaps to the full extent of the figure from which it would have fallen, and the clique could sell their specie in the market and realize their profit. We cannot resume with $100,000,000 nor with $200,000,000. WVe have had $200,000,000 in specie in the Treasury on several occasions during the past ten years. If it is pl)racti,cable to resume now with $100,000,000, why was it not practicable on those occasions with $200,000,000? It -was certainly not for lack of desire on the part of the Secretary of the Treasury, but simply that both the Secretary and Congress saw that the thing could not be d(one. Where are the needed $350,000,000 in gold to come from? The annual gold product of the world is $97,000,000. More than half of this is needed in the arts. One and a half per cent. on $2,600,000,000, the present Occidental stock, is needed for the maintenance of money to replace abrasion and loss. This is $39,000,000. Deduct these sums and there remains a surplus of $10,000,000 a year, out of which our needed $350,000,000 must come, unless it comes out of the 286 RS1UJmPTION OF SPECIE PA]fEINTS. 2 existing stock in other countries. It would take 35 years to accomplish the result upon the most favorable hypotllesis. "But the increased population of the Occidental world will make increased demand for gold exchanges and for its use in arts equal to at least $6,0009000 annually, and tihe annual product of gold is diminishing instead of increasing. When these elements of the circulation are all moderately provided for, there will remain perhaps $500,000 per annum of surplus, taking 700 years to get our $350,000,000. And even this cannot be done unless Austria, Italy and Russia shall leave us to monoopolize all the gold we need before they reform their. own debased currency. I tell you, gentlemen, the thing cannot be done. Redemption in gold is out of the question. It is not practical financially, metallurgically, internationally, or politically; in short, it is not practical at all. "The stock of coin which forms the sutbstratumrn of the world's prices is the accumulation of 50 centuries, and bargains are being made every day which cover long periods of time. To disturb these prices and contracts by forcing the exchanges of the country to be measured by a suiiin of specie so vastly less than its usual measure, as $100,000,000, or even $200,000,000, would be tantamount to the violent destruction of vast interests and ai wrenching of all the relations of industrial and social life. "The Senator proceeded to argue that we cannot get the gold from Europe, with which to resume, because its whole supply is only $2,600,000,000, and on every one of these dollars stands a vast and alinIost toppling superstructure of credit in every conceivable form. Try to buy one sixth or seventh of that amount, and the rate of interest would go up in Europe in order to check the outflow of gold; and so the price of gold would rise until, iu order to secume the 287 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. amount required, we would be obliged to sell all our movables at prices that would bankrupt every interest in the country. WVe might get $50,000,000 or $100,000,000 possibly, but it would be at the expense of a tremendous finaneial convulsion abroad, reacting with equally alarming disaster to ourselves. Recollect that the problem is that of taking $350,000,000 in gold out of a fully occupied and heavily overtopped basis of only $2,600,000,000 in the Occidental world. It is not the whole stock of metal, both in silver and gold, that we can now call upon. Silver has beer demonetized in several countries in Europe, -and here we have so thoughtlessly worded our laws that, until we alter them, we can only pay in gold." By the act of April 12, 1873, the silver coins of the United States were declared to be a legal tender at their nominal value for any amount not exceeding five dollars ill any one payment. Silver as a commodity fluctuates in value agree ably to the laws of supply and demand. The effect of the law above mentioned was to partially demonetize silver, anl hence silver coins are now (May, 1876) quoted at about 3 per cent. less than legal tender Treasury notes. There is no good end to be attained by specie resumptioni that could not be attained by simply making thle greenback a full legal tender, as should have been done in the first instance. By making the greenback a full legal tender, the products of the country would be placed upon the same footing with foreign commodities, and that is all that is proposed to be accomplished by specie resumption. The public would then be relieved of the onerous tax imposed on gold to pay duties on imports, which redounds solely to the advantage of the bullionists and bondholders of the United States. If this method were adopted, no disturbance of the industrial or social relations of the country could 288 RESUMPTION OF SPY,CIE PAiYMENTS. possibly occur-. Forcedl slecie resumption cal) bc accomplished only through a complete revolution of all the business and social relations of the country. This will appear from a brief consideration of the steps that will necessarily precede resumlption. The circulation of the country onI the 1st of April, 1876, was as follows: Legal tender Treasury notes................ $370,755,248 Fractional currency....................... 42,604,893 National Bank notes....................... 330,378,904 Total........................ 743,739,045 'e lawful money reserve of the National B13anks onl the 1st day of October, 1875, was as follows: Legal tender Treasury notes................ 760,366,921 United States certificates of deposit......... 48,810,000 Due from reserve agenits....................85,644,964 Redemption fund with Treasurer............. 16,233,193 $227,055,078 Specie.................................. 8,050,328 Total........................... $235,105,406 It will be seeni that the lawful money reserve of tlhe National Banks, exclusive of specie, now amounts to over two-thirds of the entire greenback circulation. The banks have still two years and a half to gather in the remainder of the outstanding greenbacks —all' that are not locked up in private hoards. To call in their own circulation is an easy matter. If the bailnks cease discounting paper for six months there will scarcely be a bank note left in circulation. 'hat they will do so is not to be doubted. The notes of the banks are simply evidences of their own indebtedness, and it is not to be supposed that they will voluntarily add twelve per cent. or more to their own indebtedness when thley can easily avoid it. Loing before the first day of January, 1879, the banks will have possession of the entire circulation of 15. 289 RIESUMPTION' O'F SPECI:E PAY-MENTS. the country, otlt geenb icks:tnd-l bank notes, and the nation will be (ompletely strippe(d of it medium of exchange. rlbe public will bc helpless. Thlie people will Inot possess evenii the )oo) privilege of issuiug an( ising shinplasters and ~crip, because it will be inmpossible to raise money enough tro pay the teii per ceit. tax imposed tipon all notes not issued by National Banks. Forced iesumnptioi, therefore, mean.4 something imore than a.d(ling - 2 pei cent. to the amount of every debt owed iii the United States. Without a medium o)f ex(thange people will 1)e natble to pay their debts at all; industry andIl trade will be completely )aralyzed: and bankruptey, dist r ess, st arvati(n and riot will elsue. sl},c1E JsUr'rSMPTIO N I-N GLANI). 'I'e expelieniice of tlhe people of Great Brit,ain from i819 to 1825, under simil.ar circumstances, is full of instruction to the people of the Unrited States. In 1797 the Bank of Englaid (was obliged to susped specie p)ayments.* Great Brit-in at the timne w.S enga-i.ged ii war with Fraiice. In 1797 large, sumr-s of g,old( were required abroad, and the price of ,gold be,ait to rise. Ini September, 199, the standard price ,)f gold w.as ~:3, 17s., 6(d. per ounce, and in June, 1800, it was 24, 5s. per ounce. The war with Fr,ance ended in 1815. D)uring this period iid for several years after the war the ,i)(ople of Great Britain were obliged to use an irredeemable )apeI (urren(y for their medinum of exchange. Prior to the usperIsioln of specie payments the condition of affairs in ,r(eat ])ritain w.is gloomy indeed. Sir Archibald Alison, th( lhistorian, iii speking of the period immediately precediIng suspensioni says: "Nor wats the internal suffering of this ill)imened period inferior to its externial disaster. It began with the severe commercial distress of 1793, unprecedented at that period in intensity and duration, and which wasi only ee Bankh- of l,;ngland, page'. :20O RESUMKflO~ 0~ SPECIF PAYMENTh' 291 ~C~'~CV~'d by (`tiT ~Xt~11(~IV~ lot!) to il~c tradiiig ()`Ia~~e~ by gov~T'nn~ent; aii(~ it t~)'!ninat~~t iii tlie dr~adfiiI ~~on~tary crisis riiii ~ipoii tlie 1)'tiik ai~J 1~~utiny in tli~ ileet, ii~ tlie spring of I ~O~~, which brought tl)C natioit to tlie bi'irik of ruin, an~I ~overnn~ent tlie it~c'ussity ()f ~t)~penJing fOpCtj U~()ll tlie ~ash p'ty1i1t1it~~" The P)riti~1) ~ovei'nn~ent and people had beeii v~'tnIy tryiiif~ to t'~rry t)1i gicat operations ~`itli an iiiadequ;tte niediuni of exeIiaii~~, The su~pension of t10t3 ~~ank of ~~nqr1'~nd leti to tbe use of iri'edeeiiiable paper ~~oney to ~n etior~nons ainotint, 0)', tO U~C' at' expression iTo~ :~`eatJy i'i4it'.til~d by the builionists, "to an an~~nnt equal to t~~e w;tiits of ti'.'~de." The result was n~a~ie~tl ~Ye ~iI1 .`{gain qn{)te from Sir ~~rehibaItI ~iison. Ife ~tys: "The T3~Xt eigl~teen yeai's of Ilie w.'ti', fro~i ~~9."j to ~~I5, were, as :~ll the world kno~vs, tlie 1!)()8t glorious, an(~, taken as a "-,hol(~, the iiiost prospel'()ns, which Grt.<'tt J3rit+in liad ever k~o~'ii. Vsliered iii by a combinatioi~ of t'.ii'eun~s~~nees the n~ost ~:il:tiiiito~s, botI) ~`ith referente t(> e~ternaI security .`~n(1 ii~tcrn'tl indu~ti'y, it tci'niin.'tte(t ill a b!nzc of gloi'y and a f!()o(I of prosperity ~~hicI} have iiever, since the beginning of tl)c world, descended upoit any nation. llardly had the i'~Ti UpOil tl)C bajik sl~akcn t(> its centcr tl)C whole fabric of <)ur coiniiiercial ~)rospcrity,`tnd tl~e iflUtii)iC5 of tlie Nore, Plymouth`~nd off ~~adi, I~'traIyzcti tI~e arni of our na~~~1 d~fendcrs, when tlic victories of St. Viiict'iit aiid Canipercio~vii ag;tiii i'estoi'c~I to us the d~~iniiiioii of the set; and crc l~~ng tiic thttiiderbolts of tl)e Nile and Trafaigar prostrated tlte iiav~tI strciigili of tlie cllciny, aiid the victories of ~~rCl liiigton lirst ai~cstc~~, alid at length ~~rokc his niilitt~ry po~ver. I)i'osperity, un i verstI an (I unli e')rd of, pervaded &~very depai'tiueiit of Ilie enipire. Onr colonial possessions c~ncircled tlte cartlt-tjie whole ~Vest Iiidia Islands had ~allcn into our hands; aii enipire of sixty iiiiliions of mcii in .RESU3PTION OF SPECIE PAYMEN'TS. Hindostan acknowledged our rule; Java was added to our eastern possessions; and the flag of France had disappeared from every station beyond the sea. Agriculture, commerce and manufactures at home had increased in an unparalleled ratio; the landed proprietors were in affluence; wealthl to an unheard of extent had been created among thie fanners; the soil daily increasing in fertility and breadth of cultivated land, had become almost adequate to the maintenance of.: rapidly increasing population; our exlports, imports and tonnage had more than doubled since the war began; anfal though distress, especially during 1810 and 1811, had,it times been severely experienced among the manufacturing, operatives (occasioned by Bonaparte's decrees against British goods), yet, upon the whole, and in average years, their condition was one of extraordinary prosperity. The revenue raised by taxation within the year had risen to ~72,000,000 in 1815 from ~21,000,000 in 1796; the total expenditure from taxes and loans had reached in 1814 and 1815, tihe enormous amount of ~117,000,000 each year. In the year 1813 and 1814, being the twentieth and twenty-irst of thie war, Great Britain had above a million of men in arms in Europe and Asia, and remitted ~11,000,000 yearly in sutbsidies to the continental powers. Yet was this prodigious and unheard of expenditure so far from exhausting either the capital or resources of the country, that the loan in 18 14 was obtained at the rate of ~4, 11s., lid. per cent., being a lower rate than that paid at the commencement of the war; although the annual loan at its close was abovo ~35,000,000, and the population of the empire at that period was only eighteen millions." All this was accomplished in Great Britain during the early part of the present century by irredeemable papecr money. The bullionists try to blunt the force of this mg 292 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. mernt by attributing the proIsperity of England during this period to the vast outlays of the government, but if this was the cause, why did it not produce the samec effect during the period prior to the suspension, when the government was making similar outlays? The simple truth is that the people of Great Britain possessed patriotism and faith in the sta bility of their government and institutions, and when ftunished with inidustry's most essential tool, an abundant and cheap medium of exchange, they were enabled to develop the producingforces of the nation to their utmost extent, witlh the mnarvelous results above given. And the logic of the whole matter is, that if paper money will perform suchi marvels in time of war, danger and uncertainty, it can be made to perform the same or greater marvels in time of peace, when no uncertainty need attend its use. When the several acts of Parliament were passed continuing Pitts' "bank restriction" (continuing the suspension of specie payments), one clause was always retained, and that was that the bank was "to resume cash payments" within a few months after peace should be established. Doubleday, in his Finaicial, Monetary and Statistical Historv of England, says that "it has been asserted that Pitt never meant this clause to be enforced, at least as far as regarded the fundliolders (bondholders); and that he intimated as much in Parliament on one occasion." Hiowever, it was adhered to. The bullionists immediately began to clamor for a return to specie payments. The bank of England, which had "bales of paper money" in circulation, was obliged to contract to an extent that would enable it to redeem the remainder in coin. This began to occasion distress amongst the merchants and manufacturers. In speaking of this period Doubleday says:' Duringr, former revulsions, such as that of 1810, caused by the decrees of Bonaparte against 293 294 - RESUMPTION OF SPEF(FIE PAYMYNTS, the adliissioii of i)ritisli goods, thle bank had cotme pl-mpty forwar(l with loans and( discounts to relieve the pressure. Now, liowevei, thle (dilrectors scaIcely dared to move an inch. rThey kiilew that thle )political econolmists were stroiig in the Ilotiset,:nd that they wvere l)elit ui)oIl esh o1 )ayllents at all risks.. They knew thliat the Jews of Chliti,e Alley w-ouldl secre(tly abet the stile doctiiiie. A gainst a combl)i nation Yf usureis atnd theorists, one set.ll selfishiess, tlhe otlhei a! crot(chets, there w,s 110no deflse to be ade.'Th'e'(couitry gentlemeii, whlo were thle dupes of the economists, were led to believe that cash p.ynimeits were necessary for botl the interest:aid security of theinselves. Those who had thley power were resolved, anuid nothiing w.t.s left to the bank bIt to.narrtIow its issues, and look about for gold and sl,vewheirewith to meet the storm. This w:as altog,ether:t d(if:cult business. In the year 1816 alone thirty-sevein ctuttry banks had become banxkrupt.'The commerciall worldl required additional propping. B3ut the grovernmnent (the bank) was in the same dilemman.; and to it the merehliants were sacrificed. Between February aind April, 1816, the directors lessened their discounts frotm ~23,000,000 to ~1 1,000,000; and before Fel)ruary, 1817, to ~8,000,000; and before August of the samie year to ~7,000,000; whlilst u) to nearly the same pwiod they held of Excheqlier bills, etc., ~25,000,000.; * This reduction of the bank issues, and destruction and crippling of the country b-anks, had tnother aid still maore ilmportant effect, inIasmuch as by causilg the price of gold to fall to nearly the mint price, it encouraged the political economists to press forward, and at last, in 1819, to pass anl act, the imost important in its consequences, and extraordinary in its circumstances, that ever was decided upon by any legislature, in any age or country. *' Thec Carrency bill of (May) 1819 was passed at ttu- ias:ace of: ]RFIUT~PTION OF 5PEC1E 11.AY),kENtT,. a committee, amongst the menibers of whomnl were included all the parliamentary dabblers ill political economy of a-ly name or talent, and of whom I-eel was chairman. lI-orner, the chairman of the bullion committee of 1810O, was dead; but in his stead, they had PRicardo, a rich Jcw stock-jobber, who having made all immense fortulne by thlis worst species of ganibliing, had also contrived to obtain a rei)utation by the publication of somne books on political ecoiioimy. * " Backed by the authority of this rieh:iid arroganit mi'aii, the economists obtained on this occasioni atl almost citire comtmand of the lIouse of Commono. * * Tlhe IHoise made the plunge with o1e accord. There was hlardly the semblanqe of an opposition. Riicardo had the enormous folly to tell the tIouse that the bill as'iiot worthiv of lhalf an hour of even their consideratioi;' atnd assuried thent tlhat the whole questioln was oce of'three per ceiit;' this being the extent of tlhe fall of prices, which this mal alculltetd woul(d take place, after all the one an(d two )oilnd nlotes in the kingdom were burned, anud the remainder, of five i)ound notes and upwards, made'payable oln demand in gold sovereigns wortlh ~3, 17s., 10~ad. the ounce.' Ini short tlhere was 6nily one man in the Collmmonls who really understood and opposed the measure, and this ilman w as Mr. Matthias Attw6od, * *:nd ]Mr. Attwood was prevailed upon to quit the Hlouse that the vote might be unanimous. In the Ifouse of Lords, Lord Grey alone ventured to dissent fromi the ireasure; * * The Houses, however, for ornce'were all ini 6ne accord.' * * As a bit of legislationi, this ever-mnemorable act is remarkably brief and to the point; consisting only of thirteen not very long nor wordy clauses. It repeals, ini the first place, all the acts for restraining the bank from paying its creditors, which had been passed from 1797 tp to that tinie, the repeal going into effect'from and after the 2'95 RE.SUMPTTIO OF SPECIE PAYM,NT9. first day of MAay, 1823.' This was a repeal of all bank notes on demand for sums less than five pounds. It then provides for a gradual return, in the meantime, by the bank to cash payments; beginning with an issue of gold at four pounds one shilling the ounce, in 1820, and ending with the standard mint price of ~3, 17s., lo0d." The premium on gold during this period fluctuated as follows: 18 14...........30 per c ent. 18 17.........2 per cent. 1815........184: 4 1818..........5 1826.........2- " 1819.......... 6; 1816,Oct.to Dec.1 " 1820..........par. Although the Currency bill passed Parliament unani mnously, it did not fail to excite great alarm and opposition among the industrial and business classes of the kingdom. The Directors of the Bank of England protested against its passage, declaring that' they could not venture to advise an unrelenting continuance of pecuniary pressure upon the commercial world, the consequences of wLhich it was impost sible for them to foresee or estimrate," or countenance a measure in which "the whole communit- was so deeply involved, and which would p)ossibly compromise the universal interests of the empire ini all the rclations of agriculture, inanufactures, commerce and revenuc." Tlhe bankers and nmerchants of London joined in a petition against it, in which they predicted the most disastrous results. The contraction of the- currency, which was augmented by the passage of the bill, soon produced the most alarming results. We again quote from Alison's History of Europe. lie says: "The effects of this extraordinary piece of legislation were soon apparent. The industry of the nation was speedily congealed, as a flowing stream is by the severity of an Arctic wiuter. The alarmni became as univelrsal and wide 296 RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. spread as confidence and activity had recently been. The ceountry bankers, who had advanced largely on the stocks of goods imported, refused to continue their support to their cuistomners, and they were forced to bring their stocks into the market. Prices in consequence fell rapidly; that of cotton, in particular, sank in three months to half its former level. The country bankers' association was contracted by no less than five millions sterling ($24,000,000); and the entire circulation of England fell from $235,545,000* in 1818 to,174,385,000 ill 1820, and in the succeeding year it sank as low as $142,757,000. * i The effects of this sudden and prodigious contraction of the currency were soon apparent, and they rendered the next three years a period of ceaseless distress and suffering in the British Islands. The accommodation granted by bankers diminished so much in conisequenc(e of the obligation laid upon them to pay in specie, which was not to be got, that the paper umder discount at the Bank of England, which in 1810 had been $115,000,000, and in 1815 not less than $103,000,000, sank in 1820 to $23,360,000, and in 1821 to $13,610,000. The effect uponI prices was inot less immediate or appalling. They declined in general, within six months, to half their former amount, and remained at that low level for thle next three years. Dist ress was universal in the latter months of 1819, and that distrust and discouragement were felt in all branches of industry which are at once the forerunner and cause of disaster." From Mir. Doubleday's history we also q(1uote as follows: "WVe have already seen the fall in prices produced by the immense narrowing of the paper circulation. The distress, ruin and bankruptcy which now took place were universal, affecting the great interests both of land and trade; but especially among land owners, whose estates were burthened by mortgages, settlements, legacies, etc., *A mounts are given nlu dollars instead of pounds. 297 I' 0 5" 0,o, ID- jq ~~ _ - - - ~~~~~~ ~~0*i - p-. p- -- 0 ~~ ~;-~~ ~~o 9 IT... 0 RESUMPTION OFP SPErCIE -I'AYMENTS. w ith nxious crowds eagerly expecting news from tlhe south; the sounds of industry were no longer heald, and two iundred thousand persons ill thle busiest districts of the couliitry were thrown into a state of compulsory idleness bv tle mandates of an unseen and unknown prower." Five thousand troops were ininiediately assembled at (Glas,gow, and the ilnsurgents were overawed. ]Before the cuid (of tie yela the government had increased its volunteer force t<) 35),004) men. " Vitliout doubt," says AIison, "this powverftil v-oltiuntee force, organized especially in thle manufacturing, districts4 at this period, and the dlecisive demonstration it tfforded! of moral.aned physical strengthl oni the part of the goverliment, was the chief cause through which Great 3ritaii% escaped an alarminig convulsion." T'hus were the masses of Great Britain, whose valor aiid labor had carried the nation to the acme of glory and prspenity, ruthlessly and wanttonly sacrificed ont the altir of so called "honest money," only to further enrich the moneyed class of the kingdom. Btit after all forced specie resumiption proved a failure. Parliament was obli,ged to retrace its Steps. In 1822 an act was passed:-tthorizing tlhe issue of one and two pound notes for a period of ten years longer, and the one pound notes w?ere zade (a ft ate evervwhere except at the bank of England. "This act," says Alison, "coupled with the grant of ~4,000,000 Excllequer bills, which the goverinment was authorized to issue in'aid of the agricultural interest, had a surprising effect in restoring confidence and raising prices; a(nd by doing so, it repealed, so long as it continued, the most injurious parts of the act of 1819." But the ruin, suffering and miiser-y wliclI ]iad attended the attempt to force specie paymnents could not be undone, nor could the broken fortunes be restored. By a return to specie payments finally, the specie basis banking 29 RP,ESUMPTION OF S?ECIP PAYMKNTS. and credit system, the whole tendency of which is to coneentrate wealth in the hands of the few, was reestablished; and the industrial classes, esi:eially the agricultural class, have never since been able to recover from the blow then received. "Princes and lords may flourish, or may fade, A breath can make them, as a breath has made: But a bold peasantry, their country's pride, WVhen once destroyed, can never be supplied." In 1822 the land owners of England numbered 165,000. According to the census of 1861 the number was about 30,000, and one-half of the whole kingdom is now owned by not more than twelve persons. From this mere outline of the disastrous events which atttended specie resumption in Great Britain, revolutionizing the whole structure of British society, and shaking to the center the foundations of the government itself, some idea may be formed of what the Amllerican people will be obliged to suffer during the next few years. Great Britain theq possessed mnany advantages whicih are not possessed by tlhe United States at the present timre. I-Ier industries were in full operation; the balance of trade was largely in her favor; she had at large supply of specie to begin with; the premium on gold was only about five per cent.; and, as the country was limited in extent and densely populated, money circulated with great rapidity. On the other hand, the industries of the United States are already prostrate; the balance of trade is against the country; the specie in the country is inconsiderable in amount; the premium on gold is over twice as high as i' was in England; and the immense extent of the country precludes any possibility of money circulating with rapidity. In addition to this, British thoughtt and habit had been educated under the specie basis and credit a :300 REUSM1PTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. system of money; whilst, in the United States, experience has fully demonstrated that the system is inconsistent with the genius of American institutions and repugnant to American habits and ideas. There is every reason, therefore, to believe thlat the disaster and distress which will attend an attempt to force specie payments in the United States will exceed iin intensity that which marked the experience of Great Britain an hundred fold. The contraction which took place just after the war was carried on wholly by the government. The evil conse quences of this contraction were partially averted by the emission of over $350,000,000 of bank culTenlcy. IBut now a different kind of contraction is going on. The National Banking system has already enabled the banks to acquire possession of over two-thirds of the greenback circulation, and it is a questioni of but a short time until they will hold almost the entire amount. Their own notes are encumbered with interest, and are not subject to the natural laws of trade, but to the will of the bainks. It will take but a short time, therefore, to call them all in. The organs of the banks are constantly repeating the statement that there is, pIenty of money in the banks, and that any one can get it who has anything to get it with, and the statement is echoed and reechoed by all the demagogues and weak minded tools of the money power in the country. Properly considered, we submit that this fact-aloone confirms all the objections which we have urged against the system of banks of issue. Why is money plenty in the banks, and why is it not occupying the channels of trade and honestly performing the functions for which money is designed? For the simple reason that a medium of exchange consisting, even in part, of bank currency will not obey the natural laws of trade, because it is burdened with interest which robS the industry of the 30I I:RU.MPTIO.N OF SPE(IE PAYMENTS. nation of iuore than its average profit. In ordinary times, aftei industry had been driven to the wall and a commercial crash ha,(d brought about anl adjustment, the banks began to expand their circulation, -aied the banks and the people would enter ilpon anothier era of inflation, only to end in the same mannneLI. BJut now the specie resum-pfi.on act not only prevents aniy such expansion, but comnpels both the baniks and -he people to contract in every way possible to prepare for the imlpejtdiiig crash. True enough, money is plenty in the banks, and it will grow plentier tlere before the nation is a year older. In fact the contraction of the banks has scarcely more tha,n begun. But as failures multiply, as they are now doing with startling rapidity, loans anI( discounts will grow less eomnmton, until finally the country is entirely deprived f a circulating medium. This can end ornly in the complete .~lestruction of all values-. It will be as difficult to pay srmall debt as a large 0one, for money Will be everything and property nothing. Taxes cannot be paid, for there will be no miioney to pay -them with. Not only will individual blankrul)tcy be general, but the decrine in the public revestnucs, which must follow, will render it inmpossible for the Federal or State Governments to meet their obligations. This is the only kind of repudiation tliat need ever be feared in Amnericat. Thle people are beiiig rapidly deprived by the policy of the mollney powei, not only of the ability to sustaiii the goveritnnLent, but of the.ability to provide ~for themselves and families. That:[ natioin ploessing the wonderful .advantages and ~the skill aiid e-nergy ypossessed by tle American people shlould be broutlht to even its present distressed condition in the pursuit of a phaiitom, is simply monstrous. And when the crisis is reached, w ha;t xil have been attained? h4'Ionest money?" No. Nothing but a ecirculating mnediumn ocusisting of lbnk rl'unenc:,only nominal[ly redeemable in !3 0 - ,%ver'e coinpell(Id to-' is7 baink, (U'J ('ve r~'it -we tliiv kne(-w, 'it w'ar:.I fi-a~u(I anid ~i,t b,eeituse tJ~ylieny- to -rse ]-'ut nuider tlie~ N, —tioiijil 13-]tikiri,,:ti~t~eiel the JLt~ of tie b,,tik.~ )ville Ib ta,fkeii withont htesiu- tioii, iiot Ibee.ause thiey are (-oil~ivt,ti~ble itit~ ((I'J, )t-tt bee'tul.e theX are .,~tai-,,iiteed by tlie F~e(ter,,t ('T'oNerItIn-ei~htt-btcd~ Ufx)ll tll.( f aith Id eti of tlie ii.-tioit. lii the-i crid, ttitetef-oi-e, so far' .,~,41eele eirc!ula,tion i ciscri( it will I,-rove, as'in thle -c~t bfr the w.v'ti,,t fratd-tt ntid -t del tisi~oi-i. -fle atioti,,a J')~ ~ ~ ~~~la!k,loevrwilltve 1-t(,-oiitipl isiced tlt(,i i' end. The,~y ,-will li.-,,'e.-obta'ined absolute onitr~ol t i-ite iriotieti-.y and T-(l~ct'tffairs of tith ito e w))( itris- ill fact b~t ~ 4rind shetijeto acecomipli'sh tti-~t Ipti-JI~ose, -tud' i~t is ~in,-Irv,1o, t4 -,hat ititelligeijt fpeople canti I)e (lei('ievcd iii I)elievi-n,,~o~ther~w-ise. Iii 1'9 1, wlien ~ti~it) (u~i to establish his uitdit ~atidb,,tnlkingi sceieniet, tlte g,reat I-itt au:"Lect th~ ~ni~i causadop~t tlieir ftitidingl syvster nd *'ro iltto th~eir bn iuginstituitionis, and their indlepet-ideriee will 1)i.,t YIere ]'ihiianito~ill" W~li,tttItilo with- all1 hi eitiius anid great iil~ity, -t-id iinflutence w.,ts unabtl)e to'itceoniplisli ill tilt, ~infancy of the rep,ublic, a ptack of veti-tal deiaagogues have well nighi accoiiplislie d nearly a century ltr People are wpont to say, and a4)l)atxently senen to t-it'nk tliat it is an RESUMPTION OF SPECIE PAYMENTS. evidence of their good sense, "that they don't knlow nor care anything about this financial question." It is high time that everybody should seek to understand this question, because until the National Banks are destroyed and a system of money is founded upon sound principles, there Canl be no enduring prosperity in the country, and the " independence of the people will be a mere phantom." The demoralization which is now going on throughout the country in coniequence of the enforced idleness and poverty of umillions of people, is a matter of serious import, and one which should awaken to a sense of duty and action every christian man and woman in the land, and especially ministers of the Gospel, who profess to follow lIim whose tenderest care was ever manifested for the weak, the lowly and the oppressed. There is another fact which may convey a wvarning to, those who are lending themselves to the ignoble cause of enriching the money power at the expense of ruin, poverty and distress to the masses. When the American people are driven to the extremity that the English and Scotch people were, by an attempt to force resumption, and gather in vast: multitudes, as the English did at Peterloo and the Scotch at Glasgow, to demand redress, matters will assumie a very different shape in the United States from what they did in Great Britain. It is true that an organ of a notorious Wad, street operator, the New York Tribune, has intimated that any such demonstrations would promptly be met with "shot and slaughter;" but in the United States that is more easily said than done. The day has not yet arrived when Amern cans can be intimidated by such threats. As yet they "their duties know, but know their RIGHTS, and knowing dare maintain them." While the American people undoubtedly possess too much patriotism and intelligence to jeopardize the stability of their institutions, they nevertheless may possibly forget, in the hour of their distress, that the Lord hath said, "vengeance is mine." In that day the Sherman and McCullochs had better never have been born. CHIAPTER IX. A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. IT is a common error, inculcated by the bullionists, to suppose that metallic coins alone are nmoney, and that money is the same thing in all parts of the world. iNotlingio could be further from the tluth. Popuilation, commerce ald trade have long since outgrown the world's supply of thle precious metals. Every nation builds up a monetary systemr of its own, and no two systemIs are or can be alike. The nmonetary system of a nation is an outgrowth of its civilization, precisely as are its maniners, its customs, its laiguage and its government. For example, Great Britain and France both use nietallic coins and paper money, and yet the monetary systems of the two nations differ in almiost ever-y pa-uticular. Several centuries ago tle increase in poltulation, trade and manufactures and tl-e linited supply of gold and silver rendered it impossible for the people of Great Britain to secure a sufficient amount of coin to form an adequate medium of exchange. The true nature and functions of money were but imperfectly understood, and no effort was made, on the part of the government of that king,doml, to remedy the difficulty under which the people labored in effecting their exchanges. The people were obliged to do the best they could. Exchanges of property and commodities thus came to be effected to a great extent by means of promissory notes, book accounts, and other devices of the credit system. In the course of time the Bank of Englland was established. Soon after it was established its managers conceived the 20 x A MONETARY SYSTEMI FOUNDED idea of issuing bank notes, to be exchanged for the notes of individuals. -Merchants and other]s gladly availed themselves of an opportunity to substitutte the notes of a responsible and widely kllown instituttion for the notes of individuals, which couldt onily circulate inl a limited sphere. Bank notes were found to be capable of greatly facilitating the operations of trade, and be(alle the chief reediui of exchange of tlhe natioin. Bank notes, it will be perceived, are purely an offshoot or developlmient of tlle credit system, invented to remedy the want of ain adequate medium of exchange. In this imannier a monetary system of a peculiar character has b een deveioped in Great Britain, which has exercised a powerful influence upon the destinies of tlhe peolple of that kingdomi and also upon the rest of the world. The monetary system tllus develop)ed in Great BIiitain, althoulgh based on specie, is made up almost wholly of credit. The statelment of Sir John Lubbock, given on page 48, shows that of ~19,000,000, paid ilito his bank in a few days, only one-half of one per ceint. consisted of coin. Every dollar in coin in Great Briitain tllhus becomes tile basis of an iimmiense superstructure of credit. Gold coins are the legal tender money of the coultr-y, silver being a tender only for small sumns. As the exchanges of the country a'e carried on with a lne(ditiln of exclhang'e oilyv a small percentage of which is coin, whieever a stringency occurs, or a want of confidence prevails, which inevitably happens as soon as the credit of thle nation becomes fully inflated, everybody seeks to obtain possessioln of this small percentag(e of the circulating mediium, which alone is a tender ill payment of debts. Coiii consequently rises in value and is no longer a proper measulre of otlher values. In this respect at least its functions as moniey are totally perverted. Money thus instituted is given a tremenedous power over 306 I ,UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. property and labor, and the whole tendency of the system is to make the rich richer and the poor poorer. The system, however, is in accord with the views held by the aristocratic or goveirning class of Great Britain, and fillds its champions in a school of political economists, who profess to believe, and strive to inculcate, the doctrine that it is natural and proper that poverty and want and disease and misery should be next door neighbors of wealth and unbounded prosperity. It is due chiefly to this system of money that such great extremes of wealth and poverty are to be found in Great Britain. France, like Great Britain, uses both coin and paper money, but money in Frane is inlstituted ulpon entirely different plrinciples. The policy of the French Govelrnment is to render mioney abundant and cheap, in order that the exchan,ies of the nation may be effected with the least cost possible, and that the productive ability of the people may be developed to the utmost extent. The men who mouldled the French system were wise enougth to know that labor is the true source of wealth, and that the surest way to render the government powerful was to enable the miasses to become prosperous. This was not accomplished witlout a great struggle. Colwell, in his work on The Ways and M-eans of Payment, says: "The system of public finance in France, once so cumbrous and awkward, so expensive and otherwise disadvantageous to the nation, has, during the past half century,* under the able direction of Count MAollien, the -,ar(quis D'Audriffet and other elminenit men, undergone such radical chainges as have completely modified both its principles and its mode of operation. These refonrms were resisted, in every stage and with every weapon, by the parties (the money power) interested in maintainingi old *This was written prlor to 1860. 307 A MONETARY SYSTEM[ FOUNDED abuses. The persevering efforts of honest and intelligent men for thirty or forty years overcame all opposition, andi France now enjoys a finan cial systemn, in not a few respects, superior to any othler nation." The people of France have the cash systemi anid pay as they go. The cir'culation of the country consists of about 81,200,000,000 in specie and about $500,000,000 of irredeemable legal tellder paper money, issued by the Bank of France. The Loidon 8Standa'cd of April 14, 1806, in colnimenting on the remarkable condition of the French finances, says: "The Bank of France at the present timie occupies in the financial world a position more relnarkal)le than lhas ever been held by such an establishinejit. Its notes ejijoy a forced currency and are a le,gal teinder in all busilness tran'sactions, yet those notes suffer no depreciation. They pass from hand to hand for precisely the same value as gold. A sufficient exl)lalnationl of this fact may, perhaps, be found by some persons in the circumrstance that the bank has accumnulatedI in its coffers at this moment tlhe greatest quantity of the precious metals that has ever yet been possessed by a single establishmient. That, hlowever, does not really accoulnt for the Lnidiminlished credit of the bank. For even in the agony of the last war, when the veteran armies of the empire were prisoniers in Geirmaniy, wlien Paris was closely invested, and one-tl-iiid of thle departuieats were occupied by the invader, the batnk's notes were at no greater discount thlan two or three per cent., and almnost immediately rose to par. It is, then, tihe admirable management of the bank, not the satisfactory nature of its reserve, wlich gives to it the conIfidence it commanlds. It adds to the peculiarity of the )osition that, alfiouigh the bank possesses a stock of gold and silver out of all proportion greater than is held by any othler bank in the world, it does not propose iimmediately to 308 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. resume specie payments. And what is more remiarkable still, nobody demands that; it shall do so." A further examination of the monetary systems of other nations would disclose similar peculiarities and differences; in some gold is the only tender, in others silver, and in others gold, silver and paper. In Austria, for example, silver pieces of the denomination of onle alld one and a half florins are a legal tender to any amount. Gold is also coined into pieces of the denomination of four and eight florins (about $2 and $4), but as gold is not a tendei, it is regarded as merchandise and fluctuates in value like other merchandise. The Austrian system is modeled after the British system, silver forming the basis instead of gold, and it has proved there as elsewhere a perpetual source of disaster. From these facts it is manifest that a people should be far more concerned about the mianner in which their monetary system is instituted than about the material of which their money is made. The chief function of money is to exchange property and commodities, and it should be instituted in such a manner as to enable this to be done economically and equitably, so that all classes may be duly rewarded in the distribution of the products of labor, according to their deserts. People strive to accumulate wealth, and wealth, in its ordinary signification, consists of property and money. As money, by virtue of its legal properties, is an equivalent for all kinds of property, its possession is eagerly sought, and hence it seems that people are seeking solely for money, which is not the fact. Mloney is simply the means to attain the end, which is dominion over propelrty. Real value belongs only to property or products, and money is the legal medium by which it is represented, measured and exchanged, 309 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED and hence money, properly consideredl, is simpliy a tool of exclhange. As has already been explained, the population, commerce and trade of the woild has lonlg since outgrowil the supply of thle precious metals available for the purposes of a niedimn of exchange. Other forms of money are in use in alIl civilized nations. The larger operaztiojs of' trade, both foreign and domestic, are carried on almost wholly by means of paper devices or substitutes for money, vw]ich represenlt and are based on thle value of the commodities exchanged. Bills of exclhange constitute the real "money of the world." The trade between different sections of the country, like the foreign trade, is carried on almnost entirely by nieans of bills of exchange, checks, drafts, etc., and no one will say that it is not more economically and safely done tlhan if it was carried on by means of gold and silver. The volnme and amount of the bills of exchange, etc., used are limited only by the exchanges to be made. If any one were to stuggest that bills of exchange, drafts, etc., whethler foreiign or domestic, shiould be limited in volume and amount by law, lie would probably be denounced as a fool, and yet it is just as absurd and far more unjust to limnit the volumie and amount of the legal tender money to an amount manifestly inadequate to effect the exchanges of the nation. Money, by reason of its legal properties, under any circuinstances, has sufficient p ower over property to enable it to perform all the essential functions of monoey, namely, to exchange and acculmulate value; but to limit it in amount, as by selecting a rare and expensive mnaterial like gold, or by arbitrarily declaring by law, as in the case of legal tender Treasury notes, that it shall not exceed a certain suim, without regard to lpol)ulation, extent of country, or exchanges to be effected, is to invest money with an extraordinary 310 UPOX SOUND PRINCIPLES. power over property, labor and trade, as unsouiid iii principle as it has proved ruinous in practice. THIE RE-AL ISSUE. The issue presented to the American people, then, in the present crisis, is not between specie and paper money, but between two systems of money, both involviig the use of paper currency. No more ilmportant question could possibly arise, for upon its proper solution depends not only the present prosperity of the nation, but the welfare of the people for generations to come. "Monletary laws," says Kellog,g, "are the most important that are enacted, for by these laws money is made thle tender for debts and the medium of exchangie for products. All individuals are compelled to found their contracts for the necessaries of life upon the standard fixed by law. However good the intention of the parties, their contracts will partake of the evil of the'uonetary laws upon which they are founded, and every law that goes to support the fulfillment of the contracts will partake of the same evil. * * The laws make money the foundation for all business contracts. The value of this foundation is unjust and continually varying, so that parties in fulfilling their contracts are compelled to give either more or less than a just equivalent for their purchases. The results of all contracts are as varying and unjust as their foundation. The continual fluctuations in thle value of money makes a sort of gambling system of all trade."' The distinguishing features of the two systems of money, The Specie Basis or Bank Currency System and The Legal Tender Paper Mo(ney System, which are now presented to the American people for their adoption or rejection, have been duly explained in the foregoie,,g I)ages. It only remains now to b.ii)ln, tlhem tog,etlher, ii order that the 311 A MIONETARY SYSTEMI FOUNDED advantages acnd disadvantages of each may be fully discernled. THE SPECIE BASIS OR BANIK CURRENCY SYSTE]M. The specie basis or bank currency system originated with the Bank of England;* it was introduced into the United States about the time of the Revolution, and has exercised a powerful influence upon the business and social relations of the people of the United States since that time. The fact that banks of issue have existed ill the United States for over three-quarters of a century has led many to suppose that issuing, and lending bank notes constitute the chief business of banks. Issuing or lending bank notes, on the contrary, is a niere incident of the business of banking. The great functioil of banking is the adjustmnent of payiments, growing out of the exchange of property and colmmodities, by means of devices of the credit systelm, such as bills of exclange, etc. Banking, as we have explained,t is an agenlcy of trade, second in importance only to money itself. For many purposes of trade the means of payment afforded by balnks are preferable to the use of cash, as wherei they obviate tl-he necessity of transferring or retransferring money between individuals, localities and nations havin( mutual dealings. The great error of the specie basis and bank currency system of bankinig consists in this, that the banks, not satisfied with furnishinig the means of payment best adapted for carrying onl the larger operations of trade, seek to colmpel the public to use the samne means of paynlent (devices of the credit systemn) in all the operations of trade, although for many purposes cash is preferable to credit. No dclividing line can be established between the use of cash and credit, and it is nmanifestly but the part of wisdom to have nmoney so instituted that commerce and trade can avail *See page 89. tSee page 76. 312 UPOX SOUND PRINCIPLES. themiselves of either cash or credit in such proportions as may be most advantageous. If the circulation consists of bank currencey this cannot be done, because bank currency is credit and not cash. "The banks of the United States, says Colwell, one of the most conscientious as well as profound writers upon the subject of money, "are, properly spl)eaking, dealers in credit. So far as their capital is paid up in gold or silver, it is reserved as a security for thleir circulation. It is a rare thing that a bank lends gold or silver. Their business consists mainly in piiurchasiyng con'mercial paper that is, the evi(lences of debt taken by mce: of business in the ordinary course of their affairs; in payinglr foil that paper with bank notes, or with credits granited( upon their books; in receiving upon deposit their own notes and claims or transfers upon other banks; in allowing a constant transfer of deposits, in the way of payment, ainolig their customers and those with whomn they deal. The banks, then, are not lenders of money, thoughrl complelled to pay their obligations in mioney. They are foiin(led on the idea that an association of mien, with a paid up capital, and a corporate existence, is entitled to a higher ciredit than individuals, and that the latter mighlt find it greatly for thleir advantage to avail themselves in their business transactions of this superior credit." It is undoubtedly highly advantageous to individuals to be enabled to avail tlhemselves of this superior credit in imany of the operations of trade, but it is equally imlp)ortalnt that they s-hou-ld be e.nabled also to avail themselves of the use of cash in other operations. Under the bank currency system cash does not circulate in the channels of trade, but bank notes, and these are continually being returnied to the banks in payment of debts. The following extracts fromn The Ways and Means of Payment, to which we are alreacldy so much indebted, will 313 A MONETARY SYSTENI FOUNDED convey a clearer idea of the leading principles, whielh underlie the specie basis systemi, than we could otherwise hope to give. It should be reimembered that lIr. Colwell's work was written prior to 1860: "Te have seen," says Colwell, "that thle credit systenm rests upon the fact, that the businiess of purchasing and selling commodities is separated from the business of paymients; and upon the furthler fact, that the commodities which men sell are made to pay for those they purchase So far as credits and payments are concerned it is the maia object of every man to apply his credits to pay his debts; to emiuploy what is due to him by others in discharging thlat which he owes to others. Thle main agency in this is tlhe banks. Itiswellknown thlat all the large transactions of businiess are made upon the credit of the parties concerned in them; that the great staples of thle country, as well as forei,gn goods ini large quantities, are boulght and sold upoIl individual credit. The imarket value involved in every transaction is expressed in money of account, and appears on the face of thle bills of exclhange and promissory notes which the purchaser gives, and thle seller takes, as evidence of the debt incurred and credit given ill each case. These evidences of deblt and credit, which represent, in various shlapes, the market value of the commodities, foreign and and domestic, as they move in the channels of trade are the very articles in which it is the object and proper business of the banks to deal. The parties to these evi,dences of debt, or this commercial paper, having delivered and received the eomiuodities upon which the credits andcl indebtedness are alike founded, have the remaining duty of payment to fulfill." * * "Mleni extensively engaged in comlmnercial andl industrial pursuits are, by the velry nature of their business, both buyers 314 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. and sellers-both debtors and creditors. It is ilmplortant to pay their debts, and realize thleir credits, with the least trouble, expense and waste of time possible. NWhlen any two of tlhem have mutual accounts against ecch other on thleiI books, they compare and balance tllhei: of course debts so paid, and credits so realized, are as satisfactorily 1,aid and realized as if gold had passed on each transaction. So each man of business indebted 1upon)1 piromissorI, notes and bills of exchange, and holding such paper of otheirs for debts due to him, is only desirous of aplplying his credits to his debts. HIe never thinks of looking for gold or silver to effect a discharge of his debts, and as little (los lie think of exacting such payment fronm those who aire indlebted to him*." "The banks of the United States are the chief agencies in this mode of payment. They offer thie mieans and facilities of payment which the parties to this business paper require. They receive this paper, hlA. vilig somle months to run to maturity, and deducting, interest for the time, give thle parties bank notes, or a credit on their books for the proceeds. This is not turning individual notes into money, it is simIply turning tlemn into promissory notes of thie bank, or deposits; these being of highler credit, and fitted fromn the imannier in which they a-:e issued, to be used as a currency or a meedinin of payminent. The real basis of the individual notes discounted by the bank is the co-mmodities which the person giving the notes received. These persons contracted debts to the several amounts of their notes, and ag,ainist these debts they hold the purchlased coiimmodities. They offer the goods thus purchased to the public, and expect, from their sale, to realize the means of paying the debts. The discounted paper, therefore, exhibits on its face the true market value of the commodities purchased by it; 315 A MONETARIY SYSTEM[ FOUNDED and the bank notes, or bank credits, given for this individual paper have the same basis, with the added guarantee of the bank. All bank notes and( bank credits issued upon real business paper are virtually issued for commodii ities actually moving in the regular channels of trade. The purchasers of these coimmodlities expect to realize enoutgh, by thleir sale, inot only to pay for them, but a profit beside. "It is this process which is co2ntic?ktally absoi'biii, b(a)t Ytotes a() ( et'i thems to tle b(at'ks. Tlhe sellers of goods receive the paper of tl-e purchase s, and dispose of it to thle bank, taking therefor bank notes and bank eiedits, the latter of whlich they elmploy in payilng their debts, and the foirmer pass into circulation in the r etail bu,tsine.ss, and in this way soon reach the hands of the debtors of the banks, to wholl they aie always as valuable as the equivalent, or same nominial amount of gold or silver, and even more desirable, because they pay debts to the bank equally well, and with less trouble, expense and hazard." * * "If the banks in any comlnmunity have discounted notes to the amounIt of a million, averaging sixty days to maturity, granltin(, credits therefor to the amount of $9900 00, they will piromptly give up any or all the notes going to make up the million, for a return of their credits to the amount. The banks give nothinlg for the notes discounted but credlits on their books: what they gave for the notes they are willing to receive in kind for them. The profits of the bank, being the interest, for which they issued no credits, must of course be paid when the notes are retired. The main business 6f the banks consists, then, in purchasing coimmercial securities and evidences of debt, paying for them with their own notes anld balk credits, and deducting the interest for their profit. In doing this, they not only 316 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. furnish a mediumn of payment in which these commercial securities caln be discharged, bu,t C6 citriregcy wiich m2ay be emntoyed in the itterval, before it is applied to the extinction of these debts. What cliefly makes this currency available andl effective is, that there is an active andl urgent demand for it, to the whole amount dule to the banks; that is, for more than all the ballks have issued. This demand is active, urgent, daily, unremitting: the notes in bank are maturing daily, and the demand, therefore, never flags; every day has its payments, which are to be effected with money, or the issues of the banks. The latter, in any community where thlere are banks of circulation, being the chief mediumon of payment, is the medium most in demand. "We have shown that, in all cases where the notes discounted by the banks were given by the makers of them for commodities of daily use and consumption, these commnodities are immediately offered to the public for bank notes, or checks on bank deposits, as the proper fund with which to pay the discounted notes. The commodities, by their sale, give origin to promissory notes; the promissory notes give rise to the bank notes and credits; these become, in their turn, a medium with which to purchase the commodities; and the bank notes and bank credits coming thus, by circulation, into the hands of the debtors to the banks, are returned to the banks in payment of the discounted notes." * * "In cases where banks discount paper not given for property transferred at the time, it is, or should be, on well grounded confidence that the maker of the paper has the power or means of redeeming from the hands of the public an equal amount of the issues of the bank. The banks being large holders of individual paper, either discounted or deposited witlh then for collection, they are of course constantly looked to for the means of payment; and a credit 317 A MONETARY SYSTE.M FOUNDED on the books of:, bank, granted by the bank, or derived from another quarter, being all that is required, it is earnestly soughit for that purpose. Wh-ere there a-re many banks, and large transac(tions in business and u1pon credit, the movement of these payments in banks, and the consequent movement of bank credits or deposits, become far too complicated to be followed up by any process of analysis. One great feature, however, must ever be prominent, and that the most effective of all in sustainingi the present banlking system; that is, that every debtor of a balnk is an active agenlt in purchasiing and returning to thle bank its notes and credits; that the issues of the banks, whether notes or credits on their books, are more available, conven-ient and economical for these debtors, than the legal currency of coins. They are more abundant, more easily obtained, and equally effective. It is this which gives to bank notes and bank credits their efficiency and rapidity of movement. The amount of the circulation of the New York banks averaged over $8,000,000 in 1857, and the deposits averaged over $87,000,000. These constitute the medium in whichl the payments of the City of Nev Yolrk are chiefly made. Withl these, there is a daily payment to be made of from $30,000,000 to $.50,000,000, and they are quite capable of making that amount of payments each day, for both notes and deposits may be paid many timres duringi the day. It is very safe to assume that over $30,000,000 of city bank notes and deposits are paid each business day in New York. There is a demand, then, upon these notes and deposits in every week, for payments, to the amount of $200,000,000, and in every month for $800,000,000. This demand daily, weekly, monthly, constantly pressing upon a fund of bank notes and deposits, which may at no time exceedl $100,000,000, is certainly active and )pressing enough to keep up the value 318 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. of a fund so much used, and so indispensable to the men who have $200,000,000 to pay evely week. "That these stins are far within the actual daily payments of New York is apparent from thle operatiolls of the Clearinghouse. Tlhe amlount cleared daily, in 1857, was over $20-, 000,000, and these clearings are but the balances on the transactions between the ballks. A vast sumi of payments is made every day in thle business of such a city as New York, which is in no way embraced in the transactions of the Clearing,-house. If we assume that the whole of the )aylments effected yearly throulgh the a,gency of banks in the United States, is only ten timies greater than the amount paid yearly in New York, we shall have an aggregate 400 times greater than the amount of the precious metalsi in thle country; 500 timies the amount of the bank note circulation of the United States; 400 times the amiount of bank deposits; and 30 timles the annual value of the whole productive indust,y of tile country." * "hIu the great movemenets of industry and trade, goods and services pay for goods aId( services; the promissory notes, bank notes, banrk credits, or other currency,9 which intervene, are devices of adjustment, and not the very payment ultimately aimed at. Mel give what they have to spare, to obtain what they desire. If they do not, in the first instance, sell for money, and with that purchase what they want they take a security or evidence of debt; they make their purchases upon their individual credit, and give evidences of debt. The debt and credit extinguish each other in the banks, and thle parties have, in substance, exchaingedl goods; all the rest is merely keeping and balancingT accounts between them. These securities are issued, in this country, to an amiount not less than $1,000,000,000 every three months, in whichl period this amount continually 319 A MONETARY SYSTEM~ FOUNDED runs off and is renewed, makingi $4,000,000,000 in the year. Of this $1,000,000,000 of securities, thle banks become the owners and collectors; and for half this amount they are under a constant engageiment to pay money on demand. To meet this engagemient, the banks hold $60,000,000 against $500,000,000, or twelve per cent. of the amount. Of course, absolute convertibility of all this fund of securities into specie, on demand, is an impossibility. If all the gold and silver in the country, esti-matted at $250,000,000, were in tlie banks, it would be an impossibility. It must, therefore, continue to be impossible; and hen(.ce aises one of the gravest difficulties connected with banks of circulation. "If bank notes, like checks upon banks, were confined in their use and circulation to those at whose special instance they are issued, and whose debts are to be adjusted by them, there wvouldcl be less occasion for any public intervelntion or concern. For the public have little interest, whether men thus mutually indebted dischlarged their debts by halancing accounts, by bank notes, or by checks on banks. But the experience of a century and a half has shown that, where bank notes are offered as a currenlcy, they are freely received, and soon become tlhe chlief medium of exchange. It is almost invariably true that, wlherever bank notes are offered as a currency, with even the sligltest pretensions to regularity and security, they are accepted, and pass rapidly into general circulation. This facility of converting bank paper into a currency is a strorng temptation to resort to it, and accounts iii part for the multiplication of banks of circulation in this country and elsewhere; but it has given rise, also, to that ceaseless jealousy with which this system of banking has been watched. There is, perhaps, more ground for this jealousy tlhan many friends of the system 320 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. have been willing to acknowledge. If the circulation of bank notes had been confined to the payment of the debts ill which they originate, no more mischief could ellsue than now arises firom thle employment of checks upon banks, which the parties using them are interested to keep) withil legitimate and safe bounds. But as bank notes, wherever offered, secure a wide circulation, it is not enough to say, let people take them at their risk, as they take them at their discretion." * * "We have said, and the figures we have adduced show, that convertibility of the notes and deposits of our banllks is imlpossible, even when the banks are in tlhe bcst condition. Aind that this must continue to be the case, conlstituted as the banks of the Un,ited States are, is as certain. The main feature of the business of these ballks is the discount of notes maturing at a future time: we have previously assumed that the average timie to run, of tle paper thus discounted, is ninety days, or one-fourth of a year. They issue to the parties at whiose instance these discounts are made, their notes payable:on demand, or give them credit on their books for the proceeds, payable in like manner onl demand. The deposits of the banks are made -Lil, almost altogether, froiom the notes thus issued, and the credits thus granted. The circulation and deposits of 1856 amounted to $445,000,000, for which the banks, by this mode of doing business, becane liable oil demand; that is, they received from, their customers claims oil the public matuiing in three months, and they become liable to pay a certainl amount on demand; in the year 1856, for instance, ill every thlree months, $445,000-, 000, and in 1857, in evelry like period, $500,000,000. The paper discounted by the banks not being payable ol demand would only be paid, and could only be demanded as it mnatured from day to day; whether the sums thus paid into 321 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED the banks were eight or ten millions daily, it was all the banks could exact, and if the notes had not been discounted, the amount required to pay them would have been the same. But the banks became liable to the payment of from $445,000,000 to $500,000,000 ill any one day in 1856 and 1857a position, stripped of the miists and prejudice which constantly surround it, which should be called, as it really is, stupendously absurd; and, in times of commercial revulsion, not less dangerous than absurd." * * "Banks of circulation, however, here and elsewhere, are and continue to be placed under stringent legal obligations to pay their liabilities in coins. If any law could compel them to do this, and still leave them power sufficient to carry on the business of banking with the same advantage to their customers and the public as at present, the currency they would furnish would indeed be the best attainable for circulation. For a paper currency of sufficient amount, absolutely and at all times convertible, would combine almost every conceivable advantage. The obstacle is, that such a convertibility is impossible; no legislation can accomplish it; the onlnnipotence of the British Parliament could not achieve it. Even the unusual provision in the constitution of the State of New York, which denies the power to the Legislature of legalizing a suspension of specie payments, availed not in 1857, during the fearful panic of the hundred days. This precaution about the notes did not extend to the deposits. The banks suspended upon their deposits, which were ten times the amount of their notes. They have since resumed, and have now $31,000,000 of specie to $90,000,000 of notes and deposits. With this enormous and unusual accuinulation of gold, payment on demand rests only on the forbearance of the people. The depositors could bring the banks to a state of suspension in two hours. 322 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. Ulpon this state of facts, the common phrase that our bank circulation is based on gold and silver is absolutely untrue. If our paper currency had no other basis than this very uncertain, insecure, and ultimately impossible convertibility, it could not be upheld for a week, nor even a day. The real basis of our paper currency, that which does sustain it through extraordinary emergencies, is the individual promissory notes, and other evidences of debt, in exchange for which it is issued. These must all be paid, or the debtors must fail or suspend. The business men of the United States owed the banks, in 1856, the sum of $684,000,000; and the banks were indebted, for their circulation and deposits, $445,000,000. If we suppose that these debtors to the banks were 100,000 in number, owing an average of $6,840 each, all this mass of business men would be active agents in redeeming the issues of the banks, of which the average burden of each would be $4,450. The products of the industry of a country being sold, individual paper being given therefor, and-thel issues of the bank being given for that individual paper, it is evident not only that the issues are based upoll that paper, but it is equally evident that the commodities for which the individuals issued their paper have come into their hands, that they have these commodities to offer to the public for the notes in circulation, and for checks on the banks, with which to pay their debts. The real strength of the banks is in this, that their business is founded on the trade and industry of the country; and all the business men, with the commodities of daily consumiption in their hands, are under the strongest inducements to offer these commodities for the notes and deposits of the bank. ' It nmust not, then, we repeat, be supposed that the basis of our paper currency is specie; the fact is, and must be, 323 AA MONETARY SYSTEM: FOUNDED otherwise; that is no foundation to be relied upon, which must go with the first flood. No superstructure like our banking system should be reared upon a quicksand. We do not urge this as an argument against convertibility on demand, in the aspect of a check upon the banks. It may be necessary or expedient, but cannot be so on the grouncld of its being the basis, or adequate security, of bank issues. WVe should not make the concession even by implication, that $50,000,000 or $60,000,000 of gold and silver can be any proper basis for issues or liabilities of the banlks to the amount of $445,000,000 to $500,000,000: it is a mere delusion, to regard the former amounts as sufficient to sustain a demand for the latter." * "We object, then, to a phrase so likely to mislead, as that of calling gold or silver the basis of paper currency, under the present constitution of our banks. The obligation to pay on demand can be nothing more than a check on the abuse of banking, or a security to the public, and as such only should it be regarded and discussed. If it. be indispensable, it is upon the ground that no other adequate security is attainable. We do not believe this, and regard this attempt to place the credit system on the back of our coinage system, as partaking of that caution and wisdom which would place a locomotive, for its best service, upon a one-horse cart." THE COST OF THE SPECIE BASIS SYSTEM. Under the specie basis system the money of the country is locked up in bank vaults as the basis of bank etwrenrcy, and the business of the country is necessarily carried on with credit and currency. Tie amount of credit and curTency, is limited, not by the amount of specie held by the banks, but by the amount of property and commodities mov'ig 324 UPON SOUND PRlINCIPLES. ini the clhannels of trade. The cost of such a miediuml of exchange is enormous. The amiount of the loans and discounts of the banks during the year 1875 aimounted, on aii average, to nearly $1,000,000,000, the interest oil which at 10 per cent. is $100,000,000.*' The loans and discounts miade outside of the banks doubtless exceed the loans and discounts of the banks, but assumliing that they are the saime ($1,000,000,000), a-nd that the rate of interest averages 15 per cenit. for the year, it would amlount to $150,G00,000, or in all $250,000,000 paid yearly in the way of interest. But there is another method of arriving at an approximate cost of the system, which makes the amount much larger. The clearings of the banks of New York city average about 820,000,000 daily. Estimnating the payments of the city of New York at $40,000,000 daily, and the payments of the whole counltry at five times tllat aemoint, or $200,000,000 daily, will give $60,000,000,000 for the year. If this vast suni of payments costs the payers onl an average 60 days' interest, or say one per cent. on the whole amount, it will make the sumll paid yearly unider the credit system $600,000,000. This vast sum1 is paid by the industries of the coulntry. With a miediium of exchangec occupyilng the channels of trade, uneniculil)ered by interest, such as specie or legal tender Treasury notes, tlhe greater portion of this enorimous stumn would be saved to the producing classes of the nation. The interest paid for a miediuim of exellchange furnished by the banks and for tlhe use of credit rendered necessary by the bank currency system, is a burden upon production and trade, that can only be removed by the extinction of banks of issue and the substitution of legal tender Treasury notes for bank currency. 'See Page 26. 325 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED COr31ERCIAL CRASHES AND MONEY PANICS. When the business affairs of the country are ill active operationl, the whole amount of credit and currency available for the purposes of trade is in constant dellland. As trade increases the demand for credit and currency illncreases, until it becomes inflated to a dangerous extent, or a demand for specie may arise abroad. In either event the banks arce obliged to provide for their own safety, and tl-he withdrawal from business men of the required amount of currency and credit produces a stringency, which inevitably leads to disaster. The mannier in which this happens is thus explained by Colwell: "It is not difficult to see what abundant food for panic there is in such a condition of things. Persons in the United States have claims to the amount of $400,000,000 on the hanks, payable on demand; these claimants know that the banks cannot pay in specie the fifth part of them, and oftel not the tenth part. And altlhougih the specie is not what they need, or would ever have asked, yet they know that the banks may stop payment in an hour; that they wiII thcn be branded as bankrupt; and that thley may thereupon be subjected to injurious and damaging legaI prioceedings: panic becomes, therefore, inevitable. eVIc in such ei'cuimstances feel themselves to be involved in a, widespread, complicated calamity. They fear the result, not only for the amount of their present deposits, and the bank notes they hold, but they tremble for other debts due to them, and are it equal dread about what they owe. Tliey know that if this machinery of the credit system is stopped, or seriously disturbed, debts cannot be paid. The banks, under the iifluence of a panic,,knowinlg that they can neither trust one another, nor the unreasonling public, for an hour, adopt wlat seems to them the only safe course; they receive in parineint 326 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. all their issues as fast as current payments return them, without, however, as usual, keeping up the currency by fresh discounts. If the payments at the banks amount in the United States, for each day, to $300,000,000, the withdrawal of the usual facilities at the banks by contraction, to the extent of even one-half, would rapidly absorb the stock of bank notes and deposits applicable to current payments, and of course make these paylments daily more difficult, and finally, to a large extent, impossible. IHighi interests such as eighteen, twenty-four or thirty-six per cent. per amulnn, supervenes in this hour of trial to check still further the circulation of that portion of the bank notes and deposits not absorbed by the banks." * * "The contraction in New York, in the panic of 1857, is a specimen of what the banks are constrained to do, to save themselves. They can only protect their coffers by refusing to issue the usual supply of currency. The diminiution of loans alnd deposits in the banks of New York stood thus in August and October, 1857: Loans. I)ep)osits. 15th of August......... $121,241,472 $92,356,328 19th of September...... 108,777,421 75,772,774 17th of October........97,245,826 52,894,623 "This exhibits a reduction of discounts, in one month, of $13,000,000, and the succeeding monthl of $11,000,000; that is, $24,000,000 in sixty days: in one month deposits ral down, under this operation, $17,000,000; in the succeeding month, $23,000,000; making, in the two months, a reduction in the chief medium of payment of $40,000,000. The deposits were thus reduced nearly one-half. It cannot be surprising that, under such a process, of contraction, interest went up to between fifteen and thirty-six per cent., and exchange down to nine or ten per cent. below par. What the banks did in New York was done, ill a greater or less 327 A MONETARY SYSTEMi FOUNDED degree, in other cities; bankruptcy, ruin and destruction followed. It is estimated that from five to six thousand failures occurred, involving an indebtedness of from $280, 000,000 to $300,000,000, with a loss to creditors of more than $150,000,000. But this loss bears no comparison with that arising fiom the depreciation of securities, and from the fall ill price of real and personal property, which, judging from thle results of estimates carefully made, cannot be less than $500,000,000, and may not improbably be twice that sum. The loss sustained by the men who labor for their living is even more severe in its consequences, if not equal in pecuniary amount. A million of men idle for six imonthls involves a loss to tlhe country of $150,000,000, besides the loss upon the machinery, shops, tools and factories, which stand idle when the workmen are unemnployed. "T]he late panic has inflicted, in all its bearings and ramifications, a loss upon the country which may be variously estimated from $500,000,000 to $1,000,000,000. No doubt the ill effects of the panic were much enhanced by the previous abuse of credit, and that a considerable portion of this devastation should be set down to that account. With every allowance in that respect, we shall have a vast sum of loss to cliarge to the panic; and whether this sum be $400,000,000, or $800,000,000, matters not to our view. The loss was, to great extenit, unnecessary, cruel, terrible - a loss which has carried privation, distress and ruin to a million of homies. For a time, at least, not yet passed, it reduced ihuidreds of thousands of the best people to a state of entire dependence, if not beggary. "What was the occasion of these dire calamities? The banks of the United States had a reserve of specie for several years previous to 1857, and during the first half of that year, amiounting to somewhat over $50,000,000; and of this, :328 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. the banllks in thle city of New York held a little anore than onie-fifthl. To save this amount of specie, the ballks contracted the currency one-half, denied the usual facilities upon their books, p)ut up the rate of interest fiomI twelve to thlirty-six per cent., put (lown exclhange upoii England to nine or ten per cent. below par, reduced the revenue from customs to less than half thle usual amount, drew a surplus of $20,000,000 of gold out of the public treasury, and drove the governnenlt to an issue of paper promises to pay its current expenses, deprived hunldreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of their customary eimploymenlt, caused soine five or six thousand failures amlong incii of business, and finally inflicted a loss on the country, in the depreciation of securities, in the reduction of prices and by insolvency, of several hundred inillions.-Not to save this suml of fifty millions from beiiig lost, sunk in the ocean, or thrown away, were all tlese evils encountered, but merely to prevent it from passing into circulation among the people, or' at the worst, to preveit it fromn being exported in payment of debts due in forei,gn countries. Nine-tenths of the debts of the country are paid, as we have seen, by the agency of discounts and deposits, with some aid from the circulation of the ba]nks; but the banks ]have been placed under such heavy penalties to pay all their liabilities ill specie on demand, that when they are threatened with a panic, a comimercial revulsion, or a heavy export of specie to foreign countries, they are coinpelled, like Samipson in the temple of the Philistines, to pull down the whole fabric of credit, public and private, about the ears of the people, to disturb and check the progress of industry in all its departments, to make bankrupts of their customers, and to sow pauperism broadcast in the field of labor. "This compelled policy of the banks, under the stringency 329 A MONETARY SYSTEMI FOUlNDED of the laws which govern thliemn, has been calledl i)aying specie. But with how little propriety. Instead of paying their liabilities with conmmercial promptness and the faithfulness of those who are dlischarginlg a legal and lmoral obligation, they resist it with all the power and weapons. they can commanad. In the struggles incident to this resistance, they strike down friends as well as einemlies, and deprive the public of all amount of currency necessary to business, teni times greater than the specie they are unwilling to pay out. And this is the convertibility so long aimued at, and to secure which so miuch legislation and so nluc thought has been expended! This is the triumphll of banks which pass through a season of panic and revulsion without suspendiing! a triumph like the victory which leaves 100,000 dead bodies on the field of battle, which miakes 10,000 widows, 50,000 orphans, and 200,000 paupers." THE LEGAL TENDER PAPER MIONEY SYSTENI. With the clear and comprehensive analysis of the principles of the bank currency system, contained in the foregoing extracts from The Ways and Aleans of Payment, before us, it is not difficult to understand how public notes issued by the government can perform the functions of a medium of exchange. The great object of trade is the exchange of commrodities and services, and it is immaterial to the parties interested, whether this exchange is effected by means of a medium possessing intrinsic value, or representative value, as long as it is done with equal safety, convenience and cost. Public notes, like bank notes, are virtually based on commodities moving in the channels of trade. There is a constant interchange of commodities and services on a vast; scale going on between individuals, growing out of the 330 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. necessities of government, Federal, State aind local. To effect this exchange a medium is required. On the one side :are the people, who are obliged to contribute out of their substance in proportion to their means towards the expenses of government. On the othler, there is a vast multitude of people to whom the government, Federal, State and local, is indebted for commodities and services. Tlhe people possess abundant property and products desired by the creditors of the government, and the only problem to be solved is as to the manner in whilch the exchalnge can be equitably, speedily and. economically accomplished. This can be done, and as it is a matter in which the entire nation is directly interested, it is eminently proper that it should be done, through the instrumentality of public notes issued by the government. Individuals engaged in trade employ the superior credit of banks to enable them to exchange commodities and services; and this superior credit of the banks, for reasons which have been fully explained, serves the purposes of money, in the interval between the time it is issued, in the form of bank notes, to creditors of the banks, until it is returned by the debtors of the banks. In the same manner the superior credit of the government, issued in the form of public notes to the creditors of the government, performs the functions of money, until it is returned to the Federal Treasury by the debtors (tax payers) of the government. The bank notes rest upon the credit of the institutions which issue them, and are a lien upon the assets of the banks, which consist of the property of the banks and of their debtors. The public notes rest upon the credit of the government, and are a lien upon the whole property of the nation. Thus far the analogy between publie notes and bank notes is complete, with the advantage largely in favor of p)ublic notes, for two reasons: in the first 331 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDEL place, public notes constitute a more economical mediun of exchange, because they do not bear interest, and in the second place their security is more ample. There is not an objection to the use of public notes, as a medium of exchange, that does not apply with ten fold more force to the use of bank currency; while there are a great many objections to the use of bank currency, which cannot be urged against the use of public notes. It is said by the bullionists and bankers that the "security, though ample, is too general and intangible for the purpose; and that the'whole property' can only be reached and applied through the slow process of taxation." This is begging the question. The process of taxation is going on constantly, and in point of fact the "whole property" of the people can be reached by a tax warrant much more speedily and certainly than the property of the banks and their debtors can be reached by process of law. Again it is contended by the bullionists and bankers that a paper currency, in order to perform the functions of money, should be convertible into gold on demand. It has already been sufficiently explained that this is impossible under the bank currency system, unless the amount of notes issued does not exceed the amount of gold held for their redemption; and in that event there is no need to issue any notes, for the public might as well use the gold. Nothing can be clearer than that paper currency is used chiefly for the purpose of supplying the deficiency of money occasioned by the scarcity of the precious metals; and to issue paper notes to the amount of three, five or ten times the amount of gold held for their redemption, and say that they are convertible into gold on demand, is nothing more nor less than a fraud and a delusion, which inevitably leads to disaster. Tbere is but one way to make paper money equal to 332 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. specie, and that is to clothe it with the ability to perform the same functions that specie will perform. That this can be done is fully demonstrated by the instances referred to by Jefferson* and Calhoun,t and by the experience of the French people at the present time. The partial legal tender paper money of the United States now in use fails to circulate at a par with gold, because it is not clothed with the same powers as gold. That Treasury notes of the goverinment, when made a full legal tender, will circulate at par with specie was clearly established by the "old demand notes" issued in 1861, which, after they were made a full legal tender, went up with gold to $2.85, as compared with greenbacks; and at the present time we find the currelncy bonds of the United States government quoted at a premium of three or four per cent. over gold bonds. WHAT IS A DOLLAR? Much colnfusion arises inl regard to the nature and functions of money, from the fact that people have been led to believe that gold, in some way or other, has been made a standard of value. Such is not the fact, either theoretically or practically, as will be fully shown. The idea of value is something that exists in the minds of the people independent of coins. The unit of value, which is established by custom and education, whatever may have been its origin, is used abstractly. When once a unit of value becomes fixed in the minds of the people, or in other words has passed into the "money of account," it measures all values and is capable of measuring the value of gold and silver, the same as any other commodities. "The value of the unit, or beg,inningi point, being once firmly fixed in men's minds by constant use," says Colwell, "remains there wholly independent of subsequent changes of price which *See page t6. tSee page 59. 333 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED may affect the specific article from which it took its rise. Thus if it sprung from a coin, or a certain quantity of gold or silver, it becomes afterwards so independent of these as to be quite capable of expressing the changing prices of that or any other coin. It is, then, a matter of fact that all coinmercial people keep thei- accounits, compute money, and explress prices by thie use of a money of account. The namling a price witli them is not naminig a coiln, or any specific quantity of gold or silver; but it is the employment of the denominations of the money of account, which all understand to express a price. There is scarcely any mental operation more generally and constantly in exercise than that which is used to express prices." It was thus that the people of Great IBritain came to keep their accounts inll pounds, shillings and pence. The unit of value with them had its origin in comparing values with the value of a pound of silver, which was divided into twenty parts denominated shillings. This unit of value was changed by successive changes in the silver coinage, until about a century ago, since which time the unit of value in England has remained unchanged. From about 1660 until 1816, the pound sterling had no10 corresponding piece of coin. The English guiniea had been intended to represent a pound, but it hiad not been properly adjusted, and, owing also to the fluctuations in the price of gold, it varied in value iuitil 1717, when its value was fixed at twenty-one shillings. In 1816, after much deliberation, it was decided to fix the weight of the sovereign at 5 pelnhyweights, 3 grains maid 171-623 thousandths of a grain. It is manifest that the whole difficulty was in establisliing a coin whose value should correspond to the unit of value of the money of account, carried in the minids of the people. T'he English sovereign has silnce been changied several tilmes. The people of the Unitecld States have undergone a silmilar 234 'UPOX SOUND PRINCIPLES. iexperience. Prior to the Revolutionitle moneiy of account of the colonies was expressed in pounds, shillings and pence. The unit of value, the pound, not only differed from the English pound sterling, but was different in different colonies. The-pound in the followiing named colonies varied from the present money of account in the UnLited States as follows: ~1 —New England and Virginia, $3.33 or 6s. to the dollar. " New York and North Carolina, 2.50 or 8s. Peinnsyl'nia and Middle States, 2.66 or 7s., 6d. South Carolina, 4.28 or 4s., 8d. " There were no COills ill existence corresponding to these lamounits. These different units of value had their origin in various causes, which we will not stop to discuss; but when industry and trade had becomie sufficiently advanced they became fixed. The trade of the colonies with the WVest In dies had iitioeduced into the coulntry a considerable amount of Spanish Collns. The names and values of these coins did not oorrespond to the money of account of the people, and their value was estimated in the money of account of the several colollies precisely as that of wheat, or any other commodity, was estimiated. In 1792 an act was passed by Congress with a view to establishing a uniform money of account throu,ghout the country. People reckoned in pounds, shillings and pence, and paid in Spanishl dollars. It will be remembered that continental money was payable in "Spanish miilled dollars, or the value thereof in gold or silver." The Act of Congress of April, 1792, declared-"That the money of account of the Uniited States shall be expressed in dollars or units, dimes or tenths, cents or hundreths, and mills or thousandths; a dimie being the tenth part of a dollar, a cent the hundrethl part of a dollar, etc.; and that all accounts in the public offices, and all proceedings in the courts 335 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUXDED of the United States, shall be kept and had il conformity to this regulation." This is believed to be the first tilme that a money of account was ever established by law —moneys of account haviing in all nations grown lup in the minds of the people. The word dollar, however, expressed a value which was fully understood by the people, without any reference to a fixed amount of gold or silver. The great dclifficulty consisted in fixing the amount of gold and silver that would be equal to a dollar. By the samie act a coinage of gold and silver was provided for; "Dollars, or units, each to be of the value of a. Spanish miilled dollar, as the same is now curirent, and to contain 371 4-16 grains of pure, or 416 grainis of standard silver. * * Eagles, eachl to be of the value of ten dollars, and to contain 2471 grains of pure or 270 grains of standard gold." Other coins were to be in the same proportionI. It was then decl(ared and established, that 371 4-16 grains of )pure and 416 grains of standard silver, shall be current as money at the price of one dollar, the valute of the unit of the nioneyi of ac,count; and gold eagles and half eagles wceie made current in like mannier. The act further provides, "tllat the proportional value of gold to silver, in all coins whichi shall be current as money within the United States, shlall be as fifteen to oneIC, according to quantity in: weight, of pure gold or pure silver." This attempt to fix the price of gold and silver by law proved a failure. The price of gold as compared with silver was fixed lower, as it prov ed, than the illarket price, and the result was that gold ceased to circulate as money to any extent until 1834, whenI the amount of pure gold in the eagle was changed from 2471 grains to 232. After the discovery of gold in California and Australia, gold depreciated in v-alue, and silver, becoming thle more valuable mlletal of the two, according to the standard established by Congress, deserted 336 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. the channels of trade. This was remedied, in a measure, by the act of 1853, which changed thle coinage of silver about seven per cent. The weight of silver half dollars was fixed at 192 grains, and the smaller coins ill the same proportion. The simple fact is, that gold and sil ver fluctuate ill value like other merchandise, being, governed entirely ))y the uncontrollable law of supply and demand, and it is about as absurd to attempt to fix, by law, an unchangeable price on gold or silver as upon a bushel of wheat or a day's labor. Sir James Stewart, in his work on political econllomy, says: "Money which I call money of account, is no 1more than a scale of equal parts, invented for measuriing the respective value of things vendible. * * M]onley of account performs the same office, with regard to the value of tlingls, that degrees, minutes, seconds, etc., do with regard to anglles, or as scales do to geographical maps, or to plans of any kind. In all these inventions there is some denominative taken for the unit. In angles, it is the degree; ini geograplhy, it is the mile; in plans, it is the foot or yard; in money, it is the pound, livre, florin, etc. The degr,ee has no determinate length, so neither has that part of tle sca:le upon plans or maps which miarks the unit; the iusefulness of all these being solely confined to the marking of proportions. Just so, tihe iunit in money can have no invariable determinate proportionl to any part of value; that is to say, it cannot be fixed in perpetuity to any particular quantity of gold or silver, or anly other commodity. The value of coimmodities dep)ends upon circumstances-their value ought to be considered as cliangling with respect to one another only; consequently anytilng which troubles or perplexes the ascertaining these changes of proportion by the means of a general detlerminate and invariable scale, must be hurtful to trade; and this is the infallible consequence of every vice in the policy of mloney 337 A 1A0ONETARY SYSTEM: FOUNDED or coin. *: It does not follow, froim this adjusting of thle mietals to the scale of value, that they themselves should, therefore, become the scale." It is of course dclenied by the bullionlists that ally such currency can be esta-blished,.as will iaturally conform to the money- of account; but upon what other hypothesis can the success of the greenback, as a currency, be accounted for? Durinig a.nd since the rebellion the greenback has performed all the futnctionis of money. Gold in the meantime has ralnged fromi par to $2.85. If gold was the standard of value the price of all commodities would fluctuate with gold; but commodlities rise and fall in price, as measured by the greenilback, without reference to the price of gold (except articles on which duties are paid in gold.) It is said, however, that now that matters lhave become settled the price of gold shows the depreciation of the gr eenback; and only recently a distinguished ex-Unitedcl States Senator,* in a letter to the HIon. S. S. Cox, proposed to change the unit of value (the dollar) from 100 cents to say 85, or the supposed present value of the greenback as compared with gold. If gold coins and greenbacks were on the same footings, such reasoning might carry some weight, for there would be reason to believe that the mioney of accotIunt of the counitry had undergone a change; but until greenbacks are made a full legal tender, it is entitled to 1no consideration whatever. If gold was only a partial legal tender and greenbacks were a full leg,al tender, greenbacks would probably bear a premium over gold, just as currency bonds bear a hliger premium th-m,, gold bonds, because they possess a slight advantage over gold bonds in point of time. The inconvertible inscriptions of credit of the B-ank of Venice were at a I)remiu-in of 20 per cent. over goll for centmies, simply because they were endlowed witlh superior *1Ifon. Edgar (Cowan, of Pennsy tvania. 338 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. powers to coin; andl for centuries these inscriptions of credit, conforming i as they did by law to the money of account of the people, constituted an univarying standard of value, by which all commodities, including gold, were measured. The staindaird of value of the Venetians thus instituted chanced only with the money of account of the country. Gold, if not made a legal tender in payment of debts, performs the functions of a medium of exchange simply as ~an equivalent; but when made a tender it is invested with additional powers. If the amount of gold put in a dollar is less in value than the money of accounit, injustice is done to the creditor; if more, injustice is done to the debtor; a.ndl when too much gold is put in a coin, it will cease, if tliere is any other tender, to circulate as money at all. The fact is that the precious metals, considered in their true light, hav.e simply come to perform in the commercial world, the functions of an universal equivalent, and pass by weighlt, except when made a tender in the shape of coins; and are subject, in regard to price, to the same laws which govern other commodities. At the present time silver is some two or three per cent. below par, while gold is about twelve per cent. above, as measured by the greenback. This is due almost entirely to the character of the legislation which regulates the circulation of gold, silver and paper. Gold, then, performs the functions of a medium of exchange by reason of its intrinsic value; and public notes and bank notes performi the same offices by reason of their possessing representative value, not of gold, but of property anld commodities, including gold. (It will be observed that in using the words "public notes," Treasury notes are referred to, not as a legal tender, but as a device of the credit system, the same as ba)k notes.) The bank note virtually represents the commodities mov-ig il the channels 339 ,4 A ONQIET,TARY SYSTELT FOUNDEID of trade, wlich birouglt it into circulation,:miil rests upon the credit of the institution which issued it; inI like mainier the public note virtually represelnts the property or coimmodities levied by the government to defray its expenses andc discharge its obligations, and is backe ( by the credit of the governllment and the entire property of thle nation. It was in this sense that Calhloun asked, "W Th1y not use its own, credit (the credit of the government) to the ameonut of its own transactions? 9 1Why shlould it not be safe in its ownI hands, while it shall be considered safe in the hands of eight hunldredl private institutions, scattered all over the country, anid which have no other object but their own private profit; to increase which they extendcl their business to the most dangerous extremes? And whty slhouldI the community be compelled to give six per cent. discounLt for the government credit, blended with that of the banks, when the superior credit of the government could be furnished separate, without discount, to the mutual advantage of the government and the community?" Public notes issued by the governnment for the purpose of effectiingc the exchange of property and products constantly taking place between the people on the one side and the creditors of the government on tlhe other, should naturally confollrmll to the money of account in wlhich they are stated, and would undoubtedly do so if founded utpon soun4d principles. The nation possesses abundant property and products of almnost every description, subject to thle demands of tlhe governliment; and the government unquestionably possesses the ability to command every dollar's woithl of property and products belonging to the nation. The credit of tle goverlinenit, therefore, slhouldl be T)beyond (ltestion, a(nd its paperl should represent and command property and products to the exact ateouit stated onl its face. A note of the government '.- 4 0 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. is virtually an order given by tle people collectively upon themselves, payable in property and products. To make this order payable in precious metals, wheni the people ]lave no precious metals, or only a very limiited amount, is to render it impossible for the people to comply with tlhe order, and compel them to dishonor the public credit. A law making public notes payable in diamonds of a certaili degree of purity and weight would be considered very oppressive, as well as absurd, and yet it is upon precisely tl:he same principle that the public note is made redeemable in gold. The public note will conmmand property and products, if properly instituted, to the precise amount inscribed on its face, and gold coins can do no more. The creditor of the governmenit wants property and products, and the tax payer must have imoney ()public notes) to pay his taxes. It is this that, in the first instance, gives circulation to public notes. The tax p)ayers constitute a vast army of agents engaged in selling comnnodities for public notes, with which to discharge their olligations to the State, just as the debtors of the banks form a large body of agents engaged in collecting bank notes to pay tlhleir debts in bank. LEGAL TENDER. People cannuot be coimpelled to part with their property for imoney, but pub)lic policy requires that some equivalent of property slhould be establishled as a tender in payiment of debts, and tlhis equivalent is styled moiley. To tl]e icreditor it should be iimmateriil hetlier tlhis equivalent possessed intrinsic or represent.ative valite, provided it coinmman-ded property to tlle amountt attached to it by law. A dollar's worthl of gold, when coined and declaimed the only tender, is endowed with great a(Ivantag,es over all oth-er kiiids of property, as well as over the 1)ublic note whiilt rep)resents property. Creditors can refuse to take )property or public 341 A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED notes, at 1no matter what valuation, but gold coins they are obliged to take at the price fixed by law. Hence it is that a public note, which represents property to the amount inscribed on its face, and should command property of any kind, including gold, will not command gold. The gold has been transformed into money by being made a legal tender. Gold being clothed with special powers over p)op-l erty, as well as over the public note, comes to be in great demand, and, as it is limited in amount, is absorbed b) capital, to be used as an instrument to control property and public notes; its functions as a medium of exchange are thus capable of being perverted, and the object of the legal tender law is consequently also perverted, greatly to the injury of society and of the public credit. The public note is intended to perform the functions of a medium of exchange for the exchange of all kinds of property, including gold, and should, therefore, be made a legal teinder. If any commodity is to be made a tender, it should be such a commodity as the people possess or can readily acquire at its market value. The great object of trade is the exchange of property, not property for money or money for property; and money which is designed to effect this ecxchang,e should be instituted in such a manner as to form an unvarying representative and measure of value, conforning to the money of account of the nation. But if money is made of a commodity, it will rise or fall in value according to circumstances, and will render trade uncertain, orl, as Kellogg aptly expressed it, will make a gambling( system of all trade. The responsibility of furnishing a mediumi of exchange, or declaring what shall be a tender, rests with the Fedleral Government. It is a matter of vital importance to the nation, individually and collectively, to have money so insti 342 UPON SOUND PRINCIPI,ES. tutted as to clog the production and exclang,es of tie nation as little as possible. In this advanced age credit is everywhere used in trade, when credit can be used to exchange products moe advantageously than a mtediuimi of exchainge possessing intrinsic value. It is not only ecinecntly )ropcer, but it is a matter of public adclvantage, therefore, for the government to use its own credit, at least to the extent of its own operations. To do this its notes should be made a full legal tender, otherwise the people can ]rcpudiate individually what they have done collectively, which inevit ably worlks injustice to the creditor of the goverYnent, and impairs the credit of the nation. The bullionists assert that a paper imoney, not redeemable in gold, issued by the governmlent, can possess no v-alue; and that it virtually consists of bits of paper with figures and words printed on them; and political economists are found so shallow, or worse, as to adopt this theory. If this is true, then are all the paper devices of civilization, by means of which property is held or exchanged, a fraud and a delusion. But public notes are nlot - simply bits of paper, to be issued to an unlimited extent. Every dollar emitted by the Federal Governlment in payment for property, services, or in discharge of its obligations, costs the people precisely one dollar in property or products, to redeemi it. and return it to the public Treasurv. WVhcn public notes, representing commodities moving in the channels of trade, are issued by the governmelnt to the extent of its own transactions and are made a legal tender, they conforn-i to the money of account of the nation, and become the i-ieasure of all values, the standard of all payments andiicl tlhe basis of all money contracts; tl-tey, thlerefore, pcrform all thle offices of money, and pass into general circulation. They are paid out by the government for property or services at their face 843 A MOXETARY SYSTE-[- FOUNDED value; being a tenlldelr they pay debts at their face value; and in the end are returned to the Federal Treasury in the shape of taxes, in lieut of property, to the amount inscribed on their face. No evidence of debt or device of the Credit system ever devised possessed greater elements of strength and security than the public note of a rich and powerful nation, made a legal tender and issued to the extent of its own transactions. The notes of the Bank of France, as we have seen, although not redeemable in specie, circulate at par to the amount of hundreds of millions of dlollars, when made a legal tender and backed by the credit of the people. Who will say that the revenues of the United States are not as certain as those of France, or that the ability of the American people to produce wealth does not equal that of the French people, or that the Federal Government is not as stable as the French Government? The French people are uncertain as to whether they will be living under a -monarchical or a republican form of government in ten years from to-day, and yet we see, at the present time, *500,000,000 of inconvertible notes of the Bank of France, inade a legal tender, circuelating at par, on the credit of the government; while in the United States the notes of the governmaent, not exceeding 8400,000,000 in amount, circulate .at a depreciation, as compared with,old, of over twelve per .cenut. This is clearly the fault of legislation-imaking the notes of the goveriniment only a partial tender, when in order to conform to thie money of account of the nation, they ought to be made a full tender. TILIE QUAXTITY OF MONEY REQUIRED BY A NATION. The question as to how lmuch money a nation needs has -led to a great deal of mystification. A nation evidently needs a sufficient amounot of money to enable it to effect its exchainges in the most econolmical manner possible. As has :,144 UPON SOUN-I) PRINCIPLES. beeii explained, manay of tle O)peratiolns of t, especially of a large chariactei, can be conducted most speedily, economically and safely by means of ile devices of the credlit systein, sulil as bills of exchaiie, Cotes, checks, etc.; while, on the otlher hand, in other operations cash is an almost indispensable agency. 13y cash is meant money, such as gold or silver coins, or public notes, miade a legal tender in payment of debts. There should, therefore, be a sufficient amount of money in circulation to enable those engaged in exchanging property or services to avail themselves of either cash or credit, or both, in such proportions ;as nmay be most advantageous. Under the bank currency system, money, as we have seen, scarcely circulates at all. The medium of exclhange consists 'f lbank currency, which is used as a substitute for cash. Bank currency bears interest, and it, therefore, cojistitutes .a very expensive medium-far more expensive thlan gold or silver, or legal tender public notes, which bear interest .only when used as calpital in iidividual traimsactions. The volume of bank curreney is regulated, not by the wants of trade or the exchanges to be effected, but by artificial circumstances; and it frequently happens that bank currency, as at the present time, will desert the channels of circulation :almnost entirely, because industry cannot afford to pay the tax which it entails upon the comnmunlity. The precious metals can be obtained only by digging them out of the ground in localities where they exist, or by exclhaiaging products for them at their market value; and when obtained can be retained in tlie country only by importing commodities to a less amount than are exported. Legal tender public notes, like bank notes, can be issued to an unlimited amount; and the only question to be considered is as to the amiount which the government ought to 345 A A MONETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED issue. It is perfectly clear that the (goyvecrminct out(ht to issue, at least, an amount sufficient to conduct its owli transactions with the people. This amount is based on commodities movinig in the channels of tr:..e (betweeni thetax payers and the creditors of the government), as certainly and as securely as ally colmmercial paper or bank currency was ever based on commodities, to which they owed their origin. The revenues of the governiment, for exampler amount to about $300,000,000 a year. This requires ani exchange of property or products to that amount. lHowmuch money will it take to effect this exchange? WVlio cal tell? The public note, when issued by the govern iiient to effect this exclhanie, passes into circulation and performs the offices of a medium of exchange, not only for the purposes of the governlment, but for the trade of the nation. Its offices are limited, therefore, niot by the immediate tiransactions of the government, but by the exchanges or trade of the entire nation. It follows, then, that the amount of public notes put ill circulation by the govermnuent should be limited only by the exchanges of the nation. This theory, as to the amount of moniey -equired by a nation, is fully recogliized and endorsed by political economists, who stand high with the bullionists. Professor Bonlamy Price, in the quotation given on pIage 236, says: "A carit transfers weight; money, ownership; and all the world knows that the cartage to be done determines the number of carts," etc.; aind again, in speaking of the amount of bank notes thlat will circulate, he says: "The answer is the same as that which has already been given to the parallel question respecting coin. So many bank notes as the public has a distinct want for will circulate, and no more. It is the universal law of all coimodities in use, the law of demand' and supply" Aioney should be instituted in such a mianner thlat the 346 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. amount in circulation will confoiini to thle wants of trade, otherwise it will not prove ani unvarying standard of meas ire and payment. If money is scarce and interest is high, all exchanges become difficult and expensive; property and products depreciate ill value; wages fall ancd production is diminished. On the other hand, if imoney is redundant, it will depreciate in value, and property, products and wages will appreciate in value in a correspondiing ratio. In either event, moniey fails to conform to the imoley.of account of the nation, greatly to thie derangement of all values, and especially of exchanges of property founded on contract. It is far better, however, for a nation that monodey should be too plenty than too scarce, for when money is scarIc(e productioii languishues, wages are loAy, and idleness prebtils; but wheni it is too plenty capital alone suffers; a(nd it is better for the interests of the nation and of society tlhat capital should be idle than labor. In the olne ilnstance (if capital is idle), people are deluded with the idea that they are much better off thaii they really are, because property irules at high figures; and in the otlher (if labor is idle), the miasses are much worse off than they ought to be, because property and labor are at agreeat discount; individuals are b)rougrht to want; the public revenues are cut down; the expenses of goveirmnenit becomne oppressive; and demoralization is rife. It is said, however, that, inl any event, the amount of public notes issued by the govelnmelnt should not exceed the annual revenues of the government; otherwise they will become redundant. Why limit the aiiouiit by the revenues of a year, instead of a shorter or longer period? This is illusory. The public note performs the offices of a medium for the entire trade of the inaioni, and to limiit its issue to an amount corresponding to the exact amount of the iimmediate transactions of the governmuelit would be 347 A -~O1ETARY SYSTEM FOUNDE1) similar to linmiting the amount of bills of exchange used in trade to the exact amount of property to be exchanged. It is possible that a less amount of public notes would suffice to effect the exchangles of the nation; it is probable that a larger quantity would be required. Whether the public notes issued can be redeemed in the revenues of the government in one, two or three years, is a matter that will not effect their value in the slightest degree, as long as their security is undoubted and their use is required in the channels of trade. This has been abundantly demonstrated by the greenback, both during and since the war. It is idle, therefore, for people to speculate as to how lmuch money should be issued by the government with a view to fixing the amount by law. As already suggested, innumerable contingencies are constantly arising which will cause the amount required to vary. How much is needed( can never be known until money is properly instituted, and then people will not care to know. Some idea may be formed of the vast character of the exchanges constantly taking place in the nation, when we reflect that the annual product of industry, agricultural and manufacturing, in the United States exceeds $6,000,000,000 a year, and that this mig,hty mass of products is exchanged many times and in many forms. All that can be safely said is that money, the principal tool by means of which these exchanges are effecteld, should be commensurate in amount with the work to be performed. WVhen money becomes too plenty, or, as t is termed, redundant, prices go up, property enhances in value, and wages become high. This is detrimental to trade, works injustice to creditors, and impnlairs the public credit, if public notes constitute the money of-the nation. It is, therefore, a matter of almost as much importance to the public that 348 UPON SOUND PIPNIXCIPLES. money should not be redutndant as that it should not be too scarce. Itow is this to be remedied? Public notes are issued by the government for property or services, and are returned to the Treasury in the shape of taxes. An increase in the rate of taxation would soon relieve the nation of any redundancy in the currency, just as bank currency is returned to the banks under similar circumstances. But in this connection another question arises, which has an important bearing upon the subject, and that is the question of interest. INTEREST. The price paid for the use of money or its substitutes is termed interest. When money possesses intrinsic value, as in the case of gold coins, the value of the metal of which the coin is made is one thing, while the rate of interest which the coin will bear is quite another. The fluctuation in the price of the precious metals bears no relation to the fluctuation in the rates of interest of money. The price of gold depends upon the laws of demand and supply, which govern the commerce of the world; but the rate of interest of money, as money is lnow instituted, is regulated by causes of a local character. Gold may not vary a fraction in the markets of the world, and yet money and its substitutes may, at the same timue, be in such demand for the purposes of trade as to commiand exorbitant rates of interest. It then fails to constitute an unvarying measure of value or standard of payment. A dollar that will command 12 per cent. interest is a very different thing from one that will only command 6 per cent. To make money an unvarying measure of value and standard of payment, it is necessary that it should bear a uniform rate of interest. That money should bear interest is not only legitimate, but essential to the performnance of its functions as a mediutm 349 A MONXETARY SYSTEM. FOUNDED of exchange. Monley represents value and should be able to accumulate value; otherwise it would not be accepted in exchange for property. But, as has been suggested, its power in this respect should be uniform, in order that it may prove an unvaryiing measure of value and standard of payment. It has long since been discovered that usury laws are in vain, because they are not based upon soundprinciples. But money can, and ought to be so instituted as to command only a uniform rate of interest, proportionate to the profits of labor. Money, by reason of its legal tender property, naturally possesses a command over property and labor, and if it is instituted, as at present, so that it can be made to command any rate of interest that can be extorted by capital, its functions are not only perverted, but it is enabled to rob labor of its entire profits. On the other hand, if legal tender public notes are issued by the government in excess of the wants of trade, they will lose the power of money to accumulate value, and their functions as money will be totally perverted, greatly to the disadvantage of the nation and to the injury of the public credit. It is, therefore, as necessary to provide against a redundancy, which will lead to such results, as it is to issue public notes to supply the want of a medium of exchange. Inflation, in the sense in which the word is now used, is undoubtedly an evil, second perhaps only to contraction. The application of the term, however, is limited by the bullionists to an over issue of public notes, which leads to error and confusion. Public notes, if properly instituted, do not depreciate in valuo when over issued, because the people do not possess sufficient property to redeem them, but because the excess is not required for the purposes of trade, and they, therefore, fail to accumulate value. It is not on account of the weakness of the credit of the people 350 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. that public notes under such circumstances fail to circulate on a par with the money of account, bu,tt because of their redundancy. This is evident from the fact that bonds bearing interest, which rest upon the same foundation (the public credit) can be issued to a much greater amount than public nlotes. An excess of public notes is not, therefore, strictly speaking, an inflation of public credit, but simply a superfluous amount of money, an evil which call easily be remedied. But it is otherwise with bank currency. Then it is not money that becomes inflated, but it is credit, in all its forms, that becomes expanded. This is real inflation, and is far more dangerous to the interests of society than a rledundancy of money, because it inevitably leads to coinmnercial crashes and money panics. The advocates of the specie basis or bank currency systemn are, therefore, the real inflationists of the nation. It is possible, as the law now stands, to issue bank currency to the full amount of the bonded indebtedness of the country, about $1,700,000,000, and all that is wanting to call that amount of bank currency into circulation is an opportunity. The loans and discounts of the banks in 1875 amounted to about $1,000,000000, wvhich indicated the amount of credit used for the purposes of trade at that time. Bonds of the government bearing interest can be issued to a larger amount than public aotes, because the ability of the public note to accumulate value is limited to its use as a nmediu m of exchange, while the amuoulit of bonds which can i)e issued depends upon entirely different considerations. Public notes will not seek investment in a bond as long as they are needed in the.channels of trade. During the war $500,000,000 of 5-20 bonds, with which greenbacks were convertible, were in the market for over a year. and the Secretary of the Treasury wvas unable to dispose of more thani 351 ,A MOXETARY SYSTEM FOUNDED $25,000,000. The reason is obvious. The greenbacks were needed for the purl~oses of trade, and could accumulate value more rapidly in the production and distribution of wealth. than a six per cent. gold interest bond; and it was not until the channels of circulation were amply supplied with a medium of exchange that the 5-20 bonds could be sold. We have already suggested that a redundancy of money (legal tender public notes) could be remedied by increased taxation; but it may happen, as was the case during the war, that taxation cannot be resorted to, to the extent of the wants of the government, or the necessities of the occasion, without producing distress and defeating the ends of the government. It then becomes necessary to employ the credit of the government in another form —in the shape of an interest bearing bond. This bond or evidence of indebtedness represents property or products, payable i:l the form of money in the future; while the public note represents property in the process of exchange between the tax payer and the creditor of the government, and is virtually payable in the present. When money (legal tender public notes) becomes redundant, it is ma.nifest that there are more notes in circulation than there is property or products moving in the channels of trade to be exchanged through their instrumenitality, and consequently more than-the exchanges growing out of the transactions of the governinent will justify. Taxation must, be increased to increase the transactions between tax paver and creditor; or, if that is inexpedient or unnecessary, the form in which the government credit is issued miust be changed, that is, the public note, not bearing interest, issued in excess of the wants of trade, must be converted into a bond bearing interest; or in other words, as the government note is no longer payable in the present, it must be made 352 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. payable in the future, and justice requires tlat it should bear interest (accumulate value), just as the public note, when not redundant, was capable of accumulating value, and thfis, as is obvious, can only be done in the form of a bond. A bond, inter-convertible with the public note of the gov erumneut, is capable of performing a two-fold service; it will prevent a redundancy of public notes, acnd it will regulate the rate of interest which money will colimmand. When public notes become redundant and are unable to accumulate value, the excess would naturally seek investment in an interest bearing bond; and when money (public notes) is able to accumulate value more rapidly in production and trade, and interest rises, the interest bearing bonds of tlhe government would ag-ain be converted into money, and thus the equilibrium would be restored. MAoney thus instituted could not do otlherwise tlhaii coni form, in value, to the money of account of the nation, and, in amount, to thie wants of trade. It would then always circulate on a par with money of account-a. dollar note would mean a dollar, neithler more nor less, and would always commanlid a dollar's worth of property; interest would not vary a, fraction for any leng,th of time; and money would prove, what it is designed to be, an unvarying standard of measure and payment. Uader such a systeimt of money the exchlan,ges of the nation could be effected economiically anid equitably, and capital and labor would each secure a due share of the products of ilidustry; and commercial crashles and muoney panics could not possibly occur. The amount of interest which an inter-convertible bond should bear is a matter of detail which can be settled fully only by experience. Interest on money, as has been isuggested, should be in proportion to the profits of industry, 23 35 3i A AIONETARY SYSTEMT FOUNI)ED otherwise capital will be enabled to reap more than its due share of the profits of labor. The average rate'of illncrease of wealth in the nation is estimated at about 3 — per cent. Capital is entitled to a proportionate share of this increase, and hence the rate of interest of imoney should not exceed greatly, if at all, the average increase of wealth. For the sake of convenience ill computing interest it is suggested that a bond bearing interest at the rate of one per cent. a day on $100, or 3.65 per cenit. per annumin, should be issued. This, as well as other details, can only be settled by experience. The important point is the institution of a monetary system based on sound principles, and its details can be safely left to the government, if its affairs are placed in the hands of capable and trustworthy men, in sympathy with the wants and interests of the nation. It is urged by many who are favorable to the use of the public credit, in the shape of public notes, that a bond is not an essential part of the legal tender paper money system; that it would be absorbed by capital, and in the end would constitute a burden upon the nation. This is )borowiig trouble. The public notes of the government would not be funded in an interest bearing bond as long as they could accumulate more value in production and trade; and, wlieii funded, they would return to the channels of trade as soon as their services were required. The inter-convertible bond plan is greatly derided by the bullionists and their tools, whlo do not fail to misrepresent the principles upon which it is based in every way possible. The public note is treated by them as simply a promise to pay money, and upon this hypothesis it is not difficult to prove that it is a very worthless piece of paper. The public note, as has been sufficiently explained, is a representative,. not of money but of property, and as the great object of 3,D-4 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. trade is to exchange property and not money, it is far more important that the public note should represent property than mioney (gold coins). The amount of property in the counitry is estimated at $40,000,000,000; the amount of gold :t i100,000,000. It is to exchange this $40,000,000,000 of property that money is required and not the $100,000,000; anid to base the public credit onl $100,000,000 of gold, when it should be based on $40,000,000,000 of property, is in utter violation of the plainest principles of the credit system, to which all paper devices for the exchang,e of property, whether public or private, belong. Again it is asserted tlhat the inter-conveitible note and bond is simply payiing one paper debt with another. If the public note was simply a promise to pay money this would be true, but the public note, properly understood, is not a promise to pay money, but is a representative of property to the amount inscribed on its face, which the government is entitled to demand and receive forthlwith from the people, and in this sense was described by Calhoun as a "promise to receive," and not a "promise to pay."l* IHOW THE PUBLIC NOTE IS TO BE PUT INTO CIRCULATION. How the paper money of the governiment is to be put into circulation is a matter worthy of consideration, especially as friends of the system, withl the best intentions iii the world, have frequently allowved themselves to be led into error by failing to carry the principles of the system to their logical results. As the public note represents property and( products which the government is entitled to demand nId receive forthwith, in thle way of taxation, to the amount inscribed on its face, and is virtually based on such property or products iii the process of transfer from the tax payer to the creditor, just as other devices of tlhe credit system See pI)age 60. 355 A-A MONETARnY SYSTEM FOUXDED are based oli commodities moving in the channels of trade, it is clear that it (the public note) should only be issued by the government for property or services. If the government should issue public notes without reference to the ability of the nation to respond in property and products in the way of taxation, as for example, to pay off the public debt in paper money, when a corresponding amount of property and products could not be transferred at the same time to the creditors of the government, would, as is manifest, be a gross infraction of the principles upon which the legal tender paper money system is founded. Tlhe creditors of the government are paid in property or products, and the public note must not only represent such property, but must be able to command it, which can be done only to the extent to which the people are able to respond in the way of taxation. ilence it is idle to talk about liquidating the public debt with paper money, or any other kind of money, any more rapidly than the people are enabled to produce wealth (property and products), which can be applied to that Iurpose. It has already been explained that the amount of money which the government can issue is limited, not by the amount of the transactions of the government for any specified time, but by the transactions of the entire nation, which are constantly varying in amount. But when the channels of circulation are supplied with a medium of exchange no mnore public notes can be used; it is essential, therefore, that their emission by the government should go hand in hland with taxation. THE NATIOXAL DEBT. Debt, whether individual or national, is inconsistent with true independence, and the payment of the national debt at 056 UPON SOUND PRINCIPI,ES. thie earliest day practicable should never be lost silght of for a moment. If the bonds of thle UnLited States are payable in lawful money, it is then possible to redeem them in property or products, in which they should be redeemable, as rapidly as the nation can prodluce a surplus of products, but if made payable ill gold, which does not circulate ill the channels of trade, their redemption is rendered well nig]l impossible. If forced resumption takes place the public debt of thle'United States may be regarded as permanent, aid its increase inevitable. The experience of England in tlhis respect is worthy of note. At the close of the Napoleonic wars in 1815 the producing forces of England were in full exercise, and the revenues of thle governiuenit were enormous. England immediately beg-an to reduce her public debt; but the m)oney power interfered and resumption was decreed; and the liquidation of the public debt ceased. When the Rebellion ended in the United States production ran oil, owing to the abundance of money in circulation, to a marvelous extent, and the Federal Government was enabled to reduce the public debt some $500,000,000. But thle policy of contractioln sooi curitailed production, the revenues of the government began to decline, and the payment of the public debt practically ceased. It remllains now to return to specie payments to render it permanent, and to accomplisil this end the money power is exerting its best efforts. It is to the advantage of the money power to have nations ilvolved in debt, as well as to have money scarce; in this way governmenlts and nations are rendered subservient to capital. No event in modern times has spread such alarmi among the money kings of the world as the adoptioin of legal tender paper money by the people of the Unlited States. ,30- 7 A AMONETARY SYSTElM FOUNDED None know better than the money kings that if the system is adopted ill its entirety, it will ultimately release the masses from the bondage in which they have been held for ages by capital, and hence the bitter opposition with which the system lmeets. For several hundred years past commerce and trade have been engaged in a constant strucggle to chea1pen money, the tool of exchainge; )but it was not until the United States made the public note a le,gal tender tl-at any progress was made, except in the use of substitutes for money, which were controlled entirely by bankers and ioney lenders. When the Americai} governmenl t began to issue legal tender paper money, thle imoney kings of the world perceived the necessity of taking measures to reverse tllhe tendency of affairs, and they organized not only to destroy legal tender paper money, but also to demonetize silver, ini order that they mighlt be able to maintain their rule. That an organized conspiracy exists to demonetize silver for the purpose of increasing the power of moniey, is evident frolm what has occcured in Europe and in America within tlie past few years. Silver has been demonetized in England, Germany and Holland, and practically in Franice and in tlle United States. No country in the world produces so much gold and1 silver as the United States, and yet the people of thle United States are unable to retain it in the country. The same condition of affairs prevailed prior to the war, when we had the speie. basis system of money, so that the inability of the people to retain gold and silver cannot be char,ed( to the use of public notes. The simple fact is that gold and silver cannot be retained in the country until the producing forces of the nation are sufficiently developed to enable the nation to export more than it imports; and in the second place gold and silver and 358 UPON SOUND PRINCIPLES. paper mnoney will not all occupy tlie channels of circulatioii at the same timne, unless they are all clothed with equal powers as money. If specie circulation is desired, therefore, it can only be attained by making,, gold, silver and the public note equal legal tenders; then, as soon as the nation is able to retain the precious metals, they will occupy tihe channels of trade as a matter of course. The bullionists and bankers themselves are compelled to acknowledge that forced resumption will not give specie circulation, but tlhey say it will fix prices at a gold standard. This, as has been fully shown, is not only a delusion but a barefaced fraud. The notes of banks of issue, which the public will be obliged to use, cannot be maintained on a par with coin, if redeenmable only in coin, unless the banks can retain the coin to redeem them, and to say that the banks can retain specie in the country, when the nation cannot retain it, is absurd, as well as contrary to experience. The only way in which the people can hope to reduce and eventually liquidate the public debt, is by the adoption of a system of money, such as has been described, which will give industry free development, and enable the nation not only to largely increase its production of wealth, but to render it available when produced. CONCLUSION. Those who desire to fully understand the money question can only hope to do so by always keeping in view thqe fact that the great object of commerce and trade is the exchainge of property and products, and that money is designed to be simply a tool to accomplish that end. Moiley is nothing more than "one of iial's own inventions, a contrivance which he has himself devised for rendering an indispensable 359 CONCLUSION. service to the practical life of every civilized people."* Its institution is a governmental duty, and as political soverei;gnty in the UnLited States, theoretically at least, resides in the people, it is incumbent upon them to take hold of this question and compel their servants to dispose of it in such a mainner as will best subserve the interests, not of a single class, but of the entire lnation. Thus far almost the entire course of Federal legislation has been controlled and directed by the few, in utter disregard of the rights of the many and of the honor of the government, and especially was this the case during the late Rebellion. Eulogies, it is true, are frequently heard from servile or subsidized sources of the patriotism of capital during that trying period. They are utterly false. "Not a patriotic act can be found in its history. It neither volunteered its services nor submitted to a draft. Its supl)ort of the government was purchased at the highest price ever paid by a bleedirng people. It was in truth a traitor to the existence of the Union-a baser traitor than he who fought to destroy it upon the field of battle. It hid itself from dang,er, and sold its assistance only for enormous pay, while the rebel soldier offered his life ol the field of battle for notlingi,, except his devotion to an erroneous principle. lWhile the soldiers of thle North, too, were freely going to the front by the million, the capitalists, who now tramnple upon tlhem and their children, were allured from their safe retreats in the midst of their hoarded treasures olnly by vast golden bribes. Neithler in law or in equity, neither in tlhe sighlt of human courts or courts divine, havethelcy any claim upon thle forbearance or gratitude of the American people." And then, not content with the vast gains wrung from the people in the hour of their extremiity, they perfected a plan, to quote againi from the Cutirrei'y tild Blanking, l)y Boiiaii3y Plrice. '360 CONCLUSIO-N. same eloquent champion of thle people's cause,* "to) hold the bonds of the government as a foundation for banking. The wealthy classes were unwilling that the governiment should deal directly with the people and furnislh them witl a cheap and safe currency. They insisted upon staiidiing betweeli the government and people. They insisted upon becoming the'middle men' in the matter of furnishing a circulating medium; and the profits that have accrued to them as such 'mididle mlen' and have been paid by the tax payers, are Wkitliout a parallel in the history of any other financial system upon the face of the globe. * * A government policy which thus taxes its people in order to fulfill a plailn duty to them, can only be properly characterized as legalized robbery." Since the war every energy has been directed by. the molley power towards the destruction of the greenback and a return to the specie basis system of money. The machinery of the government is in its hands, and it is now aiiaiiig to control the two great political organizations of the country, in order that it may consummate its purposes. The issue has been forced upon the nation by the bullionists, the bondholders and the nmouey lenders, whose tools are to be found ifi every party convention and caucus held in the country. The crisis has arrived, and the masses must arise in their majesty and assert their rights, or liberty in America will be a mnere phantom. It is not from kings or emperors thlat the American people need fear the loss of liberty, but from a moneyed aristocracy, whose hand now rests heavily lupoil the nation. The question is one of paramount linportance, involvingi as it does not only the present welfare of the people, but the well being of the nation for many generations to come. It is a question, too, in which the down Ilon. D. W. vorhlees. 361 CONCLUSION. trodden imasses of other nations havle a deep interest, for, if the money power is able to accoinplisll its desi(gns ill free, republican America, where else can tl peopl e hop e to escape its bondage? The contest will undoubtedly be bitter, surpassing inl tllh:lt respect the memorable contest between the imoney l),ewrer and the people under the lead of Genieral J.lckson in 1832, but "the flower safety is only plucked fromll tlhe nettle danger." Thle political orgalnizations of the country are 0lo longer faithful exponents of the popular will, iior c:m they be until the money changers are driven froni tllheir tC])tL. The people must regain control of their party uiacliinely, or be led like sheep to the slaughter..)ut it is to be hoped, in the language of Jackson's farewell address touclhiig thle same subject, "that, while thle people remain *' uncorrupted and incorruptible, and jealous of their rights, the government is safe, and the cause of freedom will continue to triumph over all its enemies."' 362 k \P P N DI.) I. THE 3.65 INTER'CONYERTIBLE BOND SYSTEM. BELOW we give an able article from the pen of Horace Greeley, on the subject of the inter-coniveritible bond, wlich appeared in the New York Trib?,(le of November 9, 1871. It will be observed that lIr. Greeley suggested that the bonds should bear a moderate gold interest. This is linnecessary, and would be taken advantage of by the gold gamblers. The currency bonds of thle United States Government to-daiy bear a large premium over the gold l0)on1ds, simply bcetause they possess a slilght advantage in poilnt of the till.e they have to run. It may be, however, that, if the public note was properly instituted (mnade a full legal tender and sustained by a bond), it would practically make no difference whether the bonds of the government were payable both principal aiid interest in gold or leg,al tender notes. This view is held by many eminent persons. The lIoni. Fr..ncis V. hughes, of Pennsylvania, a distinguished leader in tlhe democratic partv, as well as one of the most profound lawyers in the country, in a speech at Scranton, Pa., in October, 1875, in discussing this point, said: "WTlWat better system coul( bel devised and what better gtuaranitee could be afforded, that our pap)er le,ga.l tenders will always remaini equal to par with gold, than that whenever there shall be an excess of currency it can and will go into government bonds payuable'iI, yold. I say gold, because I regard it as imimaterial whlether undeil selt at system the bonds be payablle in gold or not eithler vway they can bel m ade, as n1)o, betterh tfh(ti old. Our government bonds sell at 20 anld 24 1per cent. above par in our j)ag'tia(l legal tender APPENDIX. currency, and froml three to ei(,ht per cent. above par in gold. Did our government not discredit our greenbacks by refusing to take them for duties on imports, all d(lid it not thereby ilmake a market for g,old, the paper legal tenders wvould have :lways remained at par with gold. lhe $60,0Co,00o of full le7al tenders first issued remaincedL at pLar with gold, when the latter was as to partial legal tenders at a premium of 285. Let the bollnds be payable in gold, and what thlen? Why, whenever the issue of leg,ral tenders is in excess of the wants of business, by a law of its own nature as fixed as the law of gravity, such excess of currency will go back into such gold bonds. Can such legal tenders ever get below )ar in gold? Never, so loilngr as government bonds shall be it a givein rate of interest. Let experience determine this. I believe that under siucli a systemi the government credit would be so assured tlhat 3.65 bonds, as have been proposed, would go above par in gold. In suclh case the interest should be less. Let results determine the proper rate of interest, or, if need be, perhaps some functionaries under ,(areful guards, iiliht be authorized to lessen or increase the rate of interest. This is a subject for legislation, and from the many suggoestions that have been made a proper inethod cain readily be adopted." * d "It is not proposed to abolishi gold as a legal tender. Whether as an article of inelrchandise or as a coin, let us hlave the benefit of it to the extent we nmay. J.utt let us also hlave a NXTIONAL CUPRENCY. One that will not keep us involved in European moiney complications. but secure to us perfect indepeudence therefrom." The followilng is IMr. Greeley's editorial: HO0W TO REDUCE THE INTEREST OF TIIE NATIONAL DEBT. "MIr. Boutwell's plan of fuiiding ithe national debt has hlad a pretty fair trial. True, thle timies have been adverse, but we have generally foiund tlteim so when% we needed to borrow inoney. The sumIII and subst.lanlce of tle SeC(ietairv's success is the funIding of $200,00,000( at 5 per cent. on the payment of the bonus of 12 per cent. to thc seyndicate of foreigli bankers who have agreed to take the lo.an. WVe would not disparage this achievement, for we regard it as decidedly better than nothing..Add to the interest ($3,000,000) $1,000,000 more for the agg.i,egate cost of l:,iuting the new boinds, advertising, 364 APPENDIX. explaining and( coirmmending, the loaii, and tle entire c(ost of funding the $200,000,000 at 5 per cent. for teii years is $4,000,000. It seems to me that this does not justify a hope that our $1,500,000,000 of instantly or presently redeemnable sixes can be promptly funded eveii at 5 per cent. Having given to the Secretary's efforts a hearty support throughout, we urge that a radically different plaii may next have a fair trial. Before we send anotl-her bond abroad to be hawked from banking, house to banking house throughout Europe, we ask the government to try-just earnestly to try -to fund the but' of our debt at home. %We could not have sold our bonds during the dark hours of our civil war to Europe at any price, no matter how ruinous, if Mwe had not first shown our faith iii thcrt by taking hundreds of millions of them ourselves. So no-v, having seen hlow reluctantly thley take our reissues at 5 per cent., witlh t discount, let us show theli that we stand ready to take lirger amount at a lower rate of interest at par. I-lere- ise list of our proposition. Let Congress make our greenbacks funidable, at tle pleasture of the holder, in bonds of $100, 81,000 and 8,10,000, drawing interest at the rate of one cent per day on each $100 (or 3.65 per annumi), and exehaneable ini greenbacks at the pleasure of the holder. Now authorize the Tr easur y to purchase and extinguish our outstanding bonds so fast as it is supplied with the means of so doing by re( eipts of customs or otherwise, and to issue new greenbacks whlenever larger amounts shall be required, every one being fundable in sums of $100, 1,000 or $10,000, as aforesaid, at the pleasure of the holder, in bonds drawing an annual interest of 3.65 iii COiln per annum, and these bonds exchagleable into greenbacks whenever a holder shall desire it. The benefits of this system would be these: 1. Our greenbacks, wvhich are now virtual Talsehoods, would be truths. The government would pay them on demand in bonds as aforesaid, which is in substantial accordance with the p)lan on which the greenbacks were first authorized. 2. Every person having greenbackls for whichl he had no present need would present them at some Sub-Treasury and exchange them at par for these bonds. Suppose he had $10,000 whlich hlie expected to use a month hence, he can make themi earn him $30 mieantime, witlhout incurring the 365 APPENDIX. smiallest danger of loss by bank failures or otherwise, and with a positive certainty that the money would be ready for him whenever he chose to take it. 3. A merchant leaves New York with a million of dollars which he proposes to invest in wheat at the West or in cotton at the South. He calls at our Sub-Treasury, exchaiiges his greenbacks for these bonds, and takes or sends these to Chicago, Saint Paul, New Orleans, or Galveston, to be exchanged for use when needed. After looking about for a month, he buys half the produce he originally intended, converts half his bonds illto greenbacks, receives $50 per day or $1,500 in all, as interest, and makes his payments. After traveling and lookingr for another month, he invests the remainder of his capital, receives $3,000 as interest thereon for the two months he has held the last half million of bonds, and lays his course homeward. HIis bonds mnav have lain nearly all the time he owned them in the vaults of some bank; but they were earning money, not for that bank .but for him. 4. Our greenbacks, no longer false, but convertible at pleasure into bonds bearing a moderate gold interest, and exchangeable as aforesaid, could not fail to appreciate steadily until they nearly reached the level of gold. Indeed, they would, unless issued too profusely, be really better than gold. Drawing a higher rate of interest than British consuls, and convertible at pleasure, as these are nlot, they would in time obtain currency even in the Old World. 5. The trouble so inveterately borrowed by thousands with respect to over-issues, redundant currency, etc., would (or at least should) be hereby dispelled. If there were at any time an excess of currency, it would tend to precipitate itself into the bonds aforesaid. If there should ever be a scarcity of currency, bonds would be exchanged at the Treasury for greenbacks till the want was fully supplied. Black Fridays and the locking up of greenbacks would soon be numbered with lost arts and hobgoblin terrors. 6. Though the demand for these bonds might for months be moderate, their convenience and manifest utility would soon diffuse their popularity and stimulate an ever widening demand for them. They would be a favorite investment with guardians and trustees who would expect to be required to pay over the funds held by them at an early day, whether fixed or uncertain. They would say, though I might invest 366 APPENDIX. Ozr deposit these funds whlere they would command a higher (interest, I choose to place them where I know they will be safe and at hand when called for. 7. Ultimately, we believe tlhev would become so popular -that hundreds of millions of theml would be absorbed at or very near the l)ar of sl)pe(ie, and that with the proceeds an ,equal amount of our outstanding sixes Iight be redeemed ;and cancelled, without adver tising for loans or paying ibanikers to shin for us thiroughoutt Europe. The interest thus saved to our country would be an important item. Such are the rude outlines of a plan which we did not originate, but which we heartily endorse. WVhy not give it a t'ial? WVe should dearly like to inform Europe that, since she seems not to want any more of our bonds at 5 per cent., F.ve have concluded to take the balance ourselves at 31." THE LEGAL TENDER BILL AS IT PASSED THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATITES. The following is a copy of the principal sections of the Srst legal tender bill as it passed( the I-Iouse of Representatives, February 6, 1862: f'1it Act to authorize the issue of Un5ited States zotes, (atid.for the redemnption oi.fituidinr' thereof, and for fietidiig the floating debt of the ULqited States. SECTION 1. Be it enactecl by the Se,)ate and H ouse of Peprese^-tatives of thAe U'-iited States, in Co)gyress Assembled: That to meet the necessities of the TreasurT of the United States, and to provide a currency receivable for the public dues, the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue, on the credit of the United States, $150-, 000,000 of United States notes, not bearing interest, payable to bearer,t the Treasury of the United States, at Washington or New York, and of su(ch denominations as lie may .deem expedient, not less than five dollars each. Provided, iiowever, that $50,000,000 of said notes shall be in lieu of the demand Treasury notes authorized to be issued by the Act of July 17, 1861; which said demand notes shall be taken uip as rapidly as practicable, and the notes herein provided for' substitilted for them: And provided, further, 367 I APPE-NDIX. that the amount of the two kinds of notes together, shall, atno time, exceed the sum of $150,000,000. And such notes, herein authorized, shall be receivable in payment of all taxes, duties, imports, excise, debts and delmands of eiverv kind due to the United States, and for all salaries, debts an;d demands owing by the United States to individuals, corporations and associations within the United States, and shall also be lawful money and a legal teildei, in payment of all debts, public and private, within the United States. And( any holders of said United States notes, depositiing ai)y sum not less than $50, or some multiple of $50, with the Treasurer of the United States, or either of tie Assistant Treasurers, shall receive in exchange therefor duplicaLte certificates of deposit, one of which may be tranismiitted to the Secretarof the Treasury, who shall thereupon issue to the holdler aii equal amount of bonds of the United States, coilpoi orregistered, as may by said holder be desired, bearing interest at the rate of six per centum per annumi, payable semi-aiinually, at the Treasury or Sub-Treastury of the United States, and redeemable at the pleasure of the United States, after twenty years from the date thereof. Provided, that tie Secretary of the Treasury shall, upon presentation of said certificates of deposit, issue to the holder thereof, at his option, and instead of the bonds already described, an equal amount of bonds of the United States, couponI or registered, as may by said holder be desired, bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent. per annum, payable semi-annually, and redeemable at the pleasure of the United States, after five years from the date thereof. And such United States notes shall be received the same as coin, at their par value, iil payments for any loans that may be hereafter sold or iegotiated by the Secretary of the Treasury, iand may be reissued from time to time, as the exigencies of the pubtic interests shall require. There shall be printed on the back of tihe United States notes, which may l* issued unlder the provisions of this act, the following words:' The within is a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, andl is exchangeable for bonds of the United States, bearingr six per centumrn interest at twenty years, or in seven per cent. bonds at five years.' ~ 2. Atg, be it fuetIter etacted, That to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to fund the Treasury notes and floatilng debt of the United States, hlie is hereby authorized 368 APPENDIX. to issue, on thile credit of the United States, coupon bonds, or registered bonds, to an amount not exceeding $500,000,000, and redeemable at the pleasure of the government, after twenty years from date, and bearing interest at the rate of six per centumn per annumi, payable semi-annually; and the bonds herein authorized shall be of such denominations, not less than fifty dollars, as may be determined upon by the Secretary of the Treasury; and the Secretary of the Treasury may dispose of such bonds at any time for lawful money of the United States, or for any of the Treasury notes that have been, or may hereafter be, issued under any formier act of Congress, or for United States notes that may be issued under the provisions of this act; and all stocks, bonds, and other securities of the United States, held by individuals, corporations, or associations, within the United States, shall be exempt from taxation by any State or county. ~ 3. A)n,d be it further ecacted: That the United States notes and the coupon or registered bonds, authorized by this act, shall be in such forms as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct, and shall bear the written or engraved signatures of the Treasurer of the United States, and the Registry of the Treasury, and also as evidence of -lawful issue, the imprint of a copy of the seal of the Treasury Department, which imprint shall be made under the direction of the Secretary, after the said notes or bonds shall be received from the engravers, and before they are issued; or the said notes and bonds shall be signed by the Treasurer of the United States, or for the Treasurer by such persons as may be especially appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury for that purpose, and shall be countersigned by the Register of the Treasury, or for the Register by such persons as the Secretary of the Treasury may especially appoint for that purpose; and all the provisions of the act entitled'An act to authorize the issue of Treasury notes,' approved the 23d day of December, 1857, so far as they can be applied to this act, and not inconsistent therewith, are hereby revived and re-enacted; and the sum of $300,000 is hereby appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to carry this act into effect." Two penal sections (~ 4 and ~ 5) were adopted as part of this bill, to guard against counterfeiting, but it is not important to insert them here, as they do not affect the principles of the bill. 24 369 APPENDIX. THE LEGAL TENDER ACT AS IT FINALLY PASSED BOTH HOUSES AND BECAME A LAW. "An? Act to autthorize the issue of U,ited States notes, agd.for the redenmptio,) orfu'tding thereof, ant for funding the floating debt of the UnSted States. Be it enacted by the Senate and IHoutse of Representatives of the U:-ite(l States, in Congress assembled: That theSecretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue on the credit of the United States one hundred and fifty millions of dollars of ULiited States notes, not bearing interest,'payable to bearelr, at the Treasury of tile ULiiited States, and of such denominations as hle may deem expedient, not less than five dollars cach. lrovided, however, that fifty nlillions of said notes shall be in lieu of the demand Treasury notc-s authorized to be issued by the act of July 17th, 1861, which said demand notes shall be taken up as rapidly as practicable, and the notes herein provided for substituted for themn; and Provided further, That the amount of the two kinds of notes together shall at no time exceed the sumni of one hlundred and fifty millions of dollars; and such notes herein authorized shall be receivable in payment of all taxes, internal duties, excises, debts and demands of every kind due to the United States, except duties on imports, and of all claims and demands against the United States of every kind whatsoever, except for interest upon bonds and notes, which shall be paid in coin; and shall also be lawful mloney and a legal tender il payment of all debts, public and private, within the United States, except duties on imports and interest as aforesaid; and any holder of said United States notes depositing any sum not less than fifty dollars, or some multiple of fifty dollars, with the Treasurer of the United States, or either of the Assistant Treasurers, shall receive in exchange therefor duplicate certificates of deposit, one of which may be transmitted to the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall thereupon issue to the holder an equal amount of the bonds of the UnLited States, coupon or registered, as may by said holder be desired, bearing interest at the rate of six per cecntum per annum, payable semi-annually, and redeemable at the pleasure of the United States after five years, and payable twenty years from the date thereof; and such United States notes shall be received the same as coin, at their par 370 APPENDIX. value, in payment for any loans that may be hereafter sold or negotiated by tihe Secretary of the Treasury, and may be reissued from time to time as the exigencies of the public interests shall require. ~ 2. And be it further e),acted, That to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to fund the Treasury notes and floating debt of the United States, he is hereby authorized to issue on the credit of the United States coupon bonds or registered bonds, to an amiount not exceeding five hundred million dollars, and redeemable at the pleasure of the United States after five years, and payable twenty years from date, and bearing interest at the rate of six per centum per annum, payable semni-annually; and the bonds herein authorized shall be of such denomination, lnot less than fifty dollars, as may be determined upon by the Secret.lary of the Treasury; and the Secretary of the Treasury may dispose of such bonds at any time at the market value thereof, for lawful money, the coin of the United States, orI for any of the Treasury notes that have been, or may hereafter be, issued under any former act of Congress, or for the United States notes that may be issued under the provisions of this act; and all stocks, bonds, and other securities of the United States held by individuals, corporations or associatiolns within the United States, shall be exempt fromn taxation by or under State authority. ~ 3. An,d be itCfu'ther e)(actet, That the United States notes and the coupon or registered bonds authorized by this act shall be in such form as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct, and shall bear the written or engraved signatures of the Treasurer of the United States and the Register of the Treasury, and also, as evidence of lawful issue, the imprint of a copy of the seal of the Treasury Department, which imprint shall be made under the direction of the Secretary, after the said notes or bonds shall be received from the engravers, and before they are iss.ued; or the said notes and bonds shall be signed by the Treasurer of the United States, or for the Treasurer, by such persons as may be specially appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury for that purpose, and shall be countersigned by the Register of the Treasury, or for the Register, by such persons as the Secretary of the Treasury may appoint for that purpose; and all the provisions of the act entitled'An act to authorize the issue of Treasury notes, approved the twenty-third day of December, eighteen hundred and fifty-seven, so far as they can be applied 371 APPENDIX. to this act, and not inconsistent therewith, are hereby revived and re-enacted; and the sum of three hundred thousand dollars is hereby appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to carry this act into effect. ~ 4. Acd be itfurther enacted, That the Secretary of the Treasury may receive from any person or persons, or any corporation, United States notes on deposit for not less than thirty days, in sums of not less than one hundred dollars, with any of the assistant treasurers or designated depositories of the United States authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury to receive them, who shall issue therefor certificates of deposit, in such form as the Secretary of the Treasury shall prescribe, and said certificates of deposit shall bear interest at the rate of five per centum per annum; and any amount of United States notes so deposited may be withdrawn from deposit at any time after ten days' notice on the return of said certificates; Pr ovided, that the interest on all such deposits shall cease and determine at the pleasure of the Secretary of the Treasury; and Provided further, that the aggregate of such deposits shall at no time exceed the amount of twenty-five million dollars. 5. Ag,d be itftrGther enacted, That all duties on imported goods which shall be paid in coin, or in notes payable on demand, heretofore authorized, to be received and by law receivable in payment of public dues, and the coin so paid shall be set apart as a special fund, and applied as follows: First-To the payment in coin of the interest on the bonds and notes of the United States. Second-To the purchase or payment of one per centum of the entire debt of the United States, to be made within each fiscal year after the first day of July, 1862; which is to be set apart as a sinking fund; and the interest of which shall in like manner be applied to the purchase or payment of the public debt, as the Secretary of the Treasury shall from time to time direct. Third The residue thereof to be paid into the Treasury of the United States." The penal sections (~ 6 and ~ 7), in relation to counterfeiting, etc., of no importance here, are omitted. 3 4'2 SPEECH OF HON. THADDEUS STEVENS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, DECEMBER 19, 1862. WHIEN Congress convened i11 Decemiber, 1862, the IHon. Thaddeus Stevens, Chairlian of the Colmmittee of Ways and MAeans, offered a bill similar to the original legal tender bill, which passed the House of Representatives, February 6, 1862. This bill was intended to remedy the evils which had resulted from the partial legal tellder act, but the money power raised a great liue and cry, and Mr. Stevens, findin, that it was impossible to carry the measure, was forced to abandon it. His remarks upon the occasion were as fol lows: Mr. STEVENS. I ask the gentleman firom Maryland, (Mr. Crisfield,) who is entitled to thle floor, to permit me to make a statement ill reference to the national finances. Mr. CRISFIELD. I yield to the gentleman for that purpose. Mr. STEVENs. The bill which I introduced some days since, to provide means to defray the expenses of the governiment, produced a howl among the lmoney-clhangers as hideous as that sent forth by their Jewish cousins when they were kicked out of the temp)le. It produced, what seemed to me, an unaccountable excitemnenit ill fina]ncial circles. This was caused, I suppose, by wiong information as to its origin, and a miisuiiderstaiiding as to its object. This was partly the fault of letter writers, and partly the fault of stock-jobbing money editors. I perceive the money article of the Philadelphia lress, of Monday of this week, represents the bill as reported by theC Committee of Ways and MIeans, notwithstanding the papers of last week stated its true origin. I suppose these imoney-article editors are some dishonest brokers who make gail by their misrepresentations. The bill, as all knew who wished to know, was introduced by me on my individual responsibility, on the call of the States, with the sole object, as I then stated, of referring it to the Committee of Ways and Means. Neither the Secretary of the Treasury nor the Committee of WVays and Means had APPENDIX. ever been consulted with regard to it; nor, although refeTrred to them on motion of the mover, has it ever been considered by the committee. So much for the origin of the bill. Its contents and objects seeim to be equally misunderstood or misrepresented. It is known to this House that I do not approve of the present financial system of the government. When this Congress assembled a year ago, all the banks of tile Union, as well as the governlment, had suspended specie payments. The last $50,000,000 of loan, which had been taken by the banks at a discount of $5,500,000, payable in coin, was no longer paid in anything but the currency of suspended banks. The immense expenses of the government, (from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 daily,) were to be provided for. It was imnpossible to negotiate loans, except at a ruinous discount. The Committee of Ways and 5/eans were expected to provide the means, without aiiy suggestions froml any quarter to aid them. After careful deliberation, the committee, or rather as it turned out, the oine-half of them, determined to inraugurate a system of national currency consisting of legal tender notes, receivable in all transactions between individuals, and between individuals and the government, and convertible into bonds of the iUnited States, bearing six per cent. interest, payable semi-annually in lawful money, and redeemable in twenty years in gold or silver coin. The issue of $150,000,000 of sLuch notes was authorized, and of $500,000,000 of twenty years bonds. The system was simple in its machinery, and easily understood. It formed a uniform currency, sustained by the faith of the government, and filurnishing but one currency for all classes of people. It was believed that as the legal tender notes accuimnulated in the hands of bankers and capitalists they would invest them in six per cent. bonds, so as to realize a profit from their capital. The instinct of avarice and gain would never allow them to remain long idle. This conversion and reconversion would have absorbed the $500,000,000 withinii the fiscal year, and supplied all the wants of government. So long as the legal tender notes remained unconverted the government would have had the benefit of the circulation without interest. This was the plan of thle committee. The currency has proved thle most acceptable ever offered to the people. This was the condi 374 APPENDIX. tion of the bills as presented originally, and as they passed the House. But the simplicity and harmony of this system were doomed to be mangled and destroyed as it passed through the Senate. They began by nmakingr two kinds of currency for the same communiiity-a fatal mistake wherever it occurs. They provided that bollnds issued( as above stated should receive the interest in gold, while the interest of all other bonds should be payable in legal tender notes, thus producing at the outset a depreciation of the United States notes, and creating a demand for gold to be taken advantage of semi-annually by bullion mongeris. Witlout such provision there would have been no denmand for a singlle dollar of gold to be used in this country. If merchants wished to import goods beyond our exports, and that required gold, I should feel but little sympathy for them, whatever premium they were obliged to pay. Being unable to defeat this provision, I procured to be inserted a provision liaking the duties on imports payable in gold. This was to enable the government to meet the payment of interest in coin. That had one good and one bad effect. It increased our tariff some thirty per cent., but it compelled our merchants to go among the Shylocks to purchase coin to pay their duties. These combined provisions formn a mine of wealth for brokers and bankers. The duties and interest will require $60,000,000 of gold annually, and soon double that amount. Now, our banks and brokers have scarcely that amount on hand. They may put the price as high as they please, it must be paid. Suppose the banks in our three great commercial cities to have just that amount. If half-yearly they sell the half of it to the government and merchants at thirty per cent., using the other half to the end of the year and then selling it, they would clear by this single operation thirty per cent. on their capital, and have all the profits of loans, on deposits, and currency circulation besides. The gold would return to their vaults, possibly, by the payment of interest on the very bonds they held themselves, and so to be ready for the same operation at the next semi-annual payment, doubling their capital in three years. If a financial system which produces such results be wise, theni I am laboring under a great mistake. The next error was to change the twenty-year bonds into bonds redeemable at the option of the government in five 375 APPENDIX. years, and payable in twenty years. We all know these long loans sell much higher than short ones. But the most unsalable kind of bond is that payable in a short time if the obligor choose, or at any intermediate time up to a distant day at his option. Every man wishes to know when his investment will fall due, so as to know how to arrange for business for re-investment. The very uncertainty of the day of payment is a great fault; hence our bonds sell some five per cent. lower than an absolute twenty-year loan would; yet no one believes that we shall be able to redeem them short of that time. The only justification for this change would be the expectation of being able to pay in five years. He must be a very hopeful man who can indulge that idea. Another change, which seems to me equally injudicious, was the allowing the holders of legal tender notes to deposit them with the government agent at interest not exceeding five per cent., and payable on call after ten days. This effectually destroyed the hope of any very speedy conversion of them into bonds. A holder of them would much prefer lending them on short call at a smaller interest, and wait for emergencies to speculate, than to fund them in goverliment stock. The consequenlce is, that while $80,000,000 have been deposited on short loan, only about $20,000,000 have been invested in bonds. One singular feature of this provision is, that wahen $50,000,000 or more of these notes are thus borrowed by governlmenit, the Secretary of the Tlreasury shall keep on hand $50,000,000 of legal tender notes to meet the call, either by not issuing the amount authorized, or holding others. It is, in effect, the same as if the government agreed to take a loan of $50,000,000 at four per cent., and keep it in their vaults without use until the lender called for it; in other words, paying four per cent. interest for the privilege of holding unused:a special deposit. How these short loans and the pressing demands for other claims are to be paid, at least after all the greenbacks are once issued, I do not well see. Had they twenty years to run, I should feel easy. These are the objections which I have to the present system. I will now briefly state the provisions of the bill which I introduced. It was intended to restore the law just to the condition in which it left the House of Representatives, and nothing more. The first section provides that the Secretary of the Treas 376 APPENDIX. ury shall pay off and cancel all the five-twenty bonds and all others whose interest is payable in gold, and to exchange new bonds for them on such terms as shall be agreed on, or pay them in legal tenders. Certain money editors have professed to see in this a violation of public faith, which promised the payment in gold. Nothing is more false. It proposed to lift these bonds, by negotiating with the holders, at such rates as could be agreed on. If the holder declined to sell, he would be entitled to receive his interest in gold, according to the original contract. I suppose no man could be found in this HIouse base enough to propose repudiation. None but a very stupid man could so misread the bill. True, it proposed to issue no more bonds of that kind, and repealed the law authorizing it. And yet it has been thought of sufficient importance gravely to introduce, the resolution here declaring in advance that we intended to make no change in the law. What business has anybody to inquire whether in our future issue of bonds we intend to pay the interest in coin or legal tender? It is enough for them to know that in contracts already executed the government will keep its faith. It further proposed to pay off the legal tender interestbearing deposits, and to repeal the law authorizing such loan. It has turned out just as the committee predicted, that such demand loan has prevented the conversion to any considerable amount. While $80,000,000 of legal tender are deposited on call, but about $20,000,000 have been invested in bonds. It is obvious that at that rate the sale of bonds will aid but little in carrying on the war. It proposes to repeal the law requiring the payment of duties in coin, as well as the interest on future issues of bonds, except one-fifth of the amount of duties. This is retained so as to furnish the government with coin to defray the foreign diplomatic and consular expenses, and the charges of our courts in foreign ports, and the costs of destitute seamen. Thus the whole currency needed in this country would be legal tender United States notes. The bullion mongers would lose; the merchants and government would gain. Having restored the law to its original shape, it proposes to raise money to pay the pressing debts due to depositors and gold-bearing bonds, the pay due soldiers, and other expenses, by issuing legal tender notes, not exceeding 377 APPENDIX. $200,000,000 beyond those already authorized, and to issue $1,000o,000,000 of bo(nds, bearing six per cent. interest, payable semni-aniiilully ill l.lwfLl molney, and redeemable in twenty years in coin. With $500,000,000 of legal tender notes in circulation, they would:tecumnulate so fast with capitalists and banks that he'holders would be glad to turn them -to profit by l)nrchasilg the loans; and I doubt not before the year woul( expire the whole $1,000,000,000 of bonds would be called for at par. In my opinion, with the present law this amount can never be sold except at ruinous discount. I believe that this disposes of the provisions of this bill, whliel were intendlded[ to restore the comlnmittee's project, and which was sanctioned by a large majority of the House. The balance of the bill refers to State banks, and imposes a tax of fifty per cent. on all their -circulation beyond onehalf of their capital. -This tax is obviously intended for prohibition, and not for revenue. I incline to think it should have taxed all above three-fourthls, instead of one-l).lf of the capital. The object of this provision was two-fold: first, to give a wider cireuhlaioit to Ulnited States notes, and thus induce their colnversion; secondly, to prevent the undue inflation of the currency. I suppose that such a law would drive at least $100,000,000 of baunk notes out of circulation, leaving about the same amount afloat. These, together with the United States notes, would give a circulation of $600,000,000. I believe the business of this country requires that amount. Before the rebellion the paper issues were over $200,000,000, and the coin was at least $300,000,000. I suppose what may properly be called tile present circulation- amounts to more than that sum. The checks which pass as currency in our large cities are as much a paper circulation as bank notes. They amount to some $200,000,000, I imagine, and almost entirely supersede bank notes in New York and Boston. When it was said that the currency necessary to do the business of Great Britain was near two billion dollars, the bank note circulation was less than four hundred millions. The rest was supplied by bills of exchange. But in times of suspension of specie payments, banks will expand to an unlimited amount unless restrained by some national law. I can account for the present high price of everything in no other way than by such expansion or the expectation of it. I fear the true amount of present circula 378 APP'ENDIX. t-on is not ascertained. Take, as an example, a very sound, well-maniaged bank in my own district; it has a capital of $320,000; it holds about $150,000 of United States six and seven-thirty per cent. bonds; it has on short loan $250,000 legal tender; it has $80,000 in coin; and its circulation is $800,000. In an adjoining district a bank with $400,000, capital has more than its whole capital invested in United States loans, and has a circulation of $1,000,000. Such issues must inflate the currency. The people will run mad with speculation, and in a few years a general crash will follow. My proposition would not reduce bank profits below a fair gain. While suspension continues they mi(ght hold, as they now have, their whole capital in government stocks, bearing at least six per cent. per annum. They could have the profits of a circulation equal to three-fourth of their capital, and bank on whatever deposits they have. This would give them at least ten per cent. interest to pay their expenses and dividends to stockholders. This is enough But I ought perhaps to say, before I close, to my country banning friends that they need not be alarmed. There is no great prospect that we shall return to the system I have indicated, nor do much to protect the people fromn their own eager speculations. When, a few years hence, the people shall have been brought to general bankruptcy by their unregulated enterprise, I shall have the satisfaction to know that I attempted to prevent it. Mr. Stevens' views in regard to the defects of the partial legal tender system have been fully confirmed by fourteen years' experience, and his predictions have been verified in a remarkable manner. Notwithstanding the defects of the system, however, and in spite of hostile legislation and the existence of the National Banks, it has proved immensely superior to the specie basis or bank currency systemn, which cursed the country for over half a century prior to the Rebellion, and which the bullionists and bankers are now seeking to re-establish. The people have been brought to the verge of bankruptcy by the machinations of the money power, and the interests of the nation demand that a full 379 APPENDIX. legal tendr money system be now given a fair trial. This end can only be accomplished at the polls. The bullionists and bankers, and their tools, are already in the field, manipulating party conventions and caucuses all over the country, to carry out their designs. The masses must organize against them, throw party prejudice aside, and vote for no man for any official position, from the lowest to the highest, who is not known to be honestly in sympathy with the people's cause, and in favor of full legal tender money. 380 N '4 1865. 1866. >2. | 1863. 105 134 16034 104-4 153 172 102~ 139 171{4 1021 146 159 104 1431 155 109~ 1401 148-7 120 123-4 145 116- 122 129 34 124 127 1431 137 1408 156 2 133~143 154 134 1147 152a ....130 134 147 152-34211 244 1441464131+141 133 137134j136-4 1 q I .110 1111 -2~ 42 1104 1114 .110 1115 .134144113415w110 11213 214 1414111315163 111 112111i 1132 .111 113- 1 1115 1131 /1123 115_a 110 1-51 r~~~~.1 11084,11041 I ii 43 -g I I L ~2 i1 5 181 __y 1867. 132 137i 137i 1401 1331 140] 1321 141~ 134x 138s 136- 138s 1363 140~ 139} 14 141 146~ 1401 145~ 137 7141 133 137~ 1868. 133~ 1421 1391 144 137 1413 1371 1408 139k 1401 11393 141t 1401 1451 1,43~ 150 1411 145i 133- 140~ 132~1137 1343 1364 18i 1864. 1364 144 1357 140 125 136, 125!129, 125!1411 137JI167 147 155 146~ 152 143- 147 145~ 154: 137~ 148 13111141 ...... ...... ...... r..... r.. i... par. 102i 101i 1011 102A, 1031 109 112. 116 !12.2 1129 1130 1511 160 157i 161 159 16934 166- 187 168 190 189 251 222 285 231 ~ 262 185 255 189 229 209 260 211 244 1971 1.96-8 148i 144 128, 135a4 138 1455 1425 144 145~ 144i 234~ 2164 201 160 145~1 1471 146~, 1481 145 149 144824 14634 ct -4 ,s *2 110o lill, 111 1114 Ill~a 1101' ~109 109 1094 log 110 1101 112 113 113 114 113 112 113 110 110 113 112 112 111~4 1131 114i 114 115 1161 ~1113 112t 1131 114~ 114 112 113{ 1153 117 115~ 1161 117~ 1171 1144 117~[117 116t . 11I5 *..... ...... ,...... *r..... ,I...... r..... 1341 130 1304 . 31-,a 134* 137 134 1314 1303 128 1211 119-1 1089~1110 109{1110~ 10931 ill5 109-{1113 112-&11143 113 11144 11321115~ 1121 115~ J1124 1115 111-1114~ 11111ll313 1111 114 1127 115 1141 118 1163 119 116 118 115 118 115 116 1143 116 110 116 107i1111 106}11'1l 108~1112 138 132; 134 144 139{ 137~ 137! 162, 1131. 128i 124 1195 123x 115 /121~ 1101-[1161 111~1115t 11331115~ 110-ix111-4a 111-}1 224a 114-} 122 li'~116.3 111 11131 110} 1114' 11ol04-!l'8 APPENDIX. FRENCH ASSIGNATS. FRENCH Assirgnats and Continental money are ghosts which have been conjured up to frighten the public by the bullionists and bankers, who wish to monopolize the right to furnish the circulating medium of the nation. The subject of Continental money was fully disposed of in the chapter on Banks of the United States;* and a word of explanation in regard to French Assignats seems to be necessary. Thiers, in his life of the celebrated John Law, tells what Assignats were as follows: "Assignat was a name given to a peculiar species of paper money, issued during the first French revolution. * * The first issue of assignats was made on the security of the forfeited [confiscated Ecclesiastical] property; and was adopted as a preferable alternative to thiowing the forfeited lands on the market; which, * * so large an amount of property would glut. The holder of the assignats might use them as money or claim the land which they represented. "The French revolutionary government wished to pay the debt of the monarchy and the expense of a universal war with the national property [confiscated church property], this property nlot being disposable, on account of the quantity and want of confidence, it anticipated the sale, and relpresented the results by papers called assignats. * * But as the success of the revolution began to be distrusted, and doubts arose as to the miaintenance of the national sale, they declined, and, as they declined, the government, to supply the deficiency, in value, was obliged to double the issue, and the repletion contributed, with distrust, to depreciate them." Uipon the overthrow of the revolutionary government and the formation of a responsible government, under Napoleon, the church property was restored to its lawful owners, and the assignats became worthless. To compare the legal tender money of the United States to assignats, is simply an insult to the intelligence of the American people. 'See page 112. 382 APPEN4DIX. EXTRACTS FROM KELLOGG. "THE most fundamental and important truths in relation to the nature of money, have always been so covered up by the technicalities of law as completely to deceive the people respecting its true character, although they have always known and felt that there was sonmetlling wrong in its power. Writers upon political economy, as well as the public in general, have taken it for granted that the laws of nations were right in founding the value of money in the innate value of the gold and silver metals out of which it was coined: hence the conclusions at which they must all arrive' are just as false as the premises upon whiclh they start. And political economists may continue to write and the public may continue to argue upon these premises for centuries to come, and be just as far from the truth as when money was instituted upon this basis. Notwithstanding this mystification about money, its true character and power are very simple, and need only to be clearly and fairly stated to meet the approval of the common mind; and then the public must know that the present centralizing power of money is as gross an imposition upon the common sense of man, as it is upon the common rights of labor and property. For if the material of neither gold, silver nor paper money can in itself be used as food, clothing or shelter, then certainly the scarcity or abundance of money, or the scarecity or abundance of the materials of money, ought never in the least to interfere with a general and full supply of all the necessaries of life. For these necessaries of life are evidently the product of labor, and not the product of money. Yet the present power of money is such that the people are compelled first to work for money, and then to depend upon the power of money to supply the necessaries of life. Thus the power of money is first, and the power of labor is second. The money commands the labor instead of labor commanding the money. This is exactly reversing the true order of things, for it is making a dead centralizing power to rule and tyrannize over the living, productive power, whereas the productive ought always to command the unproductive power. If any writers upon political economy, or any financiers, have discovered the true nature, power and use of money, they have not made such discovery manifest to the understanding of the public. For the laws of nations, as well as the newspapers and other publications of the day, 383 APPENDIX. are still carrying forward and enforcing the idea that mnoney is a productive, living power. Yet the power of money is entirely a dead power, and totally unproductive, inotwithstanding its legal, accumulative powers." "THE avarice that pervades the civilized world has been ingrafted upon society by the too great power of imoney. In most countries it has made production by labor degrading to the child whose necessity compels him to perform it. The skill to gain by lending money, and by taking advantage of otlhers in bargaiiingi, has been, and is taken as evideuce of superior talent, until, by example and precept, avarice has been instilled into the miniids of childern. It has grown with their growth and strengthened with their stren(gth until it lhas corrupted the very foundations of society. The per centage incomes onl bank, railroad, State, and other stocks, and the rates at whiclh money can be borrowed and lent, are the great leading topics of a business community. The topics are not, How shall we contrive to produce by our labor the greatest supply of all the necessaries of life for the general good? but, on the contitary, How shall we contrive to get the largest possible per centage income with the least possible production onlour part? This state of society is directly at variance with suchl a one as a, just monetary system would naturally induce. It is as much opposed to the natural rights Of society as falsehoodl is to truth; and no continuance of competition ill production or distribution, under the present monetary laws, will be any more likely to remedy the evils of this debasing system, than colmp)etition in falsehood would be likely to produce and sustain truth. We must begin improvement by doing away the great gain by unrighteous per centage interest onI money; and then the wealth will naturally be widely distributed among those who do the most for the good of man, instead of being gathered in by a few, who thus become the great oppressors of the humuan family." 384 THE INTER-CONVERTIBLE BOND. It is urged by many who are favorable to the use of full legal tender paper money that a bond is not essential in regulating the circulation of money; neither can it regulate the rates of interest. The power to make and regulate money has long been recognized as a governmental function, and money issued by the government should be clothed with the same authority, without regard to' the material used. The reason of this is obvious. Money to be a public medium of exchange must possess legal representative value, and that can be derived only from the sovereign or law-making power of a nation. For centuries, many nations have used either gold or Silver, or both, out of which they made their money; and in this enlightened age many are led to believe that gold and silver are of themselves money, and that they have been made the standard of value the world over. But such is not the fact, either theoretically or practically. Legislation must first determine the weight of the coin that represents the unit or measurement of value which enters into the money account of a nation, and even after it is coined, it is not money, neither will it perform the functions of money until legislation'declares such coin shall be a le THE INTER-CONVERTIBLE BOND. gal tender. This alone gives it legal authority to pay taxes and duties, and liquidate debts, and which in turn makes it acceptable as money. Therefore if the government will properly issue the public treasury note, or any other paper token, and declare their willingness to receive it for taxes and all public dues to the government to the amount inscribed on its face, the same to be made a full legal tender for all private obligations. When the public note is thus issued it possesses all the legal attributes and the same legal authority to perform the functions of money as if the material of which the tokens.are made, possessed intrinsic or commercial value. As we have shown, it is not the material, nor the government stamp, which constitutes money, but the act of Congress declaring its lawful acceptance, which gives it legal ability to liquidate public and private obligations. This alone gives gold, silver and paper legal public authority to perform the functions of money. The demonetizing and remonetizing of silver is a proof of the above argument. Besides, paper money has many advantages over metalic money. 1st. By reason of the pledges inscribed on its face it represents the property, products and industry of the entire country to the amount or value so inscribed. 2d. It is more valuable and safe, because every individ ual and all the property and products in the nation, inclu ding gold and silver, are held responsible for its security, for all the power and authority given it by law to perform the functions of money. 3d. It is light and convenient to handle and transport, more staple, and consequently less liable to fluctuate, and more difficult to counterfeit than metalic money. 386 THE INTER-CONVERTIBLE BOND. 4th. The material of which it is made is not costly. This will enable the government to furnish the people with a circulating medium at a small expense, in sufficient quantity that the people may be set to work and produce actual wealth, (for money should never be considered actual wealth, only the representative of wealth). It will furnish a proper medium of exchange, which is the only instrument that will enable the government to keep the people at work and make them prosperous. 5th. It is unlike gold and silver money, which is limited in quantity. Neither the government nor the people can furnish a sufficient amount of metalic money to effect an exchange of commodities advantageously; and if there could be a sufficient amount obtained, it would require the labor of thousands annually. This would be an actual loss to the government and humanity, and as uselessly appropriated as the building of pyramids or walling of cities in olden times. The idea of value is something that exists in the minds of the people independent of coins. The unit of value, the beginning point, when once established by custom and education, is used abstractly; and when once fixed in the minds of the people, it passes into the money of account and is capable of measuring all values without the aid of a material that possesses intrinsic value. Our experience in the use of the greenback for the last fifteen years, although only a partial legal tender has given the best kind of evidence that if we adept the full legal tender absolute paper money system, it will furnish us with the best civilized money ever introduced into any nation on earth. Money may be issued under the legal tender system, and be made interchangeable with bonds bearing interest, and 387 THE INTER-CONVERTIBLE BOND. yet be absolute money, because the bonds do not enter into the issuing of money; and the arguments favoring the use of the inter-convertible bond are that it will in some way regulate the circulation and interest. But after a more mature thought my opinion is, that the greatest effect the bonds are likely to have over the circulation is contraction; and what makes it more unfavorable, money will most likely be retired into bonds when property is falling, and that is the time when money should be the most plenty. And furthermore, by the use of the inter-convertible bond, we offer a premium as an inducement to capitalists to contract the currency of the country. We must conclude that the highest crime that can be committed upon the people of any nation (except murder) is the contraction of their currency; and whether done by public or private authority, the offenders should be punished by the severest penalty of the law. Furthermore, there never has been a period in the history of this nation that demanded a more urgent necessity for the government to provide financial assistance than at the present, whereby the millions of idle people can be put to work and produce actual wealth, and stop the downward tendency and evils which idleness is sure to bring to any people, viz: poverty, destitution, ignorance, crime and misery; for all practical people agree that a civil ized nation cannot prosper and develop diversified in dustries unless the government see to it that her people are properly provided with an adequate amount of money. The liberal financial minds of this nation are of the opinion that our government is not providing anything like a suffi cient amount to sustain the government and successfully conduct our various branches of industry, so numerously represented, and make us a prosperous nation; and further more, nothing short of an increase of our money will secure 388 THE INTER-CONVERTIBLE BOND. to all branches of industry, and in fact all classes of people, good and remunerative wages, which they must have before prosperity can ever return to our nation. As to the exact amount of money it will require to stimulate the greatest prosperity can only be determined by actual experience. We are confident that when a people are rich and prosperous it will require more money to conduct their business on a cash basis than it will when they are poor. But it is much better that money should be too plenty than too scarce, for when money is plenty everything else is plenty. Furthermore, when money is plenty the people can be kept at work, and all classes of industry will get good wages. This enables them to supply themselves and families bountifully, and in turn equally benefits the professional class. It not only doubles their business, but people are able to pay when they secure the services of the professions. It will be equally beneficial to the business interests of the country. Therefore I do not favor fixing any definite limit or amount per capita any more than for us to limit the extent of individual wealth. But the amount of money should be kept in proportion to our population, wealth and prosperity. Our experience has established the fact that our wealth and prosperity are better securities and regulators for money than a bondled debt. 989 As to th Ch aracter and Worth of " The Iony Questioni." Fromn "FARM AND FACTORY," Lacrosse, Wis. "THE MONEY QUESTION" is the title of a book of nearly 400 pages, written by William A. Berkey, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, which should be in the hands of every man in the country. This book, more than any other extant, strips the money question of all mystery, and explains the relation of money to societary organization, in language that is easily comprehended. In short, this glorious book opens a new channel of thought to the working man. After reading and pondering its pages he feels himself a stronger and better man. The broad light of day begins to dawn upon his heretofore clouded mind. He realizes for the first time in his life that God did not create him a slave to money, but on the contrary designed that money should be his slave, and that his past ignorance of a question which is of such vital importance to him is all that has made it possible for money to have held him in bondage so long. We shall have occasion to quote frequently from this invaluable work in the future. MR. J. W. HORNEH, of Parkersburg, Pa., says:-"I find it a very valuable work, Ind one that should be read and s-udied by every lover of his country. I consider the money question paramount to all others, and that the'money aristocracy' of the present day is fraught with more evil to the country thian ever the' slave aristocracy' was, and should be watched closer than the money gamblers. I feel a profound interest in the circulation of your book." MESSRS. TODD, POLLOCK & GRANGE1R, Wholesale Furniture Manufacturers of Burlington, Iowa, write: * * * 'We have read your able work through carefully, and consider it one of the best works on the money question ever published. It ought to be put into the hands of every voter for careful consideration." Irmavl-zowzA;4 TESTIMONIALS. Fromn POME.ROY'S DEMOCRAT. THE MONEY QUESTION: By W. A. BERKEY, G:anid Rapids, Michigan. 400 pages. Price by mail, $1.00, There is more real useful information concerning money in this book than in any we ever before saw. Its chapters tell of the wealth and resources of the United States, and why our people do not enjoy general prosperity; money and its functions; banks and banking; banks of the old world; paper money and the banks of the UInited States, with a history of them from the first; history of paper money; the national banking system, etc., etc. We wish that a copy of this really exhaustive and valuable book was in the home of every voter in the country. It is full of facts, figures, data, information and proof that legal tender paper money is equally valuable for all business purposes with gold or silver coin, duly stamped and issued as money. It gives the history of money, of banks, of panics, of fluctuations in market, and tells in a plain, earnest way, how the evils of panics and those national depressions made to enrich the few at the expense of the many, may be avoided. Mr. Berkey has done in this book as much for industry and the good of the people as Grant ever did for the army. He has written, as it seems, under inspiration, anld has produced a book so full of sense, so forcible in its illustrations, so correct in its statements and conclusions, that it should be a text book in the home and memory of every man who wishes for success in life. By all means send for it. Read it and then you will see why times are hard, and what the remedy to apply to prevent hard times in the future. From GENEI,,AL BENJAMIN F. BUTEI,ER. LOW:ELL, MASS., August 9, 1876. DEAR SiR: —I am very much obliged to you for a copy of your excellent book upon the money question. It brings together an array of facts and statistics which should be entirely convincing to every thinking man of the nation, of the inexpediency, nay, cruelty of forced resumption of specie payments. Again thanking you for the copy, which I shall keep beside me as a hand-book of dates and facts, I am, truly yours, BENJ. F. BUTLER. WOOD F. TOWNSEND, EsQ., attorney at law, Danville, Ill., says:-" I have read your book. It is grand, and it is doing great good. I hope the State Central Committee will have it circulated largely." 391 TESTIMONIALS. From HON. WENDELL PHILLIPS. BOSTON, August 1, 1876. DEAR SIu:-I have just finished a more careful reading of your "Money Question," and cannot resist thle impulse to thank you again for the great service you have done the public. I am struck with the completeness of the information furnished. I miss no fact, date or argument, and congratulate you most heartily on your marked success in achieving what, from your preface, I judge was your purposethough you there undervalue your own work. One rises from its perusal profoundly impressed with the vital importance of the subject, and well furnished with the means to advocate the true method of safety and prosperity. Yours Respectfully, WENDELL PHILLIPS. From the CINCINNATI ENQUIRER. THE MONEY QUESTION: By WILLIAM A. BERKEY, Grand Rapids, Michigan. This work, which has just been published, is one of a mnuch more comprehensive and profound character than its title would, perhaps, indicate, and merits more than a passing notice. * * But it is in the analysis of the devices of the credit system, or substitutes for money possessing an intrinsic value, that the author renders the most valuable contributions to the literature of the day upon the engrossing subject of money. * * The doctrine that the public note, like other devices of the credit system, is virtually based on commodities in the process of exchange is carried out to its logical results in every direction, and effectually disposes of such questions as, how much money we should have, how it should be put into circulation, etc. Although no pretense is made in regard to style, the work is compact in its character, and is written in remarkably pur'e English. Mr. Berkey has undoubtedly rendered the cause of honest money a great service, and inflicted a blow upon the Money Power that will be keenly felt. Mit. A. M. COMSTOCK, of San Francisco, the author of "American Finance," writes:-"Your work is the most complete presentation of the subject in print. If it could be generally read it would inaugurate a "new dispensation in finance. 392 NATIONAL BONDS -AND THIE FUNDING When my work entitled the "Money Question" was first published, a few years ago, I favored what is known as the inter-convertible bond; that is, a bond bearing a low rate of interest-below the inciease of wealth by production made inter-convertible, at the option of the holder, with the full legal tender money to be issued by the government. This theory, or plan, was at that time popular with most of the leading currency reformers, nearly all of whom, I am happy to say, like myself, have now discarded it. A more extended and thorough investigation of the subject of national debts and bonds, and the funding system generally, together with a careful observation of the working of that system in the re-funding and consolidation of our own great national debt, has fully convinced me that the true policy of all governments, and most emphatically ours, is, that no interest bearing obligations qf the government, of any kind, shall under any circumstances, ever be issued. The funding system-a method of bequeathing debts to posterity-invented by William of Orange, has in the short space of about two centuries, effectually transferred the sceptre that he wielded, to a powerful aristocracy created by it, and who have themselves made their privileges and their wealth unalienable and hereditary. The public debt. has, in England, a far greater influence in the government, than the nominal sovereign, -and both are used by the aris — SYSTEM. BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. tocracy for a common purpose-to enslave the industrial classes. This unjust and iniquitous system, is now thoroughly established here, and but a few more years will be required, to make its dominion and tyranny more complete and effective here, than in any other nation of the world; because, the tyranny of republics, when they become so, is more unrelenting and unbearable than the worst despotisms. Transitions are far more rapid now than in times past, and a single decade has given to this diabolical scheme for robbing labor, a more perfect development and greater permanence here, than it obtained in England, where it originated, in a century and a half. It is already the controlling interest in all national legislation, and the all-absorbiug topic in our national politics. Little else engages the astention of the general government. It has become a giant that threatens to devour us. It is fast undermining our free institutions and the liberties of the people. And unless something be done to thwart its purposes and its power, it will in the immediate future usurp all the functions of government. The interests of the money class, will constitute all of our nationality, and the Shylocks will have the masses completely under their feet. Let no one say that these evils may be averted here on account of universal suffrage. The right or the privilege to vote, does not necessarily, or practically, carry with it the realization of liberty,-or freedom from oppression. Observe how, in England, the elective franchise has been gradually extended, till it is almost as universal as the distress of the people, while the enslavement of the masses has been steadily and surely going on through the influence, operation and manipulation of funds, till the holdings of her once sturdy yeomanry have been entirely absorbed by the great estates of the aristocracy. Be not deceived then. The power of centralized wealth, under this accursed system, has already become so great that it controls the destinies of nations. It is king of kings. It presides over presidents, and commands legislatures, parliaments and armies. The great and fatal objection to any and all systems of national borrowing and bonds, is, that they constitute a mortgage upon the labor of future generations-of children unborn. This is not only in violation of natural law, but of all law; for no code was ever framed that would allow a parent to mortgage the labor of his children, and his chil 2 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. dren's children, to pay the debts he had contracted. The child, whose labor is thus mortgaged before he is born, is enslaved. "He is born a helot and a serf. His body is no more his own than is that of the bondsman; * * * a slave he is to all practical intents and purposes, and a slave he ought to be called." The system of national debts and bonds, is wholly at variance with all of the principles, usages and maxims of free government. It has been described, as "a device adopted by necessitous or iniquitous governments, for throwing the execution of money contracts made by the office-holders of one generation, upon generations having nothing to do with the making of the bargains that are assumed to bind them. It is a system for enabling the rulers of one age, to mortgage the children of future ages to the pawn-broker; or rather, to sell the wealth which future generations may create by their industry, without asking the consent of those generations, or giving them any of the cash borrowed in their name." It is one of the cardinal principles' of free government, that no one shall be taxed without his own consent, as expressed by a majority of freely elected representatives. Taxes imposed without such consent, are a robbery; and that a people, like ours, accustomed to free institutions and the enjoyment of a large share of their natural rights, should ever have consented to the establishment in perpetuity of a great national debt, and a system of consolidated national bonds, is as surprising, as that they should now contemplate a submission to their practical consequences. An able writer has said of it, "Of all the schemes ever devised by the perverse ingenuity of man, for making the rich richer and the poor poorer, the weak weaker and the strong stronger, the funding systtri, with its accessories, holds the highest rank, unchallenged and unchallengeable." In it, as Doubleday says in his "Financial and Monetary History of England," "we behold in tatngible form a power so terribly strong, that with a touch it can paralyze armies. We behold it gradually weaving around us a net from which it is impossible to escape, and claiming with a stern accent that brooks no denial, a right of property in ourselves, our soil, our earnings, our industry and our children. The wisest of our statesmen have tried to check its advance and failed. The wo'rst have encouraged its growth, and almost declared it 3 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. harmless; and the most adroit have yielded to its power." How entirely applicable is all of this to its operation and influence in America. It is urged in extenuation of this nefarious system, that holds money to be everything and man nothing, that considers man just fit for gunpowder food, and wealth a thing too sacred and too holy to be touched by the hand of necessity, that the benefits of wars and public works, go in part to future generations, and therefore, they ought to bear a part of the burthen of their expense. But this is the most transparent sophistry. Wars must be prosecuted and battles fought by living men, and public works must be executed by the labor and skill of the present time without any help or concern of the unborn. Besides, the sacrifices of life and limb, of health and happiness made by those who fight the battles of the nation, can never be restored. Nor does any one ever think of giving back to the heirs of the defenders of the nation and its wealth, any of the life and strength expended by them. Ought the government, then, to place the owners and sacrificers of money, above the owners and sacrificers of life, liberty and strength? Is it right for the government to require the posterity of those who lose their lives in fighting its battles or wear out their bodies in erecting public works, to pay an eternal tribute to the heirs of the usurers? Professor Amnasa Walker, one of the ablest of writers on political economy, says: "The right to tax posterity at pleasure, is the right to establish a most terrific despotism; and yet this is one of the popular soph. isms of the present day." Thomas Jefferson, one of the ablest and purest statesmen that ever lived in any age or country, and who in his knowledge and perception of the rights and liberties of mankind, has had few if any peers, says of this systematized robbery: "The laws of nature forbid the creation of a perpetual debt. The earth belongs to the living, and not the dead. The will and power of man expire with his lt'fe by Aatural law. The laws of nature impose no obligation on posterity to pay such a debt. And although like some other natural rights, this has not entered into any declaration of rights, it is no less a law, and ought to be acted on by honest governments. It is at the same time, a salutary curb on the spirit of war and indebtment, which, since the modern theory of the perpet uation of debt, has drenched the earth with blood, and 4 BONDS AND FUNDING SYST EM. crushed its inhabitants under burthens ever accumulating." The inquiry will now be made, how, if the national gov ernment is ever more to be prohibited from borrowing money on the public credit, are the extraordinary expenses incident to war, or other national calamities and emergen cies, to be provided for? To which I answer, in precisely the same manner that the ordinary expenses of the govern ment are provided for and paid; or that the extraordinary number of men required for govenmental service are obtained. And this method, as will be shown by the best and most competent authority, is not only just and practica ble, but is based upon sound principles of public economy and natural right. Governments are instituted for the pro tection and preservation of personal and proprietary rights, and derive all their legitimate authority "from the con sent of the governed." WhenIce, then, comes the right or authority of a government to tax posterity, without either knowledge or consent? The sole use, need, purpose or benefit of government, is, to secure to those who live under it, the full and free exercise of all their natural rights, the enjoyment of personal liberty, and a sure tenure of the results and proceeds of their industry, skill and ingenuity. And when they fail in their proper functions, or "become subversive of these ends, it is not only the right, but the duty of the people to alter or abolish them." Governments, when properly instituted, are simply the inhabitants of certain portions of the earth bounded by geographical lines, joined together and organized by mutual consent, for selfprotection. And when viewed in this light, they are shorn of all their ancient divinity and sacredness; a belief in which, has in times past, as now, enabled them-Republican and Democratic as well as monarchical-to rob and slay, without let, hindrance or limit. What are the duties and obligations of the citizen to thie government in consideration of the protection, security and advantages afforded by it; or in other words, what return is to be made or equivalent given by the individual to the government, for the guardianship of his rights and interests? As equality of rights, privileges and benefits secured, imposes equal obligations, duties and restraints, it follows that the maintenance and defence of organization or government, devolves equally upon all. War, or other national emergencies or extraordinary needs may increase, but cannot change these obliga 5 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. tions; and therefore, afford no excuse or reason for a departure from the principles and usages that obtain under ordinary circumstances. It must be obvious to any intelligent mind, that when the life of the nation is imperiled by war; or in other words, when the destruction of the organization called government is threatened, or the peace and safety of the people and their property endangered, and mene are needed to fight battles, and money to pay their expenses, together with other demands upon the government, it becomes the duty of every citizen, in consideration of the peirsonal protection afforded by the government, to furniish, in some way, his share of the personal service required by it; and at the same time, it becomes the duty of the existing wealth of the nation, not its prospective labor, to pay the expense, in consideration of the protection and security it has enjoyed under the national gnardianshliip It is proper, and even necessary from economic considerations, if friom no other, to excuse the young, the aged and infirm from personal service, and so, too, if any are excused from the payment of their just share of the expense, it should be the poor and weak, and not the rich. It is also just and proper at first, to call for volunteers to fill up the ranks of the army, and if they do not come in sufficient numbers, there is, perhaps, no more equitable plan than that already adopted, that each citizen shall stand his equal chance with every other by draft. At the same time, the government should call upon the wealth of the nation to pay, volunt arily, the expense, and if the money does not come, it should enroll every dollar of the wealth of the nation, as it enrolls the names of those fit for military service, and compel each and every dollar to pay its just and equal share of the expense. Is there anything wrong in this plan? If not, let no one say that it is not practicable. Has man no dignity that should be respected and protected from outrage, while the government must stand off, and, with obeisance to mammon, beg a loan upon unusual and most oppressive terms? Must man lose his life for his country, while money shall double its power out of the public misfortune? Away with such tyranny! The government that confesses itself too weak or too mean to lay upon wealth the hand of necessity, while it seizes the citizen, deprives him of liberty and imposes upon him hard senrice, and perhaps loss of health, limb, or even life itself, 6 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. is not only not worth preserving, but deserves immediate destruction at the hands of its own people. The men who volunteer to fight the battles of the nation, should say to those who possess the wealth of the nation, if you do not consider the government and its cause worth paying for, we do not consider it worth fighting, and dying for. The positions here taken, which are above successful controversy, are amply sustained by the best and ablest economists and statesmen of both hemispheres; a few of whom, from our own country, and from England, where the system of national borrowing and bonds originated, may be appropriately quoted in this connection. One of Franklin's maxims is, "the debtor is the slave of the creditor." The great philosopher would hardly have endorsed Jay Cook's sophism, borrowed from the English aristocracy, that "a national debt is a national blessing." Mr. Jackson, of Georgia, one of the most astute of American statesmen, said in Congress in 1790, on the funding proposition then under consideration, "I contend that a funding system in this country will be highly dangerous to the republic. * * * It must hereafter settle upon posterity a burthen which they canl neither bear nor relieve themselves from. * * * Enormous taxes will bear heavily upon both agriculture and commerce. It will be charging the active and industrious citizen who pays his share of taxes, to pay the idle and indolent creditor who receives them to be spent and wasted. Thus the honest, hard-working part of community will promote the ease and luxury of wealth." The problem then presented to the young American Republic, was practically, the funding and consolidation of the revolutionary war debt, or its repudiation. Our fathers chose the latter; and although no debt that was ever incurred, by any nation or people, represented more of patriotism, valor, hard service, privation and suffering than that did, subsequent events have demonstrated the wisdom of their course. Experience has also shown, that neither the morals, the credit or the prosperity of the nation have suffered as much by this act, as they would have suffered by the adoption of the Pitt-Hamilton plan of funding and consolidation, as illustrated by the history of other nations that have adopted it, and by our own recently, under its operation and influence. Prof. Amasa Walker, before quoted, says in regard to the popular delusion that more 7 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. money is needed in time of war than under ordinary circumstances, and on that account governments must resort to borrowing —" Government now becomes the great operator, employs ten times the usual number of agents, expends, perhaps, ten times its usual resources. It, then, has need of more money; but as it only takes the place of former employers, of former consumers, so it only needs to take their place in the receipt of money; and this may be effected by prompt, equal and thorough taxation-taxation conducted by the established methods, and in accordance with such rules as we have laid down. A state of war, therefore, instead of being as it is usually made, a reason for departing from the ordinary ruiles of public economy, is an additional reason for adhering closely to them in every particular. * * * The economy of a national debt, under the modern financial system, must always impoverish the industrial classes. Its entire influence upon them is oppressive." Dr. Chalmers, a most eminent and highly accredited English authority, says: "The common theory is, that in calling for the whole amount in one year, you require what is either impossible or very inconvenient; that the people cannot, without great hardship, pay the whole at once out of their yearly income, and that it is much better to require of them a small paymient every year in the shape of interest, than so great a sacrifice once for all. To which his answer is, that the sacrifice is made equally in either case. Whatever is spent cannot but be drawn from the yearly income of some one. The whole and every part of the wealth produced in the country forms, or helps to form, the yearly income of somebody. The privation which it is supposed must result from taking the amount in the shape of taxes, is not averted by taking it in a loan. The suffering is not averted, but only throwz upon the laboring classes, the least able, and who least ought to bear it; while all the inconvenience, physical, moral and political, produced by maintaining taxes for the perpetual payment of interest, are incurred in pure loss. Whenever capital is withdrawn from production, or from the fund destined for production, to be used by the state and employed unproductively, that whole sum is withheld from the laboring classes; the loan, therefore, is in truth paid off the first year; the whole of the sacrifice necessary for paying it off, is actually made, 8 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. only it is paid to the wrong persons, and therefore does not extinguish the debt; and paid by the very worst of taxes, a tax. exclusively on the laboring classes. And after having in this most painful and unjust way, gone through the whole effort necessary for extinguishing the claim, the country remains charged with it, and with the payment of its interest in perpetuity." To this Mr. John Stuart Mill adds his endorsement in the following most emphatic terms: "Borrowing in this case is not a substitute for taking the supplies within the year. A government which borrows does actually take the amount within the year, and that, too, by a tax exclusively on the laboring classes; than which it could have done nothing worse, if it had supplied its wants by avowed taxation; and in that case the transaction and its evils would have ended with the emergency; while by the circuitous mode adopted, the value exacted from the laborers is gained, not by the state, but by the employers of labor, the state remaining charged with the debt besides, and with its interest in perpetuity. The system of public loans, in such circumstances, may be pronounced the very worst which, in the present state of civilization, is still included in the catalogue of financial expedients." Our ability to "pay as we go" and to pay, cash down, the expenses of the most exhaustive war ever waged by any nation, was fully demonstrated in the rebellion. The expenditures of the government during five years, including the war period, were $773,130,000 per annum. As late as 1867, when, according to official reports, considerable amounts of taxes had been "voted off," both ex-Comnptroller Clarke and Corn. Wells agree, that the honest tax-payers were then paying at the rate of $960,000,000 per annum. Nearly two hundred millions more than the average annual expenses of the war. And this was after five years of destructive war, by which more than a million of able-bodied men had been abstracted from our productive force, and before the states lately in rebellion had begun to pay any revenue worth mentioning. The people had at that time, actually paid, in taxes, since the beginning of the war, a sum far greater than the entire expense. Leaving the $2,700,000,000 of national indebtedness existing at that time, to represent nothing but shaves, peculations and public plunder. Great Britain hasrin like mannrer demonstrated her ability to pay 9 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. the expenses of great wars, by current taxation. An eminent authority on that subject-Sir Robt. Hamilton-said, near the close of the British continental wars, "During the last ten years, though we have been engaged in a war of unprecedented expense, the amount of our taxes have .been greater than the expense of the war." It will perhaps be urged, that no one contemplates making the debt of this nation perpetual. Let no one be deceived in this respect. No one thought of making the debt of Great Britain perpetual for more than a century after its establishment, but all hope of ever paying anything but its interest in perpetuity has long since been abandoned. The original bonds issued by our government, nearly all matured within twenty years. Nearly three-quarters of that time has already elapsed, and not only has no reduction of the principal been made, but the greater part of it has been refunded in bonds running forty years longer. And they might as well have been given for four hundred or four thousand years as for forty, for if the people pay the interest for forty years, they will pay it forever, or until the debt is repudiated. Prof. Walker says-' Science of Wealth," p. 370"History is philosophy teaching by example. No great national debt was ever paid or discharged, except by repudiation." We sincerely hope that this nation may set a new example; but if we expect ever to do that, we must stop all schemes of funding and refunding on the specious plea of reducing the interest or any other decep tion. The element of time is always of greater importance to the fund-holders, than the rate; and they are always willing to reduce the latter, provided that the former be extended. Money may be issued uinder the legal tender system, and be made interchangeable with bonds bearing interest, and yet be absolute money, because the bonds do not enter into the issuing of money; and the arguments favoring the use of the inlter-convertible bond are that it will in some way regulate the circulation and interest. But after a more ma ture thought my opinion is, that the greatest effect the bonds are likely to have over the circulation is contraction; and what makes it more unfavorable, money will most likely be retired into bonds when property is falling, and that is the time when money should be the most plenty. And further more, by the use of the inter-convertible bond, we offer a 10 BONDS AND FUNDING SYSTEM. premium as an inducement to capitalists to contract the currency of the country. We must conclude that the highest crime that can be committed upon the people of any nation (except murder) is the contraction of their currency; and whether done by public or private authority, the offenders should be punished by the severest penalty of the law. In conclusion I would state, in regard to the inter-convertible bond, that, from careful study and observation, I am convinced, that it would not only fail to operate as a "regulator," adjusting the volume of currency to the needs of commerce, but would be absorbed to any extent that it might be issued by the Shylocks and fund-seekers, and thereby become a huge engine of contraction. And being convertible at the option of the holder, and not payable at the option of the government, it would eventually become, like any other system of funds, a perpetual mortgage upon posterity. Therefore we say, down with any and all systems of robbery that enslave our children. NO MORE BONDS FOREVER. The adoption of the system of finance discussed and advocated in the " Money Question," would supply the people at all times with a sufficient vQlume of currency to fully employ all the labor of the nation, at all times, whether in peace or war, and would, therefore, enable the government to meet any and all emergencies by ordinary methods, and forever obviate the necessity of mortgaging prospective labor. WM. A. BERKEY. I1 As to the Character and Worth of"The loney Qustion." FRom RON. WENDELL PHILLIPS. BOSTON, August 1, 1876. DEAR SIR:-I have just finished a more careful reading of your "Money Question," and cannot resist the impulse to thank you again for the great service you have done the public. I am struck with the completeness of the information furnished. I miss no fact, date or argument, and congratulate you most heartily on your marked success in achieving what, from your preface, I judge was your purpose — though you there undervalue your own work. One rises from its perusal profoundly impressed with the vital importance of the subject, and well furnished with the means to advocate the true method of safety and prosperity. Yours Respectfully, WENDELL PHILLIPS. MR. J. W. HORNER, of Parkersburg, Pa., says:-" I find it a very valuable work, and one that should be read and studied by every lover of his country. I consider the money question paramount to all others; and that the'money aristocracy' of the present day is fraught with more evil to the country than ever the' slave aristocracy' was, and should be watched closer than the money gamblers. I feel a profound interest in your book." MR. A. M. COMSTOCK, of San Francisco, the author of "American Finance," writes:-"Your work is the most complete presentation of the subject in print. If it could be generally read it would inauguarate a' new dispensation in finance."' WOOD F. TOWNSEND, EsQ., attorney at law, Danville, Ill., says:-" I have read your book. It is grand, and it is doing great good. I hope the State Central Committee will have it circulated largely." TMBTZ=O=ZoA~l