| Panic and
Depression 1836 President Jackson has the satisfaction, in
his last year in office of seeing the demise of the Bank of the United
States and the transfer of Federal deposits to the state banks.
But he also foresees the long-range results of his
triumph. In an effort to avoid the inflationary
consequences of unrestrained printing of paper money by
uncontrolled state banks (now that the Bank of the
United States no longer exists), the President, always
an advocate of " hard money," issues the Specie
Circular, requiring that public lands be paid for in
gold or silver. It is not successful. Land sales and
prices drop: those who have specie hoard it: speculators
thrive.
EIGHTH ANNUAL MESSAGE
During the term of Andrew Jackson while in office
as President March 4, 1833, to March 4, 1837.
Washington, December 5, 1836
Volume: III Pages: 246-253 (extract) "The influence
of an accumulating surplus upon the legislation of the
General Government and the States, its effect upon the
Credit System of the country, producing dangerous
extensions and ruinous contractions, fluctuations in the
price of property, rash speculation, idleness,
extravagance, and a deterioration of morals, have taught
us the important lesson that any transient mischief
which may attend the reduction of our revenue to the
wants of our Government is to be borne in preference to
an overflowing treasury.
I beg leave to call your attention to another
subject intimately associated with the preceding
one---the currency of the country.
It is apparent from the whole context of the
Constitution, as well as the history of the times which
gave birth to it, that it was the purpose of the
Convention to establish a currency consisting of the
precious metals. These, from their peculiar properties
which rendered them the standard of value in all other
countries, were adopted in this as well to establish its
commercial standard in reference to foreign countries by
a permanent rule as to exclude the use of a mutable
medium of exchange, such as of certain agricultural
commodities recognized by the statutes of some States as
a tender for debts, or the still more pernicious
expedient of a paper currency.
The last, from the experience of the evils of the
issues of paper during the Revolution, had become so
justly obnoxious as not only to suggest the clause in
the Constitution forbidding the emission of bills of
credit by the States, but also to produce that vote in
the Convention which negatived the proposition to grant
power to Congress to charter corporations---a
proposition well understood at the time as intended to
authorize the establishment of a national bank, which
was to issue a currency of bank notes on a capital to be
created to some extent out of Government stocks.
Although this proposition was refused by a direct
vote of the Convention, the object was afterwards in
effect obtained by its ingenious advocates through a
strained construction of the Constitution. The debts of
the Revolution were funded at prices which formed no
equivalent compared with the nominal amount of the
stock, and under circumstances which exposed the motives
of some of those who participated in the passage of the
act to distrust.
The facts that the value of the stock was greatly
enhanced by the creation of the bank, that it was well
understood that such would be the case, and that some of
the advocates of the measure were largely benefited by
it belong to the history of the times, and are well
calculated to diminish the respect which might otherwise
have been due to the Action of the Congress which
created the institution.
On the establishment of a national bank it became the
interest of its creditors that gold should be superseded
by the paper of the bank as a general currency. A value
was soon attached to the gold coins which made their
exportation to foreign countries as a mercantile
commodity more profitable than their retention and use
at home as money. It followed as a matter of course, if
not designed by those who established the bank, that the
bank became in effect a substitute for the Mint of the
United States. Such was the origin of a national-bank
currency, and such the beginning of those difficulties
which now appear in the excessive issues of the banks
incorporated by the various States.
Page: 247 (extract) "Although it may not be
possible by any legislative means within our power to
change at once the system which has thus been introduced
and has received the acquiescence of all portions of the
country, it is certainly our duty to do all that is
consistent with our constitutional obligations in
preventing the mischief's which are threatened by its
undue extension. That the efforts of the fathers of our
Government to guard against it by a
constitutional provision were founded on an intimate
knowledge of the subject has been frequently attested by the bitter
experience of the country.
The same causes which led them to refuse their
sanction to a power authorizing the establishment of
incorporations for banking purposes now exist in a much
stronger degree to urge us to exert the utmost vigilance
in calling into action the means necessary to correct
the evils resulting from the unfortunate exercise of the
power, and it is to be hoped that the opportunity for
effecting this great good will be improved before the
country witnesses new scenes of embarrassment and
distress.
Variableness must ever be the characteristic of a
currency of which the precious metals are not the chief
ingredient, or which can be expanded or contracted
without regard to the principles that regulate the value
of those metals as a standard in the general trade of
the world. With us bank issues constitute such a
currency, and must ever do so until they are made
dependent on those just proportions of gold and silver
as a circulating medium which experience has proved to
be necessary not only in this but in all other
commercial countries.
Where those proportions are not infused into the
circulation and do not control it, it is manifest that
prices must vary according to the tide of bank issues,
and the value and stability of property must stand
exposed to all the uncertainty which attends the administration of institutions that are constantly
liable to the temptation of an interest distinct from
that of the community in which they are established.
The progress of an expansion, or rather a depreciation,
of the currency by excessive bank issues is always
attended by a loss to the laboring classes. This portion
of the community have neither time nor opportunity to
watch the ebbs and flows of the money market. Engaged
from day to day, in their useful toils, they do not
perceive that although their wages are nominally the
same, or even somewhat higher, they are greatly reduced
in fact by the rapid increase of a spurious currency,
which, as it appears to make money abound, they are at
first inclined to consider a blessing.
It is not so with the speculator, by whom this
operation is better understood, and is made to
contribute to his advantage. It is not until the prices
of the necessaries of life become so dear that the
laboring classes can not supply their wants out of their
wages that the wages rise and gradually reach a justly
proportioned rate to that of the products of their
labor. When thus, by the depreciation in consequence of
the quantity of paper in circulation, wages as well as
prices become exorbitant, it is soon found that the
whole effect of the adulteration is a tariff on our home
industry for the benefit of the countries where gold and
silver circulate and maintain uniformity and moderation
in prices.
It is then perceived that the enhancement of the price
of land and labor produces a corresponding increase in
the price of products until these products do not
sustain a competition with similar ones in other
countries, and thus both manufactured and agricultural
productions cease to bear exportation from the country
of the spurious currency, because they can not be sold
for cost. This is the process by which specie is
banished by the paper of the banks. Their vaults are
soon exhausted to pay for foreign commodities. The next
step is a stoppage of specie payment---a total
degradation of paper as a currency---unusual depression
of prices, the ruin of debtors, and the accumulation of
property in the hands of creditors and cautious
capitalists.
Volume: III Page: 248 (extract) "It was in view
of these evils, together with the dangerous power
wielded by the Bank of the United States and its
repugnance to our Constitution that I was induced to
exert the power conferred upon me by the American people
to prevent the continuance of that institution. But
although various dangers to our republican institutions
have been obviated by the failure of that bank to extort
from the Government a renewal of its charter, it is
obvious that little has been accomplished except a
salutary change of public opinion toward restoring to
the country the second currency provided for in the
Constitution.
In the acts of several of the States prohibiting the
circulation of small notes, and the auxiliary enactments
of Congress at the last session forbidding their
reception or payment on public account, the true policy
of the country has been advanced and a larger portion of
the precious metals infused into our circulating medium.
These measures will probably be followed up in due time
by the enactment of State laws banishing from
circulation bank notes of still higher denominations,
and the object may be materially promoted by further
acts of Congress forbidding the employment as fiscal
agents of such banks as continue to issue notes of low
denominations and throw impediments in the way of the
circulation of gold and silver.
The effects of an extension of bank credits and over
issues of bank paper have been strikingly illustrated in
the sales of the public lands. From the returns made by
the various registers and receivers in the early part of
last summer it was perceived that the receipts arising
from the sales of the public lands were increasing to an
unprecedented amount. In effect, however, these receipts
amounted to nothing more than credits in bank. The banks
lent out their notes to speculators. They were paid to
the receivers and immediately returned to the banks, to
be lent out again and again, being mere instruments to
transfer to speculators the most valuable public land
and pay the Government by a credit on the books of the
banks.
Those credits on the books of some of the Western
banks, usually called deposits, were already greatly
beyond their immediate means of payment, and were
rapidly increasing. Indeed, each speculation furnished
means for another; for no sooner had one individual or
company paid in the notes than they were immediately
lent to another for a like purpose, and the banks were
extending their business and their issues so largely as
to alarm considerate men and render it doubtful whether
these bank credits if permitted to accumulate would
ultimately be of the least value to the Government. The
spirit of expansion and speculation was not confined to
the deposit banks, but pervaded the whole multitude of
banks throughout the Union and was giving rise to new
institutions to aggravate the evil.
The safety of the public funds and the interest of the
people generally required that these operations should
be checked; and it became the duty of every branch of
the General and State Governments to adopt all
legitimate and proper means to produce that salutary
effect. Under this view of my duty I directed the
issuing of the order which will be laid before you by
the Secretary of the Treasury, requiring payment for the
public lands sold to be made in specie, with an
exception until the 15th of the present month in favor
of actual settlers. This measure has produced many
salutary consequences.
It checked the career of the Western banks and gave
them additional strength in anticipation of the pressure
which has since pervaded our Eastern as well as the
European commercial cities. By preventing the extension
of the credit system it measurably cut off the means of
speculation and retarded its progress in monopolizing
the most valuable of the public lands. It has tended to
save the new States from a nonresident proprietorship,
one of the greatest obstacles to the advancement of a
new country and the prosperity of an old one.
It has tended to keep open the public lands for entry
by emigrants at Government prices instead of their being
compelled to purchase of speculators at double or triple
prices. And it is conveying into the interior large sums
in silver and gold, there to enter permanently into the
currency of the country and place it on a firmer
foundation. It is confidently believed that the country
will find in the motives which induced that order and
the happy consequences which will have ensued much to
commend and nothing to condemn.
Page: 250 (continue) "It remains for Congress if
they approve the policy which dictated this order to
follow it up in its various bearings. Much good, in my
judgment, would be produced by prohibiting sales of the
public lands except to actual settlers at a reasonable
reduction of price, and to limit the quantity which
shall be sold to them. Although it is believed the
General Government never ought to receive anything but
the constitutional currency in exchange for the public
lands, that point would be of less importance if the
lands were sold for immediate settlement and
cultivation.
Indeed, there is scarcely a mischief arising out of our
present land system, including the accumulating surplus
of revenues, which would not be remedied at once by a
restriction on land sales to actual settlers; and it
promises other advantages to the country in general and
to the new States in particular which can not fail to
receive the most profound consideration of Congress.
Experience continues to realize the expectations
entertained as to the capacity of the State banks to
perform the duties of fiscal agents for the Government
at the time of the removal of the deposits. It was
alleged by the advocates of the Bank of the United
States that the State banks, whatever might be the
regulations of the Treasury Department, could not make
the transfers required by the Government or negotiate
the domestic exchanges of the country.
It is now well ascertained that the real domestic
exchanges performed through discounts by the United
States Bank and its twenty-five branches were at least
one-third less than those of the deposit banks for an
equal period of time; and if a comparison be instituted
between the amounts of service rendered by these
institutions on the broader basis which has been used by
the advocates of the United States Bank in estimating
what they consider the domestic exchanges transacted by
it, the result will be still more favorable to the
deposit banks.
The whole amount of public money transferred by the
Bank of the United States in 1832 was $16,000,000. The
amount transferred and actually paid by the deposit
banks in the year ending the 1st of October last was
$39,319,899; the amount transferred and paid between
that period and the 6th of November was $5,399,000, and
the amount of transfer warrants outstanding on that day,
was $14,450,000, making an aggregate of $59,168,894.
These enormous sums of money first mentioned have been
transferred with the greatest promptitude and
regularity, and the rates at which the exchanges have
been negotiated previously to the passage of the deposit
act were generally below those charged by the Bank of
the United States. Independently of these services,
which are far greater than those rendered by the United
States Bank and its Twenty-five branches, a number of
the deposit banks have with a commendable zeal to aid in
the improvement of the currency, imported from abroad,
at their own expense, large sums of the precious metals
for coinage and circulation.
In the same manner have nearly all the predictions
turned out in respect to the effect of the removal of
the deposits--a step unquestionably necessary to prevent
the evils which it was foreseen the bank itself would
endeavor to create in a final struggle to procure a
renewal of its charter. It may be thus, too, in some
degree with the further steps which may be taken to
prevent the excessive issue of other bank paper, but it
is to be hoped that nothing will now deter the Federal
and State authorities from the firm and vigorous
performance of their duties to themselves and to the
people in this respect.
In reducing the revenue to the wants of the Government
your particular attention is invited to those articles
which constitute the necessaries of life. The duty on
salt was laid as a war tax, and was no doubt continued
to assist in providing for the payment of the war debt.
There is no article the release of which from taxation
would be felt so generally and so beneficially. To this
may be added all kinds of fuel and provisions. Justice
and benevolence unite in favor of releasing the poor of
our cities from burdens which are not necessary to the
support of our Government and tend only to increase the
wants of the destitute.
It will be seen by the report of the Secretary of
the Treasury and the accompanying documents that the
Bank of the United States has made no payment on account
of the stock held by the Government in that institution,
although urged to pay any portion which might suit its
convenience, and that it has given no information when
payment may be expected. Nor, although repeatedly
requested, has it furnished the information in relation
to its condition which Congress authorized the Secretary
to collect at their last session. Such Measures as are
within the power of the Executive have been taken to
ascertain the value of the stock and procure the payment
as early as possible.
Page: 251 (continue) "The conduct and present
condition of that bank and the great amount of capital
vested in it by the United States require your careful
attention. Its charter expired on the 3d day of March
last, and it has now no power but that given in the
twenty-first section, "to use the corporate name, style,
and capacity for the purpose of suits for the final
settlement and liquidation of the affairs and accounts
of the corporation, and for the sale and disposition of
their estate--real, personal, and mixed--but not for any
other purpose or in any other manner whatsoever, nor for
a period exceeding two years after the expiration of the
said term of incorporation."
Before the expiration of the charter the stockholders
of the bank obtained an act of incorporation from the
legislature of Pennsylvania, excluding only the United
States. Instead of proceeding to wind up their concerns
and pay over to the United States the amount due on
account of the stock held by them, the president and
directors of the old bank appear to have transferred the
books, papers, notes, obligations, and most or all of
its property to this new corporation, which entered upon
business as a continuation of the old concern. Amongst
other acts of questionable validity, the notes of the
expired corporation are known to have been used as its
own and again put in circulation. That the old bank had
no right to issue or reissue its notes after the
expiration of its charter can not be denied, and that it
could not confer any such right on its substitute any
more than exercise it itself is equally plain.
In law and honesty the notes of the bank in circulation
at the expiration of its charter should have been called
in by public advertisement , paid up as presented, and,
together with those on hand, canceled and destroyed.
Their reissue is sanctioned by no law and warranted by
no necessity. If the United States be responsible in
their stock for the payment of these notes, their
reissue by the new corporation for their own profit is a
fraud on the Government. If the United States is not
responsible, then there is no legal responsibility in
any quarter, and it is a fraud on the country. They are
the redeemed notes of a dissolved partnership, but,
contrary to the wishes of the retiring partner and
without his consent, are again reissued and circulated.
It is the high and peculiar duty of Congress to decide
whether any further legislation be necessary for the
security of the large amount of public property now held
and in use by the new bank, and for vindicating the
rights of the Government and compelling a speedy and
honest settlement with all the creditors of the old
bank, public and private, or whether the subject shall
be left to the power now possessed by the Executive and
judiciary.
It remains to be seen whether the persons who as
managers of the old bank undertook to control the
Government, retained the public dividends, shut their
doors upon a committee of the House of Representatives,
and filled the country with panic to accomplish their
own sinister objects may now as managers of a new bank
continue with impunity to flood the country with a
spurious currency, use the seven millions of Government
stock for their own profit, and refuse to the United
States all information as to the present condition of
their own property and the prospect of recovering it
into their own possession.
The lessons taught by the Bank of the United States can
not well be lost upon the American people. They will
take care never again to place so tremendous a power in
irresponsible hands, and it will be fortunate if they
seriously consider the consequences which are likely to
result on a smaller scale from the facility with which
corporate powers are granted by their State governments.
It is believed that the law of the last session
regulating the deposit banks operates onerously and
unjustly upon them in many respects, and it is hoped
that Congress, on proper representations, will adopt the
modifications which are necessary to prevent this
consequence.
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