Why would a Philadelphian who is indebted to a bank, and not a
shareholder or note holder, fear for the collapse of the bank?
Gee, I must have missed that part of the quote. "Is it because the
collapse entails the immediately calling in of loans?" could well
be. But I am not sure a collapse WOULD mean the immediate calling
in of loans -- that is, PRIOR to the collapse you would see a mad
scramble, but once the bank collapsed then it would be in the
hands of trustees or creditors of the bank, yes? Which could take
a little time to unravel. The big problem would be if a loan was
called in in the middle of a panic, you could not get a loan from
anyone else to cover it.
Keep in mind, though, that PRIOR to the proliferation of these
institutions it was very common to extend credit to people for
long periods of time. When someone died, there was then a massive
accounting back and forth of who owed what to whom. The early
merchants often did not actually KNOW the full status of their
own accounts. This was one of the reasons Morris ended up in
bankruptcy court.
I hadn't really thought of it (and don't recall reading it), but
certainly the apperance of the earlier banks in the 1790s must have
improved that situation considerably. You had a regular schedule
instead of the irregularities of having loans called in when
someone kicks. (Or when someone is being pressured by a creditor.)
On the other side -- in the antebellum period, entrepreneurs went
bankrupt A LOT. It is very common to read the life history of
one of these early businessmen and see just one bankruptcy after
another. So -- the implications of having loans called in in the
middle of a panic -- yes, of course that would be a problem, but
there was a history in the previous generation of having loans called
in unexpectedly for all sorts of things, and bankruptcy was more
common then than today (unless you belong to Generation X, which
seems to be rediscovering personal bankruptcy just like they
discovered consumer credit cards in college ...)
Sources? Well, first and foremost would be Temin on the jacksonian
economy and then the proliferation of articles that followed. The
end result was a MUCH more sophisticated picture of the financial
system in the 1820s-1840s. I think that most of this stuff is still
in article form (except for Temin) but I could be wrong because I
haven't worked in this period for a while. So you would want to
look at the JEH and BHC papers and MAYBE EEH (tho it's not something
they are THAT interested in) -- just shuffle through bound volumes
and pick out th articles on the subject and period.
Hammond used traditional sources such as personal letters to construct
his narrative. Consequently, his interpretation is greatly
entangled with what people THOUGHT was going on as well as what
politicians were trying to persuade people was going on. The research
that was jump-started by Temin and has flourished since has focused
on the direct evidence -- bank account sheets. (come to think of it,
some of this did make it into journals such as the JPE but, blush, I
would have to go look it up; don't have it here.) So, for example,
we find out that the wildcat banks weren't as irresponsible as they
were reputed to be.
The interpretation of the 1790s is also highly colored by the
view of Hamilton as prescient and the Bank of the U.S. as a modern
institution. Nope. (For that, you might just go back and READ
Hamilton.) Again, much of the interpretations that are found for
this period rely on very old-fashioned methodology -- a little bit
of info from the letters of the famous, and then what they EXPECT
to find. Even Ed Perkins' massive effort to pull together information
on Public Finance and Financial institutions in America from roughly
1700 to 1815 suffers from this problem -- he attributes powers to
public finance and to Hamilton that neither could possibly have
possessed back then. Just as E. James Ferguson's thesis about the
Constitution and the federal debt is outdated (now we're getting into
my own work), so too it's a bit out of place to assume that just
because hamilton THOUGHT his policies CREATED a market for
securities, it really did. Innovative financial arrangements
flourished in Philadelphia through the 1700s. The sudden explosion
of marine insurance corporations with (for their day) big
investment portfolios had absoltuely nothing to do with Hamilton
or the Federalist or the federal debt. Period.
When we get to the period 1790-1815, this history hasn't really
been written yet. What happened, I guess, is that historians
working backwards from the "industrial revolution" didn't bother
with much before the War of 1812. Conversely, historians working
forward from the colonial period quit after reaching 1789. Political
and foreign policy issues have continued to define the scholarship
on the early republic, with everyone relying on studies that are
now decades old for the economics part.
It also seems to me that economists who work in this area (and
there are precious few who do!) read onlyh articles. And only
things that seem to be about "economic history". Much of the
nuggets to be found on this period are in what are called
"social histories". The interpretation maybe could use some
work, but a lot of creative evidence is there.
Well -- my interest in trying to figure out what was going on
is subservient to my interest in figureing out what they BELIEVED
was going on, how those beliefs changed -- that is, how they
formed ideas and expectations about the relationships among the
economy and government and institutions. I'm after the sea
change in thought where "capitalism" comes to dominate the lingo
on both sides. And looking for what ideas were pitched in the
process, and what history has been ignored out of what we
expect we should find. If, for example, this is the era of the
so-called "merchant capitalism", what are we to make of the
active role of institutions in financial innovation in this period,
the growth of DOMESTIC indusry and DOMESTIC trade?
That is, I know enough to know that the old version is inaccurate --
but I cannot point you to a single study that is going to explain it.
Just give me a few years ... <g> No, seriously, my first advice is
still the best -- leaf through isues of the JEH; you will find a
lot of recent work on this area.
- Mary Schweitzer, Dept. of History, Villanova University
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