CHAPTER XIII.—Continued.
§ 2.—The Multiplication of Local Banks.
Taking the whole country over, there was a lull in the activity of the bank-making legislator from 1825 to 1832.
As has been said, the local banks did not arouse themselves against the great Bank at Jackson's first attack. They were not dissatisfied with their relations to it. The best of them stood in as much fear as anybody in the community of the possibilities of a bank mania. It was only after the debt was paid and the surplus revenue began to accumulate that the attraction of this bonanza overcame prudence and good sense. The popular sentiment now swung over again to a mania for banks. Each district wanted a deposit bank so as to get a share in the stream of wealth which was expected to flow from the public treasury. If a deposit could not be obtained, then a bank was formed in order to participate in the carnival of credit and speculation; for a non-deposit bank had the advantage of being bound by no rule. The deposit banks drew together from a community of interest, in order not to share the public deposits with a larger number. For two years, however, the amount increased faster than the banks did.
In order to take the place of one bank with $35 millions capital, which, after all, did not go out of existence, there were organized, between 1832 and 1837, 340 banks with $99 millions capital. The mania for banking was such that formal riots occurred at the subscription of stock, and men of pugilistic ability were employed to enter the subscriptions.[1] The fortunate few who could subscribe the whole sold to the rest at an advance. As the commissioners enjoyed this advantage, it was worth from $500 to $1,000 to be a commissioner.[2] The prospect that a bank could get some government money given to it intensified the notion already entertained by those who were desperately in debt, that the best way to escape was to join together