Page:A History of Banking in the United States.djvu/291

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THE FINANCIAL REVULSION; 1837.
269

the debt owed by Americans in England. When it began to buy cotton it engaged in a gigantic speculation in that staple, embracing the whole crop. These hazards all went against it more or less, and all became more and more complicated.

In April the bonds of the Bank of the United States were selling at one per cent. per month discount, and those of the Manhattan Bank at one and a-half per cent. The New York banks would not discount southern and western paper. It was estimated that the southerners did not pay over five cents on the dollar of what they owed. From the failure of Josephs to April 8th, there were ninety-eight failures at New York, with liabilities of $60.5 millions. At a meeting of the bankers it was proposed to petition the Legislature for permission to suspend, but the proposition met with no favor.[1]

The whole cotton region, however, seemed to be prostrated. A correspondent wrote from Charleston: "The credit system, the sure foundation of our prosperity, is abandoned. Four, five, six, and even ten per cent. a month has been paid by those requiring funds to sustain their credit."[2] The failure of the bank of Yeatman, Woods & Co., of Nashville, was a great calamity to that region. "Their house occupied a very high ground in the confidence of millions of people. The result will be ruinous in Tennessee and Kentucky to the poor. Their notes make up almost one-third of the circulation in Tennessee."[3]

At New Orleans all but four or five of the principal cotton factors had failed. The planters depended on them for the advances by which they made their improvements and bought their supplies in anticipation of the crop. A correspondent, in April, said: "It can no longer be concealed that the commercial community of New Orleans is altogether in a complete state of bankruptcy or suspension. * * * One-fourth of our bank directors have become insolvent or suspended payment, there being now but four or five large commission establishments left as the pillars of the once prosperous commerce of this city. * * * Including the responsibilities of the cotton planters, the amount may be $100 millions; but taking into consideration the amount due on land or real estate speculation, the actual indebtedness of New Orleans may be estimated at $180 millions."[4] A New Orleans newspaper declared that "the monopoly of the cotton staple has fallen by its own weight. There will not be a house left to tell the tale." It expressed the oft-repeated but as yet never-fulfilled hope that the rising generation would profit by the lesson.[5] At the same time a Mobile newspaper said: "There is a little trade to be seen going on here and there, but it is mournful even to look upon that, as it leads to comparison. Where nine-tenths of the merchants of a city, which until recently flourished and prospered beyond all others of its population, have suspended payment, it is enough to despond the stoutest heart."

  1. 52 Niles, 97, 100.
  2. Ibid, 114.
  3. 1 Raguet's Register, 76.
  4. Ibid, 130.
  5. Ibid, 161.