Legislature, but their law has no importance for anybody else. New York "may perhaps bear it from one than whom she has never had a more true and constant friend, who although an entire stranger, has for a long series of years, done everything in his power to advance her prosperity, and never saw her in any misfortune which he did not anxiously strive to mitigate; but I wish to serve her—not to flatter her. I believe, then, that at this moment New York is in an entirely false position. She is obliged by the existing law to do what she feels to be wrong. Her natural course is to appeal to her Representatives to rectify their mistake, and not to thrust out their own State banks to be crushed by the Executive." The other States ought to tell New York that they will not unite in this forced resumption. "The banks should remain exactly as they are, prepared to resume but not yet resuming. * * * The American banks should do, in short, what the American army did at New Orleans,—stand fast behind their cotton bales until the enemy has left the country."
Nathan Appleton's comment on this letter is: "It announced principles as false in political economy as its whole character was objectionable on the score of mercantile morality. Such was the influence which Mr. Biddle had unfortunately acquired in Philadelphia, that his views, so speciously set forth, were adopted in that city without hesitation, and have continued to control their operations to the present time." That letter "announced distinctly that the banks should not resume until a change took place in the administration of the federal government. It also announced, in language not to be misunderstood, that no resumption should take place until the United States Bank was restored as the fiscal agent of the government."[1]
The bank convention met again April 11th. There were 143 delegates from 18 States. It was voted to resume January 1, 1839, without precluding an earlier date for any who should prefer. New York and Mississippi alone voted No; the latter State desiring to defer resumption until July, 1839. The New England delegates generally joined Philadelphia and Baltimore in favor of a later day. We are somewhat surprised to find the Suffolk Bank leading those who held back from resumption, in Boston, but this is perhaps explained when we learn that, early in 1838, "the Suffolk drew its balance from the United States Bank, and received in payment United States Bank notes, guaranteed to be paid in specie upon resumption. These notes the directors of the Suffolk authorized their cashier to indorse to the amount of $200,000. It also authorized him to issue them; to receive them on deposit; and to pay them in specie upon resumption."[2] The Philadelphia banks sent a statement of their reasons for being absent. The chief one was that they did not care to participate in the discussion of a question which the New York banks had decided in advance.[3]
Some of the New York banks resumed in April, and those of Boston