bank to manage. In 1839, they issued peremptory orders to one of the branches to pay a sum due to the Treasury of the United States, and provided for the payment by the other branches, if the one in question should fail. They approved and allowed the dividend of each branch; inspected the branches and ordered their policy; gave or refused permission to take government deposits. They watched the tendency to accommodation paper and laid down banking rules.
The Bank of the State suspended a second time in the fall of 1839, with the exception of three of the branches. Its report for November, 1840, showed profits for the year of ten and a-half per cent. The president said: "There have been almost no difficulties in managing the bank, which have not arisen mainly from the purchase of stock by persons with the expectation of borrowing money on more favorable terms than could be allowed to others."
Illinois.—As soon as the general bank suspension occurred, an extra session of the Legislature was called, at which all the acts against bank suspension were suspended until the end of the next session, but the banks were not to pay dividends nor sell specie nor increase the circulation beyond the paid-up capital; were to give monthly statements to the Governor, and to allow renewals to their debtors, ten per cent. being paid at each renewal.
Residents of Illinois, in June, 1838, owned $60,000 of the stock of the Bank of the State. The liabilities of these stockholders to it were about $900,000.[1]
The Bank of the State, having suspended again in 1839, was revived by an act of January 3, 1840, and the forfeiture of its charter was set aside, provided it would agree to the stipulations in the act of the extra session of 1837, authorizing suspension.
Arkansas.—The Governor, in 1846, said: "The financial history of the State exhibits a series of blunders." A tax of one-fourth of one per cent. was levied by the first Legislature, 1836. It promised to produce more revenue than was wanted and the Governor hastened to call an extra session at which the levy was reduced to one-eighth, which did not, for ten years, give a revenue of $30,000. There was an annual deficit which was met by eating up the deposit of the federal surplus revenue. At that same called-session banks were planned to support the State and do away with taxation. The consumption of the federal surplus was a consumption of a part of the capital of the Bank of the State. The Governor also complained of the great amount of auditor's warrants which had been issued during the first ten years of the State's existence and which were at about fifty cents on the dollar.
The Constitution of 1836 provided that the Legislature might incorporate one Bank of the State, "which shall become the repository of the funds belonging to, or under the control of the State, and shall be required to loan
- ↑ Committe on Banks, January, 1843.