Page:A History of Banking in the United States.djvu/212

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190
A HISTORY OF BANKING.

of specie. This was one of the causes of the accumulation of silver. here at the end of 1829 and in 1830 and 1831.[1]

In the early twenties the circulation of the Bank was $4 millions or $5 millions. Towards 1830 it increased to $10 millions. In July, 1830, the Bank had $12.1 millions in specie. Its usual full stock had been between $6 millions and $7 millions. In July, 1831, it held $7 millions, the minimum of the period at the end of the second decade.

The Government paid $3 millions on its stock note in the Bank in 1830, and the other $4 millions in 1831, so that after that it was a holder for value.

It is stated that the annual expense of the Bank in 1821 was about $300,000; in 1833, it was put at $500,000, including all the branches.[2]

In 1829 Secretary Ingham expressed great satisfaction with the way in which the Bank made transfers of public money, and also with its arrangements for paying the public debt, as he said, in that year of commercial distress, "without causing any sensible addition to the pressure, or even visible effect upon the operations of the State banks."[3] In the President's message of the same year he said, with reference to the debt payment of the previous July: "It was apprehended that the withdrawal of so large a sum from the banks in which it was deposited, at a time of unusual pressure on the money market, might cause much injury to the interests dependent on bank accommodations, but this evil was averted by an early anticipation of it at the Treasury, aided by the judicious arrangements of the officers of the Bank of the United States." It was indeed in operations of this kind that Biddle was most skillful.

  1. Gouge; Journal of Banking, 395.
  2. 19 Niles, 269; Gouge; Journal of Banking, 128.
  3. Quoted in the Letter of the Bank to the Committee on Ways and Means, Jan. 28, 1833.