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|    alt.history    |    Pretty sure discussion of all kinds    |    15,187 messages    |
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|    Message 14,928 of 15,187    |
|    Jeffrey Rubard to All    |
|    Scott Reynolds Nelson, "A Nation of Dead    |
|    20 May 23 14:13:58    |
      From: jeffreydanielrubard@gmail.com              Chapter One              Duer’s Disgrace              The new nation’s first financial panic was not long in coming, threatening       to reach its climax on the night of April 18, 1792. The shouting started       outside William Duer’s cell in the “New Gaol,” a debtors’ prison near       the New York City commons        at the northeast corner of what is now City Hall Park. A diverse crowd of       three to five hundred “disorderly persons” had gathered there to confront       him that evening, including cart men, artisans, and slaves. What began with       shouts, catcalls, and a        few stones tossed at the prison’s windows soon escalated into an       old-fashioned New York riot.               Colonel William Duer was nearly fifty, a small and delicate man born into a       wealthy English family with plantations in the Anglo-Caribbean colonies of       Antigua and Dominica. Educated at Eton, Duer had come to New York in 1768       searching for timber for        his family’s Dominican plantation. Seeing greater opportunities in New York,       he had borrowed £1,400 from his sister and established himself the next year       on a large plot of land along the Hudson River. With his charming wife,       “Lady Kitty,” he had        defied convention by dressing his servants in livery, creating a family crest       of arms, and entertaining aristocrats in a fashionable town house one block       north of Wall Street. As the Revolution began, he used his growing social       network in New York to        become a furnishing merchant, supplying timber, planks, and provisions to the       Continental army. By 1780 he was worth more than £400,000, or nearly 2       million. After the Revolution, he had become a member of the powerful Board of       Treasury under the        Continental Congress, a government bond dealer, and a stock market trader.               But on March 23, 1792, less than a month before the fracas outside, Duer       had voluntarily entered the New Gaol to hide from his creditors. By ancient       rules of bankruptcy that still applied in New York, debtors’ prisons were       designed to shake money        out of debtors, their friends, and their families. Duer’s neighbors in the       New Gaol included many who had overleveraged, but no one who had leveraged so       much.               At the height of the mayhem outside the prison, some in the crowd       reportedly shouted, “We will have Mr. Duer, he has gotten our money.”       Threatening to remove Duer bodily from his cell, the crowd began to throw       paving stones, breaking windows and        streetlamps. Well after dusk, “friends of legal restraint and good order”       helped the city magistrates to arrest some of the most troublesome members of       the crowd, including several artisans, the merchant John Hazard, and Tom, a       slave owned by Joseph        Towers. For the next few nights, crowds returned to the jail to threaten       vengeance. The magistrate assigned Duer his own personal guard, though by the       middle of April civil authorities and brick prison walls seemed little       protection against a mob bent on        repossessing the colonel’s assets in this world and sending him to the next       one.               At the time he entered prison, it was estimated that Duer, America’s       first famous deadbeat, had defaulted on promises worth more than $2 million.       By some estimates this was more than half the nation’s supply of readily       available money. For though        the American colonies had revolted against the English crown more than ten       years earlier, capital, education, and power in America were still       concentrated among a small group of insiders. Duer was at the center of this       financial network, the man who        hired the auctioneers who sold bonds in coffeehouses and shouted current       prices from tree stumps on New York’s Wall Street. When he placed a bid,       every head turned to see which way his money was moving. In today’s       parlance, Duer was a market maker.               In the beginning of March, Duer and his associates borrowed more than       $800,000 to corner the market on U.S. bonds. Few understood that he had bet       most of his fortune. When his credit got tight later that month, he had his       assistants privately borrow        gold and silver at high interest from many of New York’s most unlikely       lenders. “Besides shopkeepers, Widows, [and] orphans,” wrote his associate       Seth Johnson, Duer owed “Butchers, Car[t]men, Gardners, market women, & even       the noted Bawd Mrs.        Macarty—many of them if they are unpaid are ruined.”               In addition to the sufferers outside the New Gaol, the nation’s tiny       financial elite—men who spent their hours and their fortunes in the       coffeehouses of Philadelphia, Boston, and New York—faced financial ruin.       Scores of Duer’s merchant friends        along the Eastern Seaboard had signed now-overdue promissory notes on faith       under Colonel Duer’s name. Most now rued the day they had ever met the man.       Some disappeared into the western wilderness or crossed into Canada to escape       Duer’s fate.               By April all five branches of the newly established Bank of the United       States had restricted lending. Lenders demanded immediate settlement in gold       and silver. Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton sought to buoy the       nation’s tiny stock and        securities market by buying back federal Treasuries, but few lenders were       accepting anything but gold. In May interest rates on short-term loans       approached 96 percent, or 8 percent per month. Soon there were rumors that       creditors in Connecticut were        demanding that Congress make good on Duer’s debts. Many doubted if the new       nation could survive its first financial crisis. But that is getting a bit       ahead of the story.              How To Fund A Revolution?              After Americans and British troops began to exchange gunfire at Lexington and       Concord in 1775, merchants with capital had to make a decision: support the       Revolution or support the crown? Duer and a small group of New York and New       England merchant        adventurers with names like Roosevelt, Bleecker, Melvill, and Morris threw       their financial backing behind the American partisans. They took enormous       risks in challenging the British crown, but many of Duer’s associates       profited handsomely by providing        high-interest loans to this newly formed government.                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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