PANORAMIC VIEW OF ECONOMIC CRISES IN THE UNITED STATES 1819-1857: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
IJASOS- International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, Vol. III, Issue 8, August 2017
PANORAMIC VIEW OF ECONOMIC CRISES IN THE UNITED STATES
1819-1857: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Fethia Braik
Hassiba Benbouali University of Chlef, ALGERIA,
e-mail: ,
Abstract
Eager to understand and to overcome the 2007 crisis, economists worldwide are struggling to provide better
understanding of past panics. Researches revealed that the recent crisis and the Great Depression, the most
severe ever witnessed by the United States, share some similarities. Most of the financial calamities started
in the United States and spread internationally since they occurred in a world of interconnected trade. In
narrative histories of US financial panics, little is found about similarities and differences of the panics. “All is
forgotten until another storm comes”. Contemporary commentators and economic scholars do not seem to
have the same identification of the events leading up to banking panics. The result is revealed in the number
of panics they give when referring to US economic history. The most recent definition of banking panic is
provided by Calomiris and Gorton. A banking panic may occur when depositors ask for immediate
redemption for cash. My paper studies most panics, be they major or minor, from 1819 to 1857; with
attributing more importance to the latter being focal point in the economic history of the country. My work is a
combination of historiography, clinical survey, and analysis. It comprehends history of the panics, analysis of
causes basically failures of companies and banks, and stamen of similarities and differences .
Keywords: Bank failure, bank panic, economic crisis
1. INTRODUCTION
Economic history of the United States reveals that the country suffered serious financial instability. Prior to
the Civil War, the country witnessed the most serious recessions in 1837 and 1839. During the Civil War,
the country was hit by a more severe stock crash in 1857. By the end of the nineteenth century and the
beginning of the twentieth century, the United States’ history was characterized by two major episodes of
banking panics in 1892 and 1907.
http://ijasos.ocerintjournals.org
699
IJASOS- International E-Journal of Advances in Social Sciences, Vol. III, Issue 8, August 2017
2. ECONOMIC CRISES IN THE UNITED STATES FROM 1819 TO 1857
The newly independent country faced its first major financial crisis in 1819 which was partially due to
1
international events. Soon after the Napoleonic Wars , European agriculture recovered. Hence their demand
for American agricultural products decreased. Additionally, exportation of precious metals from Mexico to
Europe declined because of wars and revolutions at that period of time. Consequently, European
governments accumulated all the specie. American bankers started issuing false banknotes to compensate
for the absence of international money supply.
Other explanations of the panic have been offered by different scholars. The panic was an outcome of the
2
failure of the nationwide economic system because of the War of 1812 . Government borrowed and spent
big amounts of money to finance the War. Banks’ reserve of specie had been strained, a fact that led to the
suspension of payments violating the rights of depositors. This culminated in banks runs and bankruptcies.
Other economists pointed out that the panic reflected the failure of the market economy in the country.
Market institutions moved from boom to bust cycle. Banks gave credits in return of low interest rates. Many
businesses and investments were promoted leading to a growth in economy. Foreign goods importation
decreased because of the blocking of foreign trade; and prices of domestic products rose due to the rapid
expansion. This led to overinvestment and excess in production. Subsequently, investors lost their money,
and employers lost their jobs leading the country to a crisis.
Rockoff (2013) contended that the panic was due to real estate speculation. Many state private banks and
branches of the US Second Bank were bestowed with the power to control land mortgages. Similarly,
branches could redeem notes issued by any other branch without any restriction. Western branches, such as
Cincinnati, made large loans in currencies which were to be redeemed by other branches. As a matter of
fact, the U S Second Bank ran out of specie. It then reduced its loans portfolio. Immediately, western
chartered banks of Cincinnati and Kentucky suspended specie payments.
Whatever might be the explanation provided, the panic caused unemployment and distress for money.
Benjamin Brand, a merchant, described the situation as follows:
We have gloomy times here, many failures have taken place, and many more soon expected. At this time,
3
there is very little credit business done. Confidence in each other’s ability to pay is very slight…
President Monroe (1758-1831), the fifth President of the United States, as a measure to overcome the panic,
limited governmental action to ensure fiscal stability. Public policy, bank debt and debt relief, internal
improvements, and tariff protection were all reviewed. Appropriations for internal improvements, for instance,
would not be approved without a constitutional law. The panic wrought great changes in different domains.
Two important Acts were enacted.
To start with, there was the Land Act of 1820. Some farmers brought public lands from Government on
credit. Thanks to the Act, the number of acres, which farmers were to purchase, was reduced to eighty
instead of 160. The cost also was reduced from 2 $/acre to 1.25$/acre. Those purchasers were required to
pay only one fourth of the total price. What remained was to be paid in three annual instalments; otherwise,
the land might be forfeited. Nonetheless, most of the purchasers proved unable to complete their payments.
Congress, therefore, delayed the lands’ forfeiture leaving them with a heavy burden of debts. With the panic,
however, these debts became a severe federal dilemma.
As a remedy to this serious problem of land debts, President Monroe presented the issue in front of
Congress. Soon after, resolutions were introduced in Congress. Senator Richard M. Johnson of Kentucky
(1780-1850) suggested that purchasers unable to pay would give over the possession of the land and be
entitled the ownership of only a part of it, that is the part they were able to pay. Similarly, Senator John W.
Walker of Alabama (1783-1823) presented another resolution calling for the complete cancellation of any
bank interest on payment instalments. Although the measure relief met opposition from some southern
1
These were a series of armed conflicts of the French Empire, led by Napoleon, against an array of European powers
that took place from 1803 to 1815.
2
It was a conflict between Great Britain and the United States due to the British attempts to restrict American trade.
th
Nevertheless, the War ended after the ratification of Trea (...truncated)