Page:A History of Banking in the United States.djvu/316

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CHAPTER XIV.—Continued.




§ 3.—1838 and 1839. Treasury Notes and Bank Notes. Continuation of the Cotton Operations. Second Failure of the United States Bank of Pennsylvania. Second General Bank Suspension, South and West of New York.


The treasury notes authorized in 1837 were not re-issuable. In May, 1838, the amount authorized had been exhausted, and the Treasury was once more in distress. They were made re-issuable. May 31st, Congress resolved that there should be no discrimination in the currency received by the government for different parts of the revenue. This was a revocation of the Specie Circular. No other laws were passed in regard to the collection of the revenue.

In a new treasury circular, June 1, 1838, the Secretary declared that he was thrown back on the Resolution of 1816. He ordered that no bank note under $20 should be received; none which were not "payable on demand, in gold or silver coin, at the place where issued," and "equivalent to specie at the place where" received; none of any bank which, since July 4, 1836, had issued any note for less than five dollars. As matters stood these were very stringent limitations. It was said that there were only four banks in New York City which could satisfy them.[1] The bank interest was by no means satisfied. Its influence had availed to cause the treasury notes (since their use was unavoidable), to be put under strict limitations, lest they should supersede bank notes. Necessity had now forced the step of making the treasury notes re-issuable, but the banks looked forward to a time, soon to come, when the public business would, once more, be done altogether with bank notes. They were banded together to bring this about and, if they could succeed, they were indifferent to the danger that some of their number would so abuse it that the Treasury might be left with their notes as an unavailable asset, as in 1818. The point was

  1. 54 Niles, 225.