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Maxwell, William Halstead, Jos. F. Randolph,
Charles G. Stratton, Thomas Jones Yorke.

INDIANA-Ratliff Boon, John Ewing, William Graham, George H. Dunn, James Rariden, William Herrod, Albert S. White.

ILLINOIS-A. W. Snyder, Zadoc Casey, Wm. L. May.

LOUISIANA-Henry Johnson, Eleazer W. Rip

MISSISSIPPI-John F. H. Claiborne, S. H.

PENNSYLVANIA-Lemuel Paynter, John Sergeant, George W. Toland, Charles Naylor, Edward Davies, David Potts, Edward Darlington, Jacob Fry, jr., Matthias Morris, David D. Wagener, Edward B. Hubley, Henry A. Muhlen-ley, Rice Garland. berg. Luther Reilly, Henry Logan, Daniel Sheffer, Chas. McClure, Wm. W. Potter, David Petriken, Robert H. Hammond, Samuel W. Morris, Charles Ogle, John Klingensmith, Andrew Buchanan, T. M. T. McKennan, Richard Biddle, William Beatty, Thomas Henry, Arnold Plumer.

DELAWARE-John J. Milligan.

MARYLAND—John Dennis, James A. Pearce, J. T. H. Worthington, Benjamin C. Howard, Isaac McKim, William Cost Johnson, Francis Thomas, Daniel Jenifer.

VIRGINIA-Henry A. Wise, Francis Mallory,

Gholson.

ARKANSAS-Archibald Yell.

MISSOURI-Albert G. Harrison, John Miller.
MICHIGAN-Isaac E. Crary.
FLORIDA-Charles Downing.
WISCONSIN-George W. Jones.

In these ample lists, both of the Senate and of the House, will be discovered a succession of eminent names-many which had then achieved eminence, others to achieve it:—and, besides those which captivate regard by splendid abilJohn Robertson, Charles F. Mercer, John Taliaferro, R. T. M. Hunter, James Garland, Francis ity, a still larger number of those less brilliant, E. Rives, Walter Coles, George C. Dromgoole, equally respectable, and often more useful James W. Bouldin, John M. Patton, James M. members, whose business talent performs the Mason, Isaac S. Penny backer, Andrew Beirne, work of the body, and who in England are well Archibald Stuart, John W. Jones, Robert Craig, Geo. W. Hopkins, Joseph Johnson, Wm. called, the working members. Of these numerS. Morgan. ous members, as well the brilliant as the useful, NORTH CAROLINA-Jesse A. Bynum, Edward it would be invidious to particularize part withD. Stanley, Charles Shepard, Micajah T. Haw-out enumerating the whole; and that would kins, James McKay, Edmund Deberry, Abraham Rencher, William Montgomery, Augustine require a reproduction of the greater part of the H. Shepherd, James Graham, Henry Connor, list of each House. Four only can be named, Lewis Williams, Samuel T. Sawyer. and they entitled to that distinction from the station attained, or to be attained by them:

SOUTH CAROLINA-H. S. Legare, Waddy Thompson, Francis W. Pickens, W. K. Clowney, F. H. Elmore, John K. Griffin, R. B. Smith, John Campbell, John P. Richardson.

GEORGIA Thomas Glascock, S. F. Cleveland, Seaton Grantland, Charles E. Haynes, Hopkins Holsey, Jabez Jackson, Geo. W. Owens, Geo. W. B. Townes, W. C. Dawson.

TENNESSEE-Wm. B. Carter, A. A. McClelland, Joseph Williams, (one vacancy,) H. L. Turney, Wm. B. Campbell, John Bell, Abraham P. Maury, James K. Polk, Ebenezer J. Shields, Richard Cheatham, John W. Crockett, Christopher H. Williams.

KENTUCKY-John L. Murray, Edward Rumsey, Sherrod Williams, Joseph R. Underwood, James Harlan, John Calhoun, John Pope, Wm. J. Graves, John White, Richard Hawes, Richard H. Menifee, John Chambers, Wm. W. Southgate.

OHIO-Alexander Duncan, Taylor Webster, Patrick G. Goode, Thomas Corwin, Thomas L. Hamer, Calvary Morris, Wm. K. Bond, J. Ridgeway, John Chaney, Samson Mason, J. Alexander, jr., Alexander Harper, D. P. Leadbetter, Wm. H. Hunter, John W. Allen, Elisha Whittlesey, A. W. Loomis, Matthias Shepler, Daniel Kilgore.

ALABAMA-Francis S. Lyon, Dixon H. Lewis, Joab Lawler, Reuben Chapman, J. L. Martin.

Mr. John Quincy Adams, who had been president; Messrs. James K. Polk, Millard Fillmore and Franklin Pierce, who became presidents. In my long service I have not seen a more able Congress; and it is only necessary to read over the names, and to possess some knowledge of our public men, to be struck with the number of names which would come under the description of useful or brilliant members.

The election of speaker was the first business of the House; and Mr. James K. Polk and Mr. John Bell, both of Tennessee, being put in nomination, Mr. Polk received 116 votes; and was elected-Mr. Bell receiving 103. Mr. Walter S. Franklin was elected clerk.

The message was delivered upon receiving notice of the organization of the two Houses; and, with temperance and firmness, it met all the exigencies of the occasion. That specie order which had been the subject of so much denunciation, the imputed cause of the suspension, and the revocation of which was demanded with so much pertinacity and such imposing demon

stration, far from being given up was com- of these occasions. I felt it due to the people to mended for the good effects it had produced; apprise them distinctly, that, in the event of my and the determination expressed not to inter-election, I would not be able to co-operate in fere with its operation. In relation to that decried measure the message said:

"Of my own duties under the existing laws, when the banks suspended specie payments, I could not doubt. Directions were immediately given to prevent the reception into the Treasury of any thing but gold and silver, or its equivalent; and every practicable arrangement was made to preserve the public faith, by similar or equivalent payments to the public creditors. The revenue from lands had been for some time substantially so collected, under the order issued by the directions of my predecessor. The effects of that order had been so salutary, and its forecast in regard to the increasing insecurity of bank paper had become so apparent, that, even before the catastrophe, I had resolved not to interfere with its operation. Congress is now to decide whether the revenue shall continue to be so collected, or not."

This was explicit, and showed that all attempts to operate upon the President at that point, and to coerce the revocation of a measure which he deemed salutary, had totally failed. The next great object of the party which had contrived the suspension and organized the distress, was to extort the re-establishment of the Bank of the United States; and here again was an equal failure to operate upon the firmness of the President. He reiterated his former objections to such an institution-not merely to the particular one which had been tried-but to any one in any form, and declared his former convictions to be strengthened by recent events. Thus:

To

the re-establishment of a national bank.
these sentiments, I have now only to add the
expression of an increased conviction, that the
re-establishment of such a bank, in any form,
whilst it would not accomplish the beneficial
purpose promised by its advocates, would
impair the rightful supremacy of the popular
will; injure the character and diminish the in-
fluence of our political system; and bring once
more into existence a concentrated moneyed
power, hostile to the spirit, and threatening the
permanency, of our republican institutions."

Having noticed these two great points of pressure upon him, and thrown them off with equal strength and decorum, he went forward to a new point-the connection of the federal government with any bank of issue in any form, either as a depository of its moneys, or in the use of its notes; and recommended a total and perpetual dissolution of the connection. This was a new point of policy, long meditated by some, but now first brought forward for legislative action, and cogently recommended to Congress for its adoption. The message, referring to the recent failure of the banks, took advantage of it to say:

"Unforeseen in the organization of the government, and forced on the Treasury by early necessities, the practice of employing banks, was, in truth, from the beginning, more a measure of emergency than of sound policy. When we started into existence as a nation, in addition to the burdens of the new government, we assumed all the large, but honorable load, of debt which was the price of our liberty; but we hesitated to weigh down the infant industry of the country by resorting to adequate taxation for the "We have seen for nearly half a century, that necessary revenue. The facilities of banks, in those who advocate a national bank, by what- return for the privileges they acquired, were ever motive they may be influenced, constitute promptly offered, and perhaps too readily rea portion of our community too numerous to ceived, by an embarrassed treasury. During allow us to hope for an early abandonment of the long continuance of a national debt, and the their favorite plan. On the other hand, they intervening difficulties of a foreign war, the conmust indeed form an erroneous estimate of the nection was continued from motives of conveniintelligence and temper of the American people, ence; but these causes have long since passed who suppose that they have continued, on slight away. We have no emergencies that make banks or insuflicient grounds, their persevering opposi- necessary to aid the wants of the Treasury; we tion to such an institution; or that they can be have no load of national debt to provide for, and induced by pecuniary pressure, or by any other we have on actual deposit a large surplus. No combination of circumstances, to surrender prin- public interest, therefore, now requires the ciples they have so long and so inflexibly maintain-renewal of a connection that circumstances have ed. My own views of the subject are unchanged. dissolved. The complete organization of our They have been repeatedly and unreservedly an-government, the abundance of our resources, the nounced to my fellow-citizens, who, with full general harmony which prevails between the knowledge of them, conferred upon me the two different States, and with foreign powers, all enhighest offices of the government. On the last able us now to select the system most consistent

with the constitution, and most conducive to the refractory bank would choose the former, if public welfare." able to do so.

The banks of the District of Columbia, and their currency, being under the jurisdiction of Congress, admitted a direct remedy in its own legislation, both for the fact of their suspension and the evil of the small notes which they

resumption did not take place in a limited time, and penalties on the issue of the small notes, were the appropriate remedies ;—and, as such, were recommended to Congress.

There the President not only met and con

This wise recommendation laid the foundation for the Independent Treasury—a measure opposed with unwonted violence at the time, but vindicated as well by experience as recommended by wisdom; and now universally concur-issued. The forfeiture of the charter, where the red in constituting an era in our financial history, and reflecting distinctive credit on Mr. Van Buren's administration. But he did not stop at proposing a dissolution of governmental connection with these institutions; he went further, and proposed to make them safer for the com-fronted the evils of the actual suspension as munity, and more amenable to the laws of the they stood, but went further, and provided land. These institutions exercised the privilege against the recurrence of such evils thereafter, of stopping payment, qualified by the gentle in four cardinal recommendations: 1, never to name of suspension, when they judged a condi- have another national bank; 2, never to receive tion of the country existed making it expedient bank notes again in payment of federal dues; to do so. Three of these general suspensions 3, never to use the banks again for depositories had taken place in the last quarter of a century: of the public moneys; 4, to apply the process presenting an evil entirely too large for the of bankruptcy to all future defaulting banks. remedy of individual suits against the delinquent These were strong recommendations, all founded banks; and requiring the strong arm of a gen- in a sense of justice to the public, and called for eral and authoritative proceeding. This could by the supremacy of the government, if it only be found in subjecting them to the process meant to maintain its supremacy; but recomof bankruptcy; and this the message boldly re-mendations running deep into the pride and incommended. It was the first recommendation terests of a powerful class, and well calculated of the kind, and deserves to be commemorated to inflame still higher the formidable combinafor its novelty and boldness, and its undoubted tion already arrayed against the President, and efficiency, if adopted. This is the recommenda- to extend it to all that should support him.

tion:

"In the mean time, it is our duty to provide all the remedies against a depreciated paper currency which the constitution enables us to afford. The Treasury Department, on several former occasions, has suggested the propriety and importance of a uniform law concerning bankruptcies of corporations, and other bankers. Through the instrumentality of such a law, a salutary check may doubtless be imposed on the issues of paper money, and an effectual remedy given to the citizen, in a way at once equal in all parts of the Union, and fully authorized by the constitution."

A bankrupt law for banks! That was the remedy. Besides its efficacy in preventing future suspensions, it would be a remedy for the actual one. The day fixed for the act to take effect would be the day for resuming payments, or going into liquidation. It would be the day of honesty or death to these corporations; and between these two alternatives even the most

The immediate cause for convoking the extraordinary session-the approaching deficit in the revenue-was frankly stated, and the remedy as frankly proposed. Six millions of dollars neither loans nor taxes were proposed, but the was the estimated amount; and to provide it retention of the fourth instalment of the deposit to be made with the States, and a temporary issue of treasury notes to supply the deficiency until the incoming revenue should replenish the treasury. The following was that recommenda

tion:

"It is not proposed to procure the required amount by loans or increased taxation. There are now in the treasury nine millions three hundred and sixty-seven thousand two hundred and fourteen dollars, directed by the Act of the 23d of June, 1836, to be deposited with the ited, will be subject, under the law, to be reStates in October next. This sum, if so deposcalled, if needed, to defray existing appropriations; and, as it is now evident that the whole,

or the principal part of it, will be wanted for that purpose, it appears most proper that the deposits should be withheld. Until the amount can be collected from the banks, treasury notes may be temporarily issued, to be gradually redeemed as it is received."

CHAPTER IX.

ATTACKS ON THE MESSAGE: TREASURY NOTES.

UNDER the first two of our Presidents, Washington, and the first Mr. Adams, the course of the British Parliament was followed

in answering the address of the President, as the course of the sovereign was followed in delivering it. The Sovereign delivered his address in person to the two assembled Houses, and each

Six millions of treasury notes only were required, and from this small amount required, it is easy to see how readily an adequate amount could have been secured from the deposit banks, if the administration had foreseen a month or two beforehand that the suspension was to take place. An issue of treasury notes, being an imitation of the exchequer bill issues answered it: our two first Presidents did the of the British government, which had been the facile and noiseless way of swamping that gov- of the answer was always to express a concursame, and the Houses answered. The purport ernment in bottomless debt, was repugnant to rence, or non-concurrence with the general the policy of this writer, and opposed by him: but of this hereafter. The third instalment of policy of the government as thus authentically exposed; and the privilege of answering the the deposit, as it was called, had been received address laid open the policy of the government by the States-received in depreciated paper, to the fullest discussion. and the fourth demanded in the same. A deposit demanded! and claimed as a debt!-that practice was to lay open the state of the country, and the public policy, to the fullest disis to say the word "deposit" used in the act cussion; and, in the character of the answer, admitted to be both by Congress and the States to decide the question of accord or disaccord— a fraud and a trick, and distribution the of support or opposition-between the reprething intended and done. Seldom has it hap-sentative and the executive branches of the pened that so gross a fraud, and one, too, intended to cheat the constitution, has been so promptly acknowledged by the high parties perpetrating it. But of this also hereafter.

The decorum and reserve of a State paper would not allow the President to expatiate upon the enormity of the suspension which had been contrived, nor to discriminate between the honest and solvent banks which had been taken by surprise and swept off in a current which they could not resist, and the insolvent or criminal class, which contrived the catastrophe and exulted in its success. He could only hint at the discrimination, and, while recommending the bankrupt process for one class, to express his belief that with all the honest and solvent institutions the suspension would be temporary, and that they would seize the earliest moment which the conduct of others would permit, to vindicate their integrity and ability by returning to specie payments.

The effect of the

government. The change from the address delivered in person, with its answer, to the message sent by the private secretary, and no considered a reform; but it was questioned at answer, was introduced by Mr. Jefferson, and the time, whether any good would come of it, and whether that would not be done irregularly, in the course of the debates, which otherwise would have been done regularly in the discussion of the address. The administration policy would be sure to be attacked, and irregularly, in the course of business, if the spirit of opposition should not be allowed full indulgence in a general and regular discussion. The attacks would come, and many of Mr. Jefferson's friends thought it better they should come at once, and occupy the first week or two of the session, than to be scattered through the whole session and mixed up with all its business. But the change was made, and has stood, and now any bill or motion is laid hold of, to hang a speech upon, against the measures or policy of an administration. This was signally the case at this extra session, in relation to Mr. Van Buren's policy. He had staked himself too

ford Brown, of North Carolina, William Allen, of Ohio, John P. King, of Georgia, Walker, of Mississippi:-in the House of Representatives, Cambreleng, of New York, Hamer, of Ohio, Howard and Francis Thomas, of Maryland, McKay, of North Carolina, John M. Patton, Francis Pickens.

The treasury note bill was one of the first measures on which the struggle took place. It was not a favorite with the whole body of the democracy, but the majority preferred a small issue of that paper, intended to operate, not as a currency, but as a ready means of borrowing money, and especially from small capitalists ; and, therefore, preferable to a direct loan. It was opposed as a paper money bill in disguise, as germinating a new national debt, and as the easy mode of raising money, so ready to run into abuse from its very facility of use. President had recommended the issue in general terms: the Secretary of the Treasury had descended into detail, and proposed notes as low as twenty dollars, and without interest. The Senate's committee rejected that proposition, and reported a bill only for large notesnone less than 100 dollars, and bearing interest; so as to be used for investment, not circulation. Mr. Webster assailed the Secretary's plan, saying

The

decisively against too large a combination of interests to expect moderation or justice from his opponents; and he received none. Seldom has any President been visited with more violent and general assaults than he received, almost every opposition speaker assailing some part of the message. One of the number, Mr. Caleb Cushing, of Massachusetts, made it a business to reply to the whole document, formally and elaborately, under two and thirty distinct heads—the number of points in the mariner's compass: each head bearing a caption to indicate its point: and in that speech any one that chooses, can find in a condensed form, and convenient for reading, all the points of accusation against the democratic policy from the beginning of the government down to that day. Mr. Clay and Mr. Webster assailed it for what it contained, and for what it did not-for its specific recommendations, and for its omission to recommend measures which they deemed necessary. The specie payments-the disconnection with banks-the retention of the fourth instalment-the bankrupt act against banksthe brief issue of treasury notes; all were condemned as measures improper in themselves and inadequate to the relief of the country: while, on the other hand, a national bank appeared to them to be the proper and adequate remedy for the public evils. With them acted "He proposes, sir, to issue treasury notes of many able men :—in the Senate, Bayard, of Del- small denominations. down even as low as aware, Crittenden, of Kentucky, John Davis, twenty dollars, not bearing interest, and reof Massachusetts, Preston, of South Carolina, deemable at no fixed period; they are to be received in debts due to government, but are not Southard, of New Jersey, Rives, of Virginia:- otherwise to be paid until at some indefinite in the House of Representatives, Mr. John time there shall be a certain surplus in the Quincy Adams, Bell, of Tennessee, Richard treasury beyond what the Secretary may think Biddle, of Pennsylvania, Cushing, of Massachu- its wants require. Now, sir, this is plain, ausetts, Fillmore, of New York, Henry Johnson, thentic, statutable paper money; it is exactly a new emission of old continental. If the genius of Louisiana, Hunter and Mercer, of Virginia, of the old confederation were now to rise up in John Pope, of Kentucky, John Sargeant, Un- the midst of us, he could not furnish us, from derwood of Kentucky, Lewis Williams, Wise. the abundant stores of his recollection, with a All these were speaking members, and in their more perfect model of paper money. It carries no interest; it has no fixed time of payment; diversity of talent displayed all the varieties of it is to circulate as currency, and it is to circueffective speaking-close reasoning, sharp invec- late on the credit of government alone, with no tive, impassioned declamation, rhetoric, logic. fixed period of redemption! If this be not On the other hand was an equal array, both paper money, pray, sir, what is it? And, sir, in number and speaking talent, on the othe. fifth year of the experiment for reforming the who expected this? Who expected that in the side, defending and supporting the recommenda- currency, and bringing it to an absolute gold tions of the President:-in the Senate, Silas and silver circulation, the Treasury Department Wright, Grundy, John M. Niles, King, of would be found recommending to us a regular Alabama, Strange, of North Carolina, Buchan- new in the history of this government; it beemission of paper money? This, sir, is quite an, Calhoun, Linn, of Missouri, Benton, Bed-longs to that of the confederation which has VOL. II.-3

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