Showing posts with label Banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Banking. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Appraisement Law

MR. EDITOR, SIR:  Previous to the State elections the blighting influence of, and urgent necessity for an immediate and unconditional repeal of an act known as the Appraisement law, was canvassed throughout the State.  Several journals clearly and fully pointed out this law’s baneful influence on the prosperity of the State, and no one ever attempted to defend it.  Yet up to this day no action has been taken by the Legislature, even to amend this extraordinary act – extraordinary because its limits extend beyond any similar law ever passed by any State in the Union; a law every provision of which exhibits a palpable design on the part of its authors to encourage fraud and to prevent honest creditors from collecting their just dues.

This base and uncalled for act has driven capital from the State; it has placed the honest debtor at the mercy of his creditor, but cutting him off from that of all others; as capitalists neither great nor small will invest money under the provisions of a law so base, and evidently framed for the benefit of the dishonest; as honest men require no such laws.

Many attribute the present embarrassed condition of the State to the rebellion.  I am satisfied, and challenge proof to the contrary, that the rebellion has not caused capital to be withdrawn from the State, nor has it been instrumental in depressing local trade.  Illinois, although a late sufferer by “stumptail” currency, as well as all northern States, claim that they were never more prosperous, and that the rebellion has not injured but benefited them.

Then we must look in some other direction to find the cause of the blight, want and ruin that is hovering over us, and forcing even our own citizens to send their capital out of the State for investment, and which is fast placing a majority of our farms and city lots on the delinquent tax list, to be sold under the hammer.  If you doubt the wide-spread devastation, now extensive and fast extending, I refer you to your county newspapers, which their ten to thirty closely printed columns descriptive of many thousands of farms, large and small, offered for sale for the taxes levied on them; and every honest spoken man will say the farmers of Iowa are not delinquent from neglect, or choice, but from necessity.

To add to the great and growing evil created by this act, it is well known that many persons who desire and could have had the privilege of redeeming on time their farms, heretofore sold under deeds of trust and mortgages, have by this law been deprived of the privilege of attempting the same; as those who now hold possession, especially where the consideration is small, are not willing to place the property back in the possession of its original owner and run the risk, under this law, of having to pay him from one to ten dollars per acre above the original debt and price of purchase, to get it back, should he be so unfortunate as not to be able to fulfill his part of the contract.  Frequently the purchaser may not possess or be able to command the surplus that this law may require under the original owner, although he may have never paid or invested one dollar in the original purchase.

Still further to increase the hardships and injustice growing out of this infamous and uncalled for act, may property holders refused to sell at all except for cash, as they fear that at the present low rates of real estate they may, under the provisions of this law, have to pay thirty of fifty percent. above selling price before they can become re-possessed of their property, in the event of misfortune or mismanagement upon the part of the purchaser.  I can produce many instances where some of the best men in Iowa have been unable to purchase property on time, even where the vendors declared that they did not require the cash, as they would immediately transfer it and reinvest it in States governed by laws more just and equitable.

If you inquire the cause of an act so blighting and injurious being passed at a time when the people had seen the evil effects of borrowing and trading beyond their ability to pay, and when the price and use of money had settled down permanently to ten per cent., I will answer your enquiry in a few words.  A few men who had, by extravagant living, used and squandered or had in their pockets the borrowed money, thrice the value of their farms, and who made more by borrowing than they ever will or could have done – by selling, urged their request upon the pliant tools at Des Moines, who fondly hoped and truly believed that this infamous law would cover and embrace all passed promises and contracts and that they, the law makers and petitioners, could hold possession of both money and property until old Time removed them from off the sod to a position beneath it.  It was therefore made for the past and not for the future; the future did not ask for it nor require it.

You may further ask, who were the architects that framed and urged through this scourge?  Look back and you will find that they consisted of brainless adventurers, representing many counties, mere birds of passage, carpet-sack residents, whose occupations and professions, backed up by their  limited intellect, could not procure them twenty shillings per week to pay their board, and whose sojourn in the state depended on their success in obtaining office.

My object, Mr. Editor, in laying these facts before you is to urge upon you and the citizens of Iowa, who feel interested in the welfare of the State, the necessity of prompt and energetic action toward ameliorating the present deplorable condition of our State, by petitioning without delay the General Assembly, requesting the repeal of this blighting law, and all other laws effecting a free and open trade in money or credit.

Yours, A. C. F.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, March 7, 1862, p. 2

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Later from Europe

PORTLAND, Feb. 20.

The Bohemian, from Liverpool 6th via Londonderry 7th, arrived here this morning, with one day later news.

The Canada, from Boston, arrived at Liverpool on the 5th inst.

Both houses of Parliament had voted unanimously an address to the Queen in response to her speech.  The opposition approved of the course of the Government in the Trent affair.

Lord Derby thought the Federal Government had assented with very bad grace to the demands of the British Government.

Lord Palmerston said the distress in the manufacturing districts in England from the blockade of the Southern ports, would not justify the interference of the Government, and that they would continue in their neutral course.

The Bank of France has reduced its rates of discount to 4 per cent.

The product of the cotton crop of India was pouring into Bombay.

The iron clad frigate, Warrior, on her passage to Lisbon, labored badly.  Her decks and cabins were flooded and in nine cases out of ten she would not mind her helm.

The London Times city article says, that the funds opened on the 6th, at a decline of more than one-eighth, but gained firmness toward the close.


PARIS, 7. – The Moniteur of this morning says, that Gen. Prim will not take supreme command of the allied forces in Mexico, but that each Gen. will preserve the integrity of his own command.

The Federal gunboat, Tuscarora, left Cowes about 9 o’clock on the morning of the 6th inst., and proceeded Westward.

The Nashville had forty hours start of her.  The engineer of the Nashville told the pilot who took her out that it was agreed by all on board, that she should never be captured; that she had all the valves of the engine arranged so that she could be blown up sky high in a moment, and that if the capture of the Nashville was ever heard of, a violent explosion would accompany it.

Private telegrams from China quote tea at Foochou as higher.  Silks were also higher.  Holders of manufactured goods held them at firm prices.

Singapore was in possession of the rebels.

Advices from Manila say that all tobacco there is to be sent to Spain.


LIVERPOOL, Feb. 7. – Breadstuffs generally quiet and steady, except for corn, which has a downward tendency.  Consols closed at 92 1-4 a 92 7-8.  The weekly returns of the Bank of England show a decrease in the bullion of £334,000.  American securities quiet and stead.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, February 21, 1862, p. 1

Monday, February 14, 2011

From Corinth and New Orleans

More Heavy Skirmishing – Gen. Butler Dispensing Beef and Sugar to the Poor.

ST. LOUIS, May 21. – Special dispatches from below this evening state that every heavy skirmishing is constantly going on at Corinth, and a general engagement is likely to take place at any time, as the federal lines extend close to the rebel pickets.

The steamer Platte Valley was fired into on her way up the Tennessee River, but nobody was hurt.

The rams have reached the fleet, and everything is ready for any emergency.

The Memphis Appeal of the 15th contains the following dispatch addressed to the Rebel Secretary of State:


CAMP MOORE, Louisiana,
May 13, 1862.

To Hon. J. P. Benjamin:

Gen. Butler on the 11th inst., took forcible possession of the office of the Consul of the Netherlands and searched the person of the Consul and took from him the key of the bank vault.  Butler also took possession of the offices of the French and Spanish Consulates, in the old Canal Bank, and placed a guard there.  The French Consulate went on board the steamer Milan, and had not returned up to Sunday morning.  It is said that the guard has been removed from the offices of the French and Spanish Consulates.  In the vault of the Canal Bank $800,000 had been transferred by the Citizens’ Bank to Hoper, banker of Amsterdam, to pay interest on bonds.  Butler also seized the Canal Bank and Smith’s banking house, and has issued an inflammatory proclamation to incite the poor against the rich, promising to distribute among the poor 1,000 hogsheads of beef and sugar.  He is recruiting in New Orleans. – The poor will soon be starved.  The enemy have sent a force up to Bennett’s Cave, which were marched through the swamp and destroyed the railroad bridge.


The Pittsburg Citizen of the 12th instant, says:

“The latest we can ascertain of the whereabouts of the Yankee gunboats, is that they are between Fort Adams and Bayou [Tonica], and are supposed to be in or about the Red River cut off.  The little freight steamer Whitman, which has made so many daring trips to and from New Orleans, has been captured by the Federal gunboat Calhoun.”

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, May 24, 1862, p. 3

Friday, October 29, 2010

Suspension of Specie Payments

DETROIT, Feb. 14.

All banks of this city suspended specie payments today.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Saturday Morning, February 15, 1862, p. 1

Monday, October 11, 2010

The dividends of nearly all the banks of Philadelphia . . .

. . . whose capitals amount to an aggregate of nine millions seven hundred and fourteen thousand one hundred and ninety five dollars, have just been declared for the last six months.  The largest has been that of the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank, which divided sixty thousand dollars, and the smallest has been that of the Tradesman’s Bank, six thousand dollars.  The total amount of dividends is over six hundred and twenty seven thousand dollars, which sum will thus be put in circulation.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, May 17, 1862, p. 1

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Financial

NEW YORK, May 2 – Mr. Cisco to-day made the exchange of one million of 7 8 10 notes for one million of the interest upon the notes to be paid up to day by the banks making the exchange.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, May 10, 1862, p. 4

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Legislative Summary

Yesterday Mr. Hatch introduced a bill Providing for the erection of an Arsenal for the safe keeping of State Arms. It is a measure so evidently demanded that no opposition to it is anticipated. Mr. Angle introduced an important Bill providing that certified copies of all decrees and judgments in the U. S. District Court for this District shall be kept on file in the Recorder’s offices of the several counties. Mr. Jennings introduced two bills: one in relation to the levy of executions; the other authorizing the stockholders of the State Bank or any of the Branches to file information in cases of failure on the part of the Bank to comply with the provisions of the law. The Committee of Ways and Means reported favorably on Mr. Trumbull’s bill. Mr. Boardman’s Bill postponing the taking effect of the Acts passed at the last session of the Board of Education until the 10th of May next, was passed. At 11 o’clock, the special order being the Treasury and State Bank Note Bill, there was a sharp struggle to postpone it one week, but it failed. At 2 o’clock Mr. Dixon’s Bill being the special order, it was postponed, and the Senate spent most of the afternoon discussing a motion to strike the State Bank Note section of the other bill. The discussion was spirited and able on both sides, but the motion was lost. Some amendments were adopted, which will be found in our report, and the bill passed its third reading.

In the House, Mr. Dorr introduced a bill for resuming the lands granted to the Cedar Rapids and Missouri Railroad, which was referred to the railroad committee. Most of the morning was spent in amending the bill authorizing counties to resume their outstanding warrants. Various amendments were adopted and the bill was re-committed. – Des Moines Register, 13th.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Saturday Morning, February 15, 1862, p 1

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Bank Statement

NEW YORK, April 21.

Decrease in loans, $342,208; increase in specie, $76,860; do circulation, $59,820; increase in deposits, $1,420,277.

The office of the Brooklyn White Lead Company of Fulton street was robbed on Saturday night of bonds to the amount of from $40 to $50,000 of the Chicago & N. H. Western RR.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Tuesday Morning, April 22, 1862, p. 1