fbpx
Wikipedia

Second Bank of the United States

The Second Bank of the United States was the second federally authorized Hamiltonian national bank in the United States. Located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the bank was chartered from February 1816 to January 1836.[1] The bank's formal name, according to section 9 of its charter as passed by Congress, was "The President, Directors, and Company, of the Bank of the United States".[2] While other banks in the US were chartered by and only allowed to have branches in a single state, it was authorized to have branches in multiple states and lend money to the US government.

Second Bank of the United States
The north façade of the bank on Chestnut St.
Company typePublic–private partnership
IndustryBanking
Founded1816
Defunct
  • 1836 (federal charter)
  • 1841 (operations)
  • 1852 (state charter)
FateLiquidated
HeadquartersPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Key people

A private corporation with public duties, the bank handled all fiscal transactions for the U.S. government, and was accountable to Congress and the U.S. Treasury. Twenty percent of its capital was owned by the federal government, the bank's single largest stockholder.[3][4] Four thousand private investors held 80 percent of the bank's capital, including three thousand Europeans. The bulk of the stocks were held by a few hundred wealthy Americans.[5] In its time, the institution was the largest monied corporation in the world.[6]

The essential function of the bank was to regulate the public credit issued by private banking institutions through the fiscal duties it performed for the U.S. Treasury, and to establish a sound and stable national currency.[7][8] The federal deposits endowed the bank with its regulatory capacity.[1][9]

Modeled on Alexander Hamilton's First Bank of the United States,[10] the Second Bank was chartered by President James Madison, who in 1791 had attacked the First Bank as unconstitutional, in 1816 and began operations at its main branch in Philadelphia on January 7, 1817,[11][12] managing 25 branch offices nationwide by 1832.[13]

The efforts to renew the bank's charter put the institution at the center of the general election of 1832, in which the bank's president Nicholas Biddle and pro-bank National Republicans led by Henry Clay clashed with the "hard-money"[14][15] Andrew Jackson administration and eastern banking interests in the Bank War.[16][17] Failing to secure recharter, the Second Bank became a private corporation in 1836,[1][18] and underwent liquidation in 1841.[19] There would not be national banks again until the passage of the National Bank Act.

History edit

Establishment edit

The political support for the revival of a national banking system was rooted in the early 19th century transformation of the country from simple Jeffersonian agrarianism towards one interdependent with industrialization and finance.[20][21][22] In the aftermath of the War of 1812, the federal government suffered from the disarray of an unregulated currency and a lack of fiscal order; business interests sought security for their government bonds.[23][3] A national alliance arose to legislate a national bank to address these needs.[24][23]

The political climate[24]—dubbed the Era of Good Feelings[25]—favored the development of national programs and institutions, including a protective tariff, internal improvements and the revival of a Bank of the United States.[10][22][26] Southern and western support for a bank, led by Republican nationalists John C. Calhoun of South Carolina and Henry Clay of Kentucky, was decisive in the successful chartering effort.[27][28][8] The charter was signed into law by James Madison on April 10, 1816.[29] Subsequent efforts by Calhoun and Clay to earmark the bank's $1.5 million establishment "bonus", and annual dividends estimated at $650,000, as a fund for internal improvements, were vetoed by President Madison, on strict constructionist grounds.[30]

 
An 1824 draft on the bank written and signed by Daniel Webster, its attorney and the director of the Boston branch
 
A promissory note issued by the Second Bank of the United States, December 15, 1840, for the amount of $1,000

Opposition to a new bank emanated from two interests. Old Republicans, represented by John Taylor of Caroline and John Randolph of Roanoke,[31] characterized the Second Bank as both constitutionally illegitimate and a direct threat to Jeffersonian agrarianism, state sovereignty and the institution of slavery, expressed by Taylor's statement that "...if Congress could incorporate a bank, it might emancipate a slave."[32][33] Hostile to the regulatory effects of the national bank,[34] private banks—proliferating with or without state charters[35]—had scuttled rechartering of the First Bank in 1811.[36][37] These interests played significant roles in undermining the institution during the administration of U.S. President Andrew Jackson (1829–1837).[38]

Economic functions edit

The Second Bank was a national bank. However, it did not serve the functions of a modern central bank: It did not set monetary policy, regulate private banks, hold their excess reserves, or act as a lender of last resort.[39]

The bank was launched in the midst of a major global market readjustment as Europe recovered from the Napoleonic Wars.[40] It was charged with restraining uninhibited private bank note issue—already in progress[40][41]—that threatened to create a credit bubble and the risks of a financial collapse. Government land sales in the West, fueled by European demand for agricultural products, ensured that a speculative bubble would form.[42] Simultaneously, the national bank was engaged in promoting a democratized expansion of credit to accommodate laissez-faire impulses among eastern business entrepreneurs and credit-hungry western and southern farmers.[43][44]

Under the management of its first president William Jones, the bank failed to control paper money issued from its branch banks in the West and South, contributing to the post-war speculative land boom.[45][46] When the U.S. markets collapsed in the Panic of 1819—a result of global economic adjustments[40][47]—the bank came under withering criticism for its belated tight money policies—policies that exacerbated mass unemployment and plunging property values.[48] Further, it transpired that branch directors for the Baltimore office had engaged in fraud and larceny.[49]

Resigning in January 1819,[50] Jones was replaced by Langdon Cheves, who continued the contraction in credit in an effort to stop inflation and stabilize the bank, even as the economy began to correct. The bank's reaction to the crisis—a clumsy expansion, then a sharp contraction of credit—indicated its weakness, not its strength.[51] The effects were catastrophic, resulting in a protracted recession with mass unemployment and a sharp drop in property values that persisted until 1822.[48][52] The financial crisis raised doubts among the American public as to the efficacy of paper money, and in whose interests a national system of finance operated.[53] Upon this widespread disaffection the anti-bank Jacksonian Democrats would mobilize opposition to the bank in the 1830s.[53] The bank was in general disrepute among most Americans when Nicholas Biddle, the third and last president of the bank, was appointed by President James Monroe in 1823.[54]

Under Biddle's guidance, the bank evolved into a powerful institution that produced a strong and sound system of national credit and currency.[55] From 1823 to 1833, Biddle expanded credit steadily, but with restraint, in a manner that served the needs of the expanding American economy.[56] Albert Gallatin, former Secretary of the Treasury under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, wrote in 1831 that the bank was fulfilling its charter expectations.[34]

Jackson's Bank War edit

 
A Democratic cartoon from 1833 showing Jackson destroying the Second Bank with his "Order for the Removal", to the approval of the Uncle Sam-like figure to the right, and the annoyance of the bank's president, shown as the Devil himself. Numerous politicians and editors who were given favorable loans from the bank run for cover as the financial temple crashes down.

By the time of Jackson's inauguration in 1829, the bank appeared to be on solid footing. The Supreme Court had affirmed its constitutionality in McCulloch v. Maryland, the 1819 case which Daniel Webster had argued successfully on its behalf a decade earlier,[57] the Treasury recognized the useful services it provided, and the American currency was healthy and stable.[54] Public perceptions of the national bank were generally positive.[58][59] The bank first came under attack by the Jackson administration in December 1829, on the grounds that it had failed to produce a stable national currency, and that it lacked constitutional legitimacy.[60][61][62] Both houses of Congress responded with committee investigations and reports affirming the historical precedents for the bank's constitutionality and its pivotal role in furnishing a uniform currency.[63] Jackson rejected these findings, and privately characterized the bank as a corrupt institution, dangerous to American liberties.[64]

Biddle made repeated overtures to Jackson and his cabinet to secure a compromise on the bank's rechartering (its term due to expire in 1836) without success.[65][66] Jackson and the anti-bank forces persisted in their condemnation of the bank,[60][67] provoking an early recharter campaign by pro-bank National Republicans under Henry Clay.[68][69] Clay's political ultimatum to Jackson[70]—with Biddle's financial and political support[71][72]—sparked the Bank War[73][74] and placed the fate of the bank at center of the 1832 presidential election.[75]

Jackson mobilized his political base[76] by vetoing the recharter bill[73] and, the veto sustained,[77] easily won reelection on his anti-bank platform.[78] Jackson proceeded to destroy the bank as a financial and political force by removing its federal deposits,[79][80][81] and in 1833, federal revenue was diverted into selected private banks by executive order, ending the regulatory role of the Second Bank.[1][a]

In hopes of extorting a rescue of the bank, Biddle induced a short-lived financial crisis[54][82] that was initially blamed on Jackson's executive action.[83][84] By 1834, a general backlash against Biddle's tactics developed, ending the panic,[85][86] and all recharter efforts were abandoned.[18]

State bank edit

In February 1836, the bank became a private corporation under Pennsylvania law.[1] A shortage of hard currency ensued, causing the Panic of 1837 and lasting approximately seven years.[19] The bank suspended payment from October 1839 to January 1841, and permanently in February 1841. It then started a lengthy liquidation process, complicated by lawsuits, that ended in 1852 when it assigned its remaining assets to trustees and surrendered the state charter.[87]

Branches edit

The bank maintained the following branches. Listed is the year each branch opened.[88]

Presidents edit

 
Share of the Second Bank of the United States, issued 18. June 1838, signed by Nicholas Biddle

Terms of charter edit

The Second Bank was America's national bank, comparable to the Bank of England and the Bank of France, with one key distinction – the United States government owned one-fifth (20 percent) of its capital. Whereas other national banks of that era were wholly private, the Second Bank was more characteristic of a government bank.[89]

Under its charter, the bank had a capital limit of $35 million, $7.5 million of which represented the government-owned share. It was required to remit a "bonus" payment of $1.5 million, payable in three installments,[4] to the government for the privilege of using the public funds, interest free, in its private banking ventures.[90] The institution was answerable for its performance to the U.S. Treasury and Congress[3] and subject to Treasury Department inspection.[4]

As exclusive fiscal agent for the federal government,[91][3] it provided a number of services as part of its charter, including holding and transfer of all U.S. deposits, payment and receipt of all government transactions, and processing of tax payments.[13] In other words, the bank was "the depository of the federal government, which was its principal stockholder and customer."[3][92]

The chief personnel for the bank comprised 25 directors, five of whom were appointed by the President of the United States, subject to Senate approval.[4] Federally appointed directors were barred from acting as officials in other banks. Two of the three Bank presidents, William Jones and Nicholas Biddle, were chosen from among these government directors.[3]

Headquartered in Philadelphia, the bank was authorized to establish branch offices where it deemed suitable, and these were immune from state taxation.[4]

Regulatory mechanisms edit

The primary regulatory task of the Second Bank, as chartered by Congress in 1816, was to restrain the uninhibited proliferation of paper money (bank notes) by state or private lenders,[34] which was highly profitable to these institutions.[93] In this capacity, the bank would preside over this democratization of credit,[11][94] contributing to a vast and profitable disbursement of bank loans to farmers, small manufacturers and entrepreneurs, encouraging rapid and healthy economic expansion.[11] Historian Bray Hammond describes the mechanism by which the bank exerted its anti-inflationary influence:

Receiving the checks and notes of local banks deposited with the [Bank] by government collectors of revenue, the [Bank] had constantly to come back on the local banks for settlements of the amounts which the checks and notes called for. It had to do so because it made those amounts immediately available to the Treasury, wherever desired. Since settlement by the local banks was in specie i.e. silver and gold coin, the pressure for settlement automatically regulated local banking lending: for the more the local banks lent the larger amount of their notes and checks in use and the larger the sums they had to settle in specie. This loss of specie reduced their power to lend.[95]

Under this banking regime, the impulse towards over-speculation, with the risks of creating a national financial crisis, would be avoided, or at least mitigated.[7][11][94] It was just this mechanism that the local private banks found objectionable, because it yoked their lending strategies to the fiscal operations of the national government, requiring them to maintain adequate gold and silver reserves to meet their debt obligations to the U.S. Treasury.[34] The proliferation of private-sector banking institutions – from 31 banks in 1801 to 788 in 1837[38] – meant that the Second Bank faced strong opposition from this sector during the Jackson administration.[11]

Architecture edit

Second Bank of the United States
 
Drawing in an 1875 book
Location420 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates39°56′54.86″N 75°8′55.2″W / 39.9485722°N 75.148667°W / 39.9485722; -75.148667
Built1818–1824[97]
ArchitectWilliam Strickland
Architectural styleGreek Revival
NRHP reference No.87001293[96]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMay 4, 1987
Designated NHLMay 4, 1987

The architect of the Second Bank was William Strickland (1788–1854), a former student of Benjamin Latrobe (1764–1820), the man who is often called the first professionally trained American architect. Latrobe and Strickland were both disciples of the Greek Revival style. Strickland went on to design many other American public buildings in this style, including financial structures such as the Mechanics National Bank (also in Philadelphia). He also designed the second building for the main U.S. Mint in Philadelphia in 1833, as well as the New Orleans, Dahlonega, and Charlotte branch mints in the mid-to-late 1830s.

Strickland's design for the Second Bank is in essence based on the Parthenon in Athens, and is a significant early and monumental example of Greek Revival architecture.[98] The hallmarks of the Greek Revival style can be seen immediately in the north and south façades, which use a large set of steps leading up to the main level platform, known as the stylobate. On top of these, Strickland placed eight severe Doric columns, which are crowned by an entablature containing a triglyph frieze and simple triangular pediment. The building appears much as an ancient Greek temple, hence the stylistic name. The interior consists of an entrance hallway in the center of the north façade flanked by two rooms on either side. The entry leads into two central rooms, one after the other, that span the width of the structure east to west. The east and west sides of the first large room are each pierced by a large arched fan window. The building's exterior uses Pennsylvania blue marble, which, due to the manner in which it was cut, has begun to deteriorate due to weak parts of the stone being exposed to the elements.[99] This phenomenon is most visible on the Doric columns of the south façade. Construction lasted from 1819 to 1824.

The Greek Revival style used for the Second Bank contrasts with the earlier, Federal style in architecture used for the First Bank of the United States, which also still stands and is located nearby in Philadelphia. This can be seen in the more Roman-influenced Federal structure's ornate, colossal Corinthian columns of its façade, which is also embellished by Corinthian pilasters and a symmetric arrangement of sash windows piercing the two stories of the façade. The roofline is also topped by a balustrade, and the heavy modillions adorning the pediment give the First Bank an appearance much more like a Roman villa than a Greek temple.

Current building use edit

 
Rather less Greek side view

Since the bank's closing in 1841, the edifice has performed a variety of functions. Today, it is part of Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia.[100] The structure is open to the public free of charge and serves as an art gallery, housing a large collection of portraits of prominent early Americans painted by Charles Willson Peale and many others.

The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1987 for its architectural and historic significance.[98]

The Wall Street branch in New York City was converted into the United States Assay Office before it was demolished in 1915. The federal-style façade was saved and installed in the American Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1924.

In popular culture edit

The Second Bank building was described by Charles Dickens in a chapter of his 1842 travelogue American Notes for General Circulation, Philadelphia, and its solitary prison:

We reached the city, late that night. Looking out of my chamber-window, before going to bed, I saw, on the opposite side of the way, a handsome building of white marble, which had a mournful ghost-like aspect, dreary to behold. I attributed this to the sombre influence of the night, and on rising in the morning looked out again, expecting to see its steps and portico thronged with groups of people passing in and out. The door was still tight shut, however; the same cold cheerless air prevailed: and the building looked as if the marble statue of Don Guzman could alone have any business to transact within its gloomy walls. I hastened to inquire its name and purpose, and then my surprise vanished. It was the Tomb of many fortunes; the Great Catacomb of investment; the memorable United States Bank.

The stoppage of this bank, with all its ruinous consequences, had cast (as I was told on every side) a gloom on Philadelphia, under the depressing effect of which it yet laboured. It certainly did seem rather dull and out of spirits.[101]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ See Andrew Jackson's State of the Union Addresses 1829–1836 Gutenberg

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Hammond 1947, p. 155.
  2. ^ Hall & Clarke 1832, p. 625.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Hammond 1947, p. 149.
  4. ^ a b c d e Dangerfield 1966, p. 12.
  5. ^ Hofstadter 1948, pp. 60–61.
  6. ^ Hammond 1956, p. 102.
  7. ^ a b Hammond 1947, pp. 149–150.
  8. ^ a b Dangerfield 1966, pp. 10–11.
  9. ^ Hammond 1956, p. 9.
  10. ^ a b Remini 1993, p. 140.
  11. ^ a b c d e Wilentz 2005, p. 205.
  12. ^ Remini 1993, p. 145.
  13. ^ a b Wilentz 2005, p. 365.
  14. ^ Meyers 1953, pp. 212–213.
  15. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 115–116.
  16. ^ Hammond 1956, p. 100.
  17. ^ Hammond 1957, p. 359.
  18. ^ a b Wilentz 2005, p. 401.
  19. ^ a b Hammond 1947, p. 157.
  20. ^ Hammond 1956, p. 10.
  21. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. 88–89.
  22. ^ a b Wilentz 2005, p. 181.
  23. ^ a b Wilentz 2005, pp. 204–205.
  24. ^ a b Dangerfield 1966, p. 10.
  25. ^ Wilentz 2005, p. 182.
  26. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 11.
  27. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 203, 205.
  28. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 11–12.
  29. ^ Dangerfield 1966, p. 11.
  30. ^ Minicucci 2004[page needed]
  31. ^ Remini 1981, p. 32.
  32. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 20–21.
  33. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 203, 214.
  34. ^ a b c d Hammond 1947, p. 150.
  35. ^ Dangerfield 1966, p. 87.
  36. ^ Hammond 1947, p. 152.
  37. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 203–204.
  38. ^ a b Hammond 1947, p. 153.
  39. ^ Hill 2015, online.
  40. ^ a b c Wilentz 2005, p. 206.
  41. ^ Dangerfield 1966, p. 76.
  42. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. 73–74.
  43. ^ Hofstadter 1948, pp. 55–56.
  44. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 205–207.
  45. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. 80–81, 85.
  46. ^ Remini 1981, p. 28.
  47. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. pp. 86, 89.
  48. ^ a b Dangerfield 1966, p. 84.
  49. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. 81, 83.
  50. ^ Dangerfield 1966, p. 80.
  51. ^ Dangerfield 1966, pp. 85–86.
  52. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 207–208.
  53. ^ a b Dangerfield 1966, p. 89.
  54. ^ a b c Hammond 1947, p. 151.
  55. ^ Remini 1981, p. 229.
  56. ^ Hofstadter 1948, p. 62.
  57. ^ Killenbeck 2006, pp. 98–109.
  58. ^ Hammond 1957, p. 371.
  59. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 77.
  60. ^ a b Wilentz 2005, p. 362.
  61. ^ Hammond 1947, pp. 151–152.
  62. ^ Remini 1981, pp. 228–229, 303.
  63. ^ Hammond 1957, pp. 377–378.
  64. ^ Hammond 1957, p. 379.
  65. ^ Hofstadter 1948, pp. 59–60.
  66. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 81.
  67. ^ Remini 1981, pp. 301–302.
  68. ^ Remini 1981, pp. 341–342.
  69. ^ Hammond 1957, p. 385.
  70. ^ Remini 1981, p. 365.
  71. ^ Wilentz 2005, p. 369.
  72. ^ Remini 1981, p. 343.
  73. ^ a b Schlesinger 1945, p. 87.
  74. ^ Remini 1981, p. 361.
  75. ^ Remini 1981, p. 374.
  76. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 91.
  77. ^ Wellman 1966, p. 132.
  78. ^ Remini 1981, pp. 382–383, 389.
  79. ^ Remini 1981, pp. 375–376.
  80. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 392–393.
  81. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 98.
  82. ^ Hofstadter 1948, pp. 61–62.
  83. ^ Wilentz 2005, p. 396.
  84. ^ Schlesinger 1945, p. 103.
  85. ^ Wilentz 2005, p. 400.
  86. ^ Schlesinger 1945, pp. 112–113.
  87. ^ Brown 1912, pp. 193–199
  88. ^ PhiladelphiaFed 2021, p. 7.
  89. ^ Hammond 1947, p. 140.
  90. ^ Wilentz 2005, p. 364.
  91. ^ Wellman 1966, p. 92.
  92. ^ Hammond 1957, p. 9.
  93. ^ Wilentz 2005, pp. 74–75.
  94. ^ a b Hofstadter 1948, p. 56.
  95. ^ Hammond 1956, pp. 9–10.
  96. ^ NRIS 2006, online.
  97. ^ Gallery 2004, p. 35.
  98. ^ a b NPS 2017, online.
  99. ^ NPS 2009, online.
  100. ^ Independence Hall 2020, online.
  101. ^ Dickens 1913, p. 81.

Bibliography edit

  • Brown, William Horace (1912). The Story of a Bank.
  • Browning, Andrew H. (2019). The Panic of 1819: The First Great Depression. University of Missouri. ISBN 978-0-8262-2183-4. online review
  • Bodenhorn, Howard (2000). A History of Banking in Antebellum America: Financial Markets and Economic Development in an Era of Nation-Building.
  • Campbell, Stephen W. (2019). The Bank War and the Partisan Press: Newspapers, Financial Institutions, and the Post Office in Jacksonian America. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas. OCLC 1066117752.
  • Catterall, Ralph C. H. (1902). The Second Bank of the United States. University of Chicago.
  • Dangerfield, George (1966). The Awakening of American Nationalism: 1815–1828. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-88133-823-2.
  • Dickens, Charles (1913). American Notes for General Circulation. p. 81. Retrieved April 17, 2020 – via Gutenberg.
  • Feller, Daniel. "The Bank War", in Julian E. Zelizer, ed. The American Congress (2004), pp 93–111.
  • Gallery, John Andrew, ed. (2004), Philadelphia Architecture: A Guide to the City (2nd ed.), Philadelphia: Foundation for Architecture, ISBN 0962290815{{citation}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Govan, Thomas Payne (1959). Nicolas Biddle, Nationalist and Public Banker, 1786–1844. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Hall, David A.; Clarke, Matthew St Clair (1832). Legislative and Documentary History of the Bank of the United States. Gales and Seaton. ISBN 978-1-296-74384-0. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  • Hammond, Bray (May 1947). "Jackson, Biddle, and the Bank of the United States". The Journal of Economic History. 7 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1017/S0022050700053420. JSTOR 2113597. S2CID 155058579. in Essays on Jacksonian America. New York: Frank Otto Gatell, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. 1970.
  • Hammond, Bray (1956). "Jackson's Fight with the Money Power". American Heritage. 8 (4).
  • Hammond, Bray (1957). Banks and Politics in America, from the Revolution to the Civil War. Princeton University Press.
  • Hammond, Bray (1953). "The Second Bank of the United States". Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. 43 (1): 80–85. doi:10.2307/1005664. JSTOR 1005664.
  • Hill, Andrew T. (December 4, 2015). "The First Bank of the United States". Federal Reserve History. Retrieved November 25, 2021.
  • Hofstadter, Richard (1948). Great Issues in American History: From the Revolution to the Civil War, 1765–1865.
  • "Historic Philadelphia Tour: Second Bank of the United States". ushistory.org. Independence Hall Association. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  • Kahan, Paul. The Bank War: Andrew Jackson, Nicholas Biddle, and the Fight for American Finance (Yardley: Westholme, 2016. xii, 187 pp.
  • Killenbeck, Mark R. (2006). M'Culloch v. Maryland: Securing a Nation. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas.
  • Knodell, Jane Ellen (2017). The Second Bank of the United States: "Central" Banker in an Era of Nation Building, 1816–1836. Routledge. online review July 17, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  • McGrane, Reginald C., ed. (1919). The Correspondence of Nicholas Biddle.
  • McGraw, Thomas K. (2012). The Founders of Finance: How Hamilton, Gallatin, and Other Immigrants Forged a New Economy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 315–320. ISBN 978-0-674-06692-2.
  • Meyers, Marvin (Spring 1953). "The Jacksonian Persuasion". American Quarterly. 5 (1): 3–15. doi:10.2307/3031286. JSTOR 3031286. in Essays on Jacksonian America. New York: Frank Otto Gatell, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. 1970.
  • Minicucci, Stephen (October 2004). "Internal Improvements and the Union, 1790–1860". Studies in American Political Development. Cambridge University Press. 18 (2): 160–185. doi:10.1017/S0898588X04000094. S2CID 144902648.
  • . Second Bank of the United States. National Park Service. Archived from the original on June 4, 2009.
  • "NHL nomination for Second Bank of the United States". National Park Service. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  • "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 15, 2006.
  • The Second Bank of the United States: A Chapter in the History of Central Banking (PDF). Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. January 2021.
  • Ratner, Sidney, James H. Soltow, and Richard Sylla. The Evolution of the American Economy: Growth, Welfare, and Decision Making. (1993)
  • Remini, Robert V. (1967). Andrew Jackson and the Bank War: A Study in the Growth of Presidential Power. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-09757-3.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1981). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1822–1832. vol. II. New York: Harper & Row.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1984). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1833–1845. vol. III. New York: Harper & Row.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1993). Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union. New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
  • Schlesinger, Arthur Meier Jr. (1945). Age of Jackson.
  • Schweikart, Larry. Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to Reconstruction (1987)
  • Taylor; George Rogers, ed. Jackson Versus Biddle: The Struggle over the Second Bank of the United States (1949).
  • Temin, Peter. The Jacksonian Economy (1969)
  • Walters, Raymond (1945). "The origins of the Second Bank of the United States". Journal of Political Economy. 53 (2): 115–131. doi:10.1086/256246. JSTOR 1825049. S2CID 153635866.
  • Wellman, Paul I. (1966) [1984]. The House Divides: The Age of Jackson and Lincoln. New York: Doubleday and Company.
  • Wilburn, Jean Alexander (1967). Biddle's Bank: The Crucial Years.
  • Wilentz, Sean (2005). The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln. New York: W.W. Horton and Company.

External links edit

  • Second Bank – official site at Independence Hall National Historical Park
  • Documents produced by the Second Bank of the United States on FRASER
  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. PA-137, "Second Bank of the United States", 43 photos, 20 measured drawings, 2 photo caption pages

second, bank, united, states, this, article, about, early, 19th, century, federal, institution, confused, with, first, bank, united, states, early, 20th, century, corporation, bank, united, states, modern, corporation, bank, america, second, federally, authori. This article is about the early 19th century federal institution It is not to be confused with the First Bank of the United States the early 20th century corporation the Bank of the United States or the modern corporation Bank of America The Second Bank of the United States was the second federally authorized Hamiltonian national bank in the United States Located in Philadelphia Pennsylvania the bank was chartered from February 1816 to January 1836 1 The bank s formal name according to section 9 of its charter as passed by Congress was The President Directors and Company of the Bank of the United States 2 While other banks in the US were chartered by and only allowed to have branches in a single state it was authorized to have branches in multiple states and lend money to the US government Second Bank of the United StatesThe north facade of the bank on Chestnut St Company typePublic private partnershipIndustryBankingFounded1816Defunct1836 federal charter 1841 operations 1852 state charter FateLiquidatedHeadquartersPhiladelphia Pennsylvania U S Key peopleWilliam Jones president 1816 19 Nicholas Biddle president 1823 36 A private corporation with public duties the bank handled all fiscal transactions for the U S government and was accountable to Congress and the U S Treasury Twenty percent of its capital was owned by the federal government the bank s single largest stockholder 3 4 Four thousand private investors held 80 percent of the bank s capital including three thousand Europeans The bulk of the stocks were held by a few hundred wealthy Americans 5 In its time the institution was the largest monied corporation in the world 6 The essential function of the bank was to regulate the public credit issued by private banking institutions through the fiscal duties it performed for the U S Treasury and to establish a sound and stable national currency 7 8 The federal deposits endowed the bank with its regulatory capacity 1 9 Modeled on Alexander Hamilton s First Bank of the United States 10 the Second Bank was chartered by President James Madison who in 1791 had attacked the First Bank as unconstitutional in 1816 and began operations at its main branch in Philadelphia on January 7 1817 11 12 managing 25 branch offices nationwide by 1832 13 The efforts to renew the bank s charter put the institution at the center of the general election of 1832 in which the bank s president Nicholas Biddle and pro bank National Republicans led by Henry Clay clashed with the hard money 14 15 Andrew Jackson administration and eastern banking interests in the Bank War 16 17 Failing to secure recharter the Second Bank became a private corporation in 1836 1 18 and underwent liquidation in 1841 19 There would not be national banks again until the passage of the National Bank Act Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment 1 2 Economic functions 1 3 Jackson s Bank War 1 4 State bank 1 5 Branches 1 6 Presidents 2 Terms of charter 3 Regulatory mechanisms 4 Architecture 4 1 Current building use 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory editEstablishment edit The political support for the revival of a national banking system was rooted in the early 19th century transformation of the country from simple Jeffersonian agrarianism towards one interdependent with industrialization and finance 20 21 22 In the aftermath of the War of 1812 the federal government suffered from the disarray of an unregulated currency and a lack of fiscal order business interests sought security for their government bonds 23 3 A national alliance arose to legislate a national bank to address these needs 24 23 The political climate 24 dubbed the Era of Good Feelings 25 favored the development of national programs and institutions including a protective tariff internal improvements and the revival of a Bank of the United States 10 22 26 Southern and western support for a bank led by Republican nationalists John C Calhoun of South Carolina and Henry Clay of Kentucky was decisive in the successful chartering effort 27 28 8 The charter was signed into law by James Madison on April 10 1816 29 Subsequent efforts by Calhoun and Clay to earmark the bank s 1 5 million establishment bonus and annual dividends estimated at 650 000 as a fund for internal improvements were vetoed by President Madison on strict constructionist grounds 30 nbsp An 1824 draft on the bank written and signed by Daniel Webster its attorney and the director of the Boston branch nbsp A promissory note issued by the Second Bank of the United States December 15 1840 for the amount of 1 000Opposition to a new bank emanated from two interests Old Republicans represented by John Taylor of Caroline and John Randolph of Roanoke 31 characterized the Second Bank as both constitutionally illegitimate and a direct threat to Jeffersonian agrarianism state sovereignty and the institution of slavery expressed by Taylor s statement that if Congress could incorporate a bank it might emancipate a slave 32 33 Hostile to the regulatory effects of the national bank 34 private banks proliferating with or without state charters 35 had scuttled rechartering of the First Bank in 1811 36 37 These interests played significant roles in undermining the institution during the administration of U S President Andrew Jackson 1829 1837 38 Economic functions edit The Second Bank was a national bank However it did not serve the functions of a modern central bank It did not set monetary policy regulate private banks hold their excess reserves or act as a lender of last resort 39 The bank was launched in the midst of a major global market readjustment as Europe recovered from the Napoleonic Wars 40 It was charged with restraining uninhibited private bank note issue already in progress 40 41 that threatened to create a credit bubble and the risks of a financial collapse Government land sales in the West fueled by European demand for agricultural products ensured that a speculative bubble would form 42 Simultaneously the national bank was engaged in promoting a democratized expansion of credit to accommodate laissez faire impulses among eastern business entrepreneurs and credit hungry western and southern farmers 43 44 Under the management of its first president William Jones the bank failed to control paper money issued from its branch banks in the West and South contributing to the post war speculative land boom 45 46 When the U S markets collapsed in the Panic of 1819 a result of global economic adjustments 40 47 the bank came under withering criticism for its belated tight money policies policies that exacerbated mass unemployment and plunging property values 48 Further it transpired that branch directors for the Baltimore office had engaged in fraud and larceny 49 Resigning in January 1819 50 Jones was replaced by Langdon Cheves who continued the contraction in credit in an effort to stop inflation and stabilize the bank even as the economy began to correct The bank s reaction to the crisis a clumsy expansion then a sharp contraction of credit indicated its weakness not its strength 51 The effects were catastrophic resulting in a protracted recession with mass unemployment and a sharp drop in property values that persisted until 1822 48 52 The financial crisis raised doubts among the American public as to the efficacy of paper money and in whose interests a national system of finance operated 53 Upon this widespread disaffection the anti bank Jacksonian Democrats would mobilize opposition to the bank in the 1830s 53 The bank was in general disrepute among most Americans when Nicholas Biddle the third and last president of the bank was appointed by President James Monroe in 1823 54 Under Biddle s guidance the bank evolved into a powerful institution that produced a strong and sound system of national credit and currency 55 From 1823 to 1833 Biddle expanded credit steadily but with restraint in a manner that served the needs of the expanding American economy 56 Albert Gallatin former Secretary of the Treasury under Thomas Jefferson and James Madison wrote in 1831 that the bank was fulfilling its charter expectations 34 Jackson s Bank War edit Main article Bank War nbsp A Democratic cartoon from 1833 showing Jackson destroying the Second Bank with his Order for the Removal to the approval of the Uncle Sam like figure to the right and the annoyance of the bank s president shown as the Devil himself Numerous politicians and editors who were given favorable loans from the bank run for cover as the financial temple crashes down By the time of Jackson s inauguration in 1829 the bank appeared to be on solid footing The Supreme Court had affirmed its constitutionality in McCulloch v Maryland the 1819 case which Daniel Webster had argued successfully on its behalf a decade earlier 57 the Treasury recognized the useful services it provided and the American currency was healthy and stable 54 Public perceptions of the national bank were generally positive 58 59 The bank first came under attack by the Jackson administration in December 1829 on the grounds that it had failed to produce a stable national currency and that it lacked constitutional legitimacy 60 61 62 Both houses of Congress responded with committee investigations and reports affirming the historical precedents for the bank s constitutionality and its pivotal role in furnishing a uniform currency 63 Jackson rejected these findings and privately characterized the bank as a corrupt institution dangerous to American liberties 64 Biddle made repeated overtures to Jackson and his cabinet to secure a compromise on the bank s rechartering its term due to expire in 1836 without success 65 66 Jackson and the anti bank forces persisted in their condemnation of the bank 60 67 provoking an early recharter campaign by pro bank National Republicans under Henry Clay 68 69 Clay s political ultimatum to Jackson 70 with Biddle s financial and political support 71 72 sparked the Bank War 73 74 and placed the fate of the bank at center of the 1832 presidential election 75 Jackson mobilized his political base 76 by vetoing the recharter bill 73 and the veto sustained 77 easily won reelection on his anti bank platform 78 Jackson proceeded to destroy the bank as a financial and political force by removing its federal deposits 79 80 81 and in 1833 federal revenue was diverted into selected private banks by executive order ending the regulatory role of the Second Bank 1 a In hopes of extorting a rescue of the bank Biddle induced a short lived financial crisis 54 82 that was initially blamed on Jackson s executive action 83 84 By 1834 a general backlash against Biddle s tactics developed ending the panic 85 86 and all recharter efforts were abandoned 18 State bank edit In February 1836 the bank became a private corporation under Pennsylvania law 1 A shortage of hard currency ensued causing the Panic of 1837 and lasting approximately seven years 19 The bank suspended payment from October 1839 to January 1841 and permanently in February 1841 It then started a lengthy liquidation process complicated by lawsuits that ended in 1852 when it assigned its remaining assets to trustees and surrendered the state charter 87 Branches edit The bank maintained the following branches Listed is the year each branch opened 88 Augusta Georgia 1817 closed 1817 Baltimore Maryland 1817 Boston Massachusetts 1817 Charleston South Carolina 1817 Chillicothe Ohio 1817 Cincinnati Ohio 1817 Fayetteville North Carolina 1817 Lexington Kentucky 1817 Louisville Kentucky 1817 Middletown Connecticut 1817 New Orleans Louisiana 1817 New York City New York 1817 Norfolk Virginia 1817 Portsmouth New Hampshire 1817 Providence Rhode Island 1817 Richmond Virginia 1817 Savannah Georgia 1817 Washington D C 1817 Mobile Alabama 1826 Nashville Tennessee 1827 Portland Maine 1828 Buffalo New York 1829 St Louis Missouri 1829 Burlington Vermont 1830 Utica New York 1830 Natchez Mississippi 1830 Presidents edit nbsp Share of the Second Bank of the United States issued 18 June 1838 signed by Nicholas BiddleWilliam Jones January 7 1817 January 25 1819 James Fisher January 25 1819 March 6 1819 Acting Langdon Cheves March 6 1819 January 6 1823 Nicholas Biddle January 6 1823 March 1839 Thomas Dunlap March 1839 February 1841 William Drayton 1841 James Robertson 1841 March 22 1852Terms of charter editThe Second Bank was America s national bank comparable to the Bank of England and the Bank of France with one key distinction the United States government owned one fifth 20 percent of its capital Whereas other national banks of that era were wholly private the Second Bank was more characteristic of a government bank 89 Under its charter the bank had a capital limit of 35 million 7 5 million of which represented the government owned share It was required to remit a bonus payment of 1 5 million payable in three installments 4 to the government for the privilege of using the public funds interest free in its private banking ventures 90 The institution was answerable for its performance to the U S Treasury and Congress 3 and subject to Treasury Department inspection 4 As exclusive fiscal agent for the federal government 91 3 it provided a number of services as part of its charter including holding and transfer of all U S deposits payment and receipt of all government transactions and processing of tax payments 13 In other words the bank was the depository of the federal government which was its principal stockholder and customer 3 92 The chief personnel for the bank comprised 25 directors five of whom were appointed by the President of the United States subject to Senate approval 4 Federally appointed directors were barred from acting as officials in other banks Two of the three Bank presidents William Jones and Nicholas Biddle were chosen from among these government directors 3 Headquartered in Philadelphia the bank was authorized to establish branch offices where it deemed suitable and these were immune from state taxation 4 Regulatory mechanisms editThe primary regulatory task of the Second Bank as chartered by Congress in 1816 was to restrain the uninhibited proliferation of paper money bank notes by state or private lenders 34 which was highly profitable to these institutions 93 In this capacity the bank would preside over this democratization of credit 11 94 contributing to a vast and profitable disbursement of bank loans to farmers small manufacturers and entrepreneurs encouraging rapid and healthy economic expansion 11 Historian Bray Hammond describes the mechanism by which the bank exerted its anti inflationary influence Receiving the checks and notes of local banks deposited with the Bank by government collectors of revenue the Bank had constantly to come back on the local banks for settlements of the amounts which the checks and notes called for It had to do so because it made those amounts immediately available to the Treasury wherever desired Since settlement by the local banks was in specie i e silver and gold coin the pressure for settlement automatically regulated local banking lending for the more the local banks lent the larger amount of their notes and checks in use and the larger the sums they had to settle in specie This loss of specie reduced their power to lend 95 Under this banking regime the impulse towards over speculation with the risks of creating a national financial crisis would be avoided or at least mitigated 7 11 94 It was just this mechanism that the local private banks found objectionable because it yoked their lending strategies to the fiscal operations of the national government requiring them to maintain adequate gold and silver reserves to meet their debt obligations to the U S Treasury 34 The proliferation of private sector banking institutions from 31 banks in 1801 to 788 in 1837 38 meant that the Second Bank faced strong opposition from this sector during the Jackson administration 11 Architecture editSecond Bank of the United StatesU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic Landmark nbsp Drawing in an 1875 bookLocation420 Chestnut StreetPhiladelphia PennsylvaniaCoordinates39 56 54 86 N 75 8 55 2 W 39 9485722 N 75 148667 W 39 9485722 75 148667Built1818 1824 97 ArchitectWilliam StricklandArchitectural styleGreek RevivalNRHP reference No 87001293 96 Significant datesAdded to NRHPMay 4 1987Designated NHLMay 4 1987This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Second Bank of the United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The architect of the Second Bank was William Strickland 1788 1854 a former student of Benjamin Latrobe 1764 1820 the man who is often called the first professionally trained American architect Latrobe and Strickland were both disciples of the Greek Revival style Strickland went on to design many other American public buildings in this style including financial structures such as the Mechanics National Bank also in Philadelphia He also designed the second building for the main U S Mint in Philadelphia in 1833 as well as the New Orleans Dahlonega and Charlotte branch mints in the mid to late 1830s Strickland s design for the Second Bank is in essence based on the Parthenon in Athens and is a significant early and monumental example of Greek Revival architecture 98 The hallmarks of the Greek Revival style can be seen immediately in the north and south facades which use a large set of steps leading up to the main level platform known as the stylobate On top of these Strickland placed eight severe Doric columns which are crowned by an entablature containing a triglyph frieze and simple triangular pediment The building appears much as an ancient Greek temple hence the stylistic name The interior consists of an entrance hallway in the center of the north facade flanked by two rooms on either side The entry leads into two central rooms one after the other that span the width of the structure east to west The east and west sides of the first large room are each pierced by a large arched fan window The building s exterior uses Pennsylvania blue marble which due to the manner in which it was cut has begun to deteriorate due to weak parts of the stone being exposed to the elements 99 This phenomenon is most visible on the Doric columns of the south facade Construction lasted from 1819 to 1824 The Greek Revival style used for the Second Bank contrasts with the earlier Federal style in architecture used for the First Bank of the United States which also still stands and is located nearby in Philadelphia This can be seen in the more Roman influenced Federal structure s ornate colossal Corinthian columns of its facade which is also embellished by Corinthian pilasters and a symmetric arrangement of sash windows piercing the two stories of the facade The roofline is also topped by a balustrade and the heavy modillions adorning the pediment give the First Bank an appearance much more like a Roman villa than a Greek temple Current building use edit nbsp Rather less Greek side viewSince the bank s closing in 1841 the edifice has performed a variety of functions Today it is part of Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia 100 The structure is open to the public free of charge and serves as an art gallery housing a large collection of portraits of prominent early Americans painted by Charles Willson Peale and many others The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1987 for its architectural and historic significance 98 The Wall Street branch in New York City was converted into the United States Assay Office before it was demolished in 1915 The federal style facade was saved and installed in the American Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1924 In popular culture editThe Second Bank building was described by Charles Dickens in a chapter of his 1842 travelogue American Notes for General Circulation Philadelphia and its solitary prison We reached the city late that night Looking out of my chamber window before going to bed I saw on the opposite side of the way a handsome building of white marble which had a mournful ghost like aspect dreary to behold I attributed this to the sombre influence of the night and on rising in the morning looked out again expecting to see its steps and portico thronged with groups of people passing in and out The door was still tight shut however the same cold cheerless air prevailed and the building looked as if the marble statue of Don Guzman could alone have any business to transact within its gloomy walls I hastened to inquire its name and purpose and then my surprise vanished It was the Tomb of many fortunes the Great Catacomb of investment the memorable United States Bank The stoppage of this bank with all its ruinous consequences had cast as I was told on every side a gloom on Philadelphia under the depressing effect of which it yet laboured It certainly did seem rather dull and out of spirits 101 See also edit nbsp Banks portal nbsp Philadelphia portalBanking in the Jacksonian Era Federal Reserve Federal Reserve Act First Bank of the United States History of central banking in the United States McCulloch v Maryland Panic of 1837 List of National Historic Landmarks in Philadelphia National Register of Historic Places listings in Center City PhiladelphiaNotes edit See Andrew Jackson s State of the Union Addresses 1829 1836 GutenbergReferences edit a b c d e Hammond 1947 p 155 Hall amp Clarke 1832 p 625 a b c d e f Hammond 1947 p 149 a b c d e Dangerfield 1966 p 12 Hofstadter 1948 pp 60 61 Hammond 1956 p 102 a b Hammond 1947 pp 149 150 a b Dangerfield 1966 pp 10 11 Hammond 1956 p 9 a b Remini 1993 p 140 a b c d e Wilentz 2005 p 205 Remini 1993 p 145 a b Wilentz 2005 p 365 Meyers 1953 pp 212 213 Schlesinger 1945 pp 115 116 Hammond 1956 p 100 Hammond 1957 p 359 a b Wilentz 2005 p 401 a b Hammond 1947 p 157 Hammond 1956 p 10 Dangerfield 1966 pp 88 89 a b Wilentz 2005 p 181 a b Wilentz 2005 pp 204 205 a b Dangerfield 1966 p 10 Wilentz 2005 p 182 Schlesinger 1945 p 11 Wilentz 2005 pp 203 205 Schlesinger 1945 pp 11 12 Dangerfield 1966 p 11 Minicucci 2004 page needed Remini 1981 p 32 Schlesinger 1945 pp 20 21 Wilentz 2005 pp 203 214 a b c d Hammond 1947 p 150 Dangerfield 1966 p 87 Hammond 1947 p 152 Wilentz 2005 pp 203 204 a b Hammond 1947 p 153 Hill 2015 online a b c Wilentz 2005 p 206 Dangerfield 1966 p 76 Dangerfield 1966 pp 73 74 Hofstadter 1948 pp 55 56 Wilentz 2005 pp 205 207 Dangerfield 1966 pp 80 81 85 Remini 1981 p 28 Dangerfield 1966 pp pp 86 89 a b Dangerfield 1966 p 84 Dangerfield 1966 pp 81 83 Dangerfield 1966 p 80 Dangerfield 1966 pp 85 86 Wilentz 2005 pp 207 208 a b Dangerfield 1966 p 89 a b c Hammond 1947 p 151 Remini 1981 p 229 Hofstadter 1948 p 62 Killenbeck 2006 pp 98 109 Hammond 1957 p 371 Schlesinger 1945 p 77 a b Wilentz 2005 p 362 Hammond 1947 pp 151 152 Remini 1981 pp 228 229 303 Hammond 1957 pp 377 378 Hammond 1957 p 379 Hofstadter 1948 pp 59 60 Schlesinger 1945 p 81 Remini 1981 pp 301 302 Remini 1981 pp 341 342 Hammond 1957 p 385 Remini 1981 p 365 Wilentz 2005 p 369 Remini 1981 p 343 a b Schlesinger 1945 p 87 Remini 1981 p 361 Remini 1981 p 374 Schlesinger 1945 p 91 Wellman 1966 p 132 Remini 1981 pp 382 383 389 Remini 1981 pp 375 376 Wilentz 2005 pp 392 393 Schlesinger 1945 p 98 Hofstadter 1948 pp 61 62 Wilentz 2005 p 396 Schlesinger 1945 p 103 Wilentz 2005 p 400 Schlesinger 1945 pp 112 113 Brown 1912 pp 193 199 PhiladelphiaFed 2021 p 7 Hammond 1947 p 140 Wilentz 2005 p 364 Wellman 1966 p 92 Hammond 1957 p 9 Wilentz 2005 pp 74 75 a b Hofstadter 1948 p 56 Hammond 1956 pp 9 10 NRIS 2006 online Gallery 2004 p 35 a b NPS 2017 online NPS 2009 online Independence Hall 2020 online Dickens 1913 p 81 Bibliography editBrown William Horace 1912 The Story of a Bank Browning Andrew H 2019 The Panic of 1819 The First Great Depression University of Missouri ISBN 978 0 8262 2183 4 online review Bodenhorn Howard 2000 A History of Banking in Antebellum America Financial Markets and Economic Development in an Era of Nation Building Campbell Stephen W 2019 The Bank War and the Partisan Press Newspapers Financial Institutions and the Post Office in Jacksonian America Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas OCLC 1066117752 Catterall Ralph C H 1902 The Second Bank of the United States University of Chicago Dangerfield George 1966 The Awakening of American Nationalism 1815 1828 New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 88133 823 2 Dickens Charles 1913 American Notes for General Circulation p 81 Retrieved April 17 2020 via Gutenberg Feller Daniel The Bank War in Julian E Zelizer ed The American Congress 2004 pp 93 111 Gallery John Andrew ed 2004 Philadelphia Architecture A Guide to the City 2nd ed Philadelphia Foundation for Architecture ISBN 0962290815 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Govan Thomas Payne 1959 Nicolas Biddle Nationalist and Public Banker 1786 1844 Chicago University of Chicago Press Hall David A Clarke Matthew St Clair 1832 Legislative and Documentary History of the Bank of the United States Gales and Seaton ISBN 978 1 296 74384 0 Retrieved November 25 2021 Hammond Bray May 1947 Jackson Biddle and the Bank of the United States The Journal of Economic History 7 1 1 23 doi 10 1017 S0022050700053420 JSTOR 2113597 S2CID 155058579 in Essays on Jacksonian America New York Frank Otto Gatell Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc 1970 Hammond Bray 1956 Jackson s Fight with the Money Power American Heritage 8 4 Hammond Bray 1957 Banks and Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War Princeton University Press Hammond Bray 1953 The Second Bank of the United States Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 43 1 80 85 doi 10 2307 1005664 JSTOR 1005664 Hill Andrew T December 4 2015 The First Bank of the United States Federal Reserve History Retrieved November 25 2021 Hofstadter Richard 1948 Great Issues in American History From the Revolution to the Civil War 1765 1865 Historic Philadelphia Tour Second Bank of the United States ushistory org Independence Hall Association Retrieved April 12 2020 Kahan Paul The Bank War Andrew Jackson Nicholas Biddle and the Fight for American Finance Yardley Westholme 2016 xii 187 pp Killenbeck Mark R 2006 M Culloch v Maryland Securing a Nation Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas Knodell Jane Ellen 2017 The Second Bank of the United States Central Banker in an Era of Nation Building 1816 1836 Routledge online review Archived July 17 2018 at the Wayback Machine McGrane Reginald C ed 1919 The Correspondence of Nicholas Biddle McGraw Thomas K 2012 The Founders of Finance How Hamilton Gallatin and Other Immigrants Forged a New Economy Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 315 320 ISBN 978 0 674 06692 2 Meyers Marvin Spring 1953 The Jacksonian Persuasion American Quarterly 5 1 3 15 doi 10 2307 3031286 JSTOR 3031286 in Essays on Jacksonian America New York Frank Otto Gatell Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc 1970 Minicucci Stephen October 2004 Internal Improvements and the Union 1790 1860 Studies in American Political Development Cambridge University Press 18 2 160 185 doi 10 1017 S0898588X04000094 S2CID 144902648 Pennsylvania Blue Marble Second Bank of the United States National Park Service Archived from the original on June 4 2009 NHL nomination for Second Bank of the United States National Park Service Retrieved March 26 2017 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 15 2006 The Second Bank of the United States A Chapter in the History of Central Banking PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia January 2021 Ratner Sidney James H Soltow and Richard Sylla The Evolution of the American Economy Growth Welfare and Decision Making 1993 Remini Robert V 1967 Andrew Jackson and the Bank War A Study in the Growth of Presidential Power New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 09757 3 Remini Robert V 1981 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom 1822 1832 vol II New York Harper amp Row Remini Robert V 1984 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom 1833 1845 vol III New York Harper amp Row Remini Robert V 1993 Henry Clay Statesman for the Union New York W W Norton amp Company Schlesinger Arthur Meier Jr 1945 Age of Jackson Schweikart Larry Banking in the American South from the Age of Jackson to Reconstruction 1987 Taylor George Rogers ed Jackson Versus Biddle The Struggle over the Second Bank of the United States 1949 Temin Peter The Jacksonian Economy 1969 Walters Raymond 1945 The origins of the Second Bank of the United States Journal of Political Economy 53 2 115 131 doi 10 1086 256246 JSTOR 1825049 S2CID 153635866 Wellman Paul I 1966 1984 The House Divides The Age of Jackson and Lincoln New York Doubleday and Company Wilburn Jean Alexander 1967 Biddle s Bank The Crucial Years Wilentz Sean 2005 The Rise of American Democracy Jefferson to Lincoln New York W W Horton and Company External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Second Bank of the United States Second Bank official site at Independence Hall National Historical Park Documents produced by the Second Bank of the United States on FRASER Andrew Jackson on the Web Bank of the United States Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No PA 137 Second Bank of the United States 43 photos 20 measured drawings 2 photo caption pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Bank of the United States amp oldid 1191128003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.