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CONTEST FOR SOUND MONEY

INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER

OUR laws with reference to paper currency have been largely influenced by the distribution of governmental authority peculiar to the United States, and entirely separate and distinct interests have thereby been brought in antagonism to the adoption of the most desirable currency system.

Nation's

birth.

For eighty-five years after the Declaration of Inde- Economic pendence the United States as a nation was in a forma- problems at tive period. The thirteen colonies had organized a confederacy to resist oppression from abroad, but with insufficient and ill-defined powers, and as soon as they had fought to a successful issue and been recognized as an independent nation, they began to be jealous and distrustful of the powers which must necessarily be given to the general government in order to form a per-. manent nation. Oppressive debt, disorganized business and depreciated currency presented grave economic problems for solution, at a time when the greater and graver problem of creating a government, based upon the consent of the governed, evidenced by popular suffrage, must first be solved, in order that it might in turn bring order, credit and prosperity out of existing chaos. The colonies were held together by the cohesive force of self-preservation in presence of the arms of a powerful and aggressive foe. This pressure once removed, the tendency toward separate action and asser

Local politi

tion of individual interests on the part of the colonies became pronounced.

Tenacious of their liberties, the people were greatly cal jealousy. impressed with possible danger from an arbitrary exercise of power on the part of a central government, and in framing the Constitution, the powers of the several states were subordinated to the national government with halting jealousy and only where deemed indispensable. The Nation was thus started with a dual sovereignty. The citizens owed allegiance to the states in which they lived as well as to the Nation, and the respects in which each was paramount were as to many questions left in the realm of debate. Seven of the original thirteen states accompanied their ratification of the Constitution with proposed amendments, and many states seemed to regard its obligations lightly. Withdrawal from the Union was freely discussed as an alternative and by no means impossible remedy for unsatisfactory treatment.

The

doctrine.

In 1798, Kentucky, roused by its opposition to the State Rights alien and sedition laws passed by Congress, adopted resolutions, among other things, reciting that the government was created by a compact among the states and

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was not made the exclusive or final judge of the extent of the powers delegated to itself, but that, as in all other cases of compact among powers having no common judge, each party has an equal right to judge for itself as well of infraction as of the mode and measure of redress." Virginia passed similar resolutions in 1799. In other states similar doctrines were at times proclaimed.

If the House of Representatives, the Senate, and the President concur as to an act of legislation, it becomes a law. If any question as to its constitutionality arises, the theory of the Constitution is that such question is to

be determined by the Supreme Court, thus making four separate parties whose concurrence is necessary before a law becomes final and binding beyond question. The Kentucky resolutions sought to introduce a fifth party and assert that each state as a party to the compact of federation may determine for itself the limitation of power which the general government possesses.

This doctrine, in all its refinement, culminated in the Nullification, nullification ordinance adopted by South Carolina in No- 1832. vember, 1832, in which it declared the United States tariff law "null and void, and no law, nor binding on this state, its officers, or citizens," and no duties were to be paid in that state and no appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States was to be permitted. The energetic determination of President Jackson to enforce the law, coupled with the "Clay Compromise," a modification of some of the law's most objectionable provisions, deferred but did not settle the constitutional issues involved.

The status of slavery in the Constitution was the Influence of occasion of prolonged controversy; and as finally set- slavery. tled, the importation of slaves could not be prohibited for twenty years, and three-fifths of the slave population was to be counted in determining the basis of representation of the several states in Congress and in the Electoral College. Each state was given two senators, and representatives were apportioned according to population. The number of votes to which each state is entitled in the Electoral College, which chooses the President and Vice-president, is equal to its congressional representation, that is, its senators and representatives combined. Allowing three-fifths of the slave population, while not enjoying the suffrage, to be counted in determining the representative population, gave to the white population of the slave-holding states a preponderating influence in national affairs which was

Missouri Compromise.

Narrow construction of Constitution.

bound to provoke controversy. In laying the foundation of the Nation, the framers of the Constitution also laid the foundation of an irrepressible conflict, and the opposition to slavery which found expression in the constitutional debates was continued with growing intensity, but as a moral rather than political question. Its abolition in the northern states, owing very largely to climatic conditions, as well as for ethical reasons, made the question of slavery a sectional one.

The first pronounced conflict arose over the admission of Missouri as a state in 1818-1819. It was admitted in 1821 as a slave state, after the "Missouri Compromise" (Act of March 2, 1820) had provided that slavery should forever be excluded from all territory west of Missouri and north of 36° 30' north latitude (the southern boundary of the state). In 1846 the "Wilmot Proviso," an amendment to an act appropriating money with which to purchase territory from the government of Mexico, proposed to exclude slavery and involuntary servitude forever from all territory so acquired. It was adopted by the House, but later reconsidered and defeated. This episode marked the formation of a political party, whose avowed and direct purpose was to prevent the extension of slavery in the territories of the United States. Their propaganda was followed by a powerful and continuous onslaught upon the institution of slavery upon moral and religious grounds, and created a strong sentiment in favor of its abolition, which ultimately became effective.

Slavery, involving enormous property interests, depended for protection upon the several state governments, and this fact all along gave to the doctrine of state rights and "state sovereignty" its principal element of strength. The power given the general government under the Constitution was rigidly construed,

circumscribed within the narrowest limits, and any attempt at liberal construction or enlargement with reference to any subject was tenaciously fought by the champions of state rights. All efforts by the general government to regulate banking and currency, encountered this opposition in all its virulence as well as that of the state bank interests.

tion and

The preservation of the Union is traceable to the fact Nationalizathat the National or Federal party controlled the coun- prosperity. cils of government during its earlier years. In this connection too much praise cannot be bestowed upon the genius and statesmanship of Hamilton, the judicial wisdom and statesmanship of Marshall. It will appear in the following history that whenever national sentiment and national influence have moulded legislation and controlled the general government, enhanced prosperity ensued; witness the periods of the first and second United States banks and that of the national banking system. Whenever the disintegrating influence involved in the doctrine of "state sovereignty" has been paramount, adverse conditions have prevailed; witness the period following the expiration of the charter of the first United States Bank (1811) until the second bank was well under way, and the period between the expiration of the charter of the second bank (1836) and the creation of the national banking system (1863). The right of secession and the doctrine of state Nationalism triumphs. sovereignty as it had been proclaimed, as well as slavery itself, were buried and the permanency of the Union, the paramountcy of the general government, proclaimed as the verdict of the Civil War (1861-1865). Spurred by "military necessity" and against its declared conviction as to its constitutional power, Congress asserted in 1862 the national sovereignty with reference to the currency question by issuing legal

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