[Albert Gallatin by John Austin Stevens]@TWC D-Link bookAlbert Gallatin CHAPTER VI 145/148
Fortunately the sub-treasury plan of Mr.Woodbury supplied the need of a safe place of deposit which, since the refusal of Congress to renew the charter of the old bank, had been sorely felt. In 1838, on the foundation of the Bank of Commerce under the free banking law of the State of New York, the presidency of it was first tendered to Mr.Gallatin.The directors of this bank were among the most distinguished financiers of the city, and its object was to provide a conservative institution with sufficient power and capital to act as a regulator upon the New York banks.
Profit to the stockholders was secondary to the reserve power for general advantage. In June, 1839, Mr.Gallatin resigned his post as president of the National Bank of New York.
In 1841 he published a financial essay, which he entitled "Suggestions on the Banks and Currency of the United States," a paper full of information, but from the nature of the subject not to be compared in general interest with his earlier paper, which is as fresh to-day as when it was written.
Mr.Gallatin condemned paper currency as an artificial stimulus, and the ultimate object of his essays was to annihilate what he termed the "dangerous instrument." He admitted its utility and convenience, when used with great sobriety, but he deprecated its tendency to degenerate into a depreciated and irredeemable currency.
This tendency the present national banking law arrests, but the law rather invites than prohibits the stimulus of increased issues.
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