from us; Pioche, Bayerque & Co. were already established
on another corner of Jackson Street, and the new Metropolitan
Theatre was in progress diagonally opposite us.
During the whole of 1854 our business steadily grew,
our average deposits going up to half a million, and
our sales of exchange and consequent shipment of bullion
averaging two hundred thousand dollars per steamer.
I signed all bills of exchange, and insisted on Nisbet
consulting me on loans and discounts. Spite of
every caution, however, we lost occasionally by bad
loans, and worse by the steady depreciation of real
estate. The city of San Francisco was then extending
her streets, sewering them, and planking them, with
three-inch lumber. In payment for the lumber
and the work of contractors, the city authorities
paid scrip in even sums of one hundred, five hundred,
one thousand, and five thousand dollars. These
formed a favorite collateral for loans at from fifty
to sixty cents on the dollar, and no one doubted their
ultimate value, either by redemption or by being converted
into city bonds. The notes also of H. Meiggs,
Neeley Thompson & Co., etc., lumber-dealers,
were favorite notes, for they paid their interest
promptly, and lodged large margins of these street-improvement
warrants as collateral. At that time, Meiggs
was a prominent man, lived in style in a large house
on Broadway, was a member of the City Council, and
owned large saw-mills up the coast about Mendocino.
In him Nisbet had unbounded faith, but, for some
reason, I feared or mistrusted him, and remember that
I cautioned Nisbet not to extend his credit, but to
gradually contract his loans. On looking over
our bills receivable, then about six hundred thousand
dollars, I found Meiggs, as principal or indorser,
owed us about eighty thousand dollars—all,
however, secured by city warrants; still, he kept
bank accounts elsewhere, and was generally a borrower.
I instructed Nisbet to insist on his reducing his
line as the notes matured, and, as he found it indelicate
to speak to Meiggs, I instructed him to refer him to
me; accordingly, when, on the next steamer-day, Meiggs
appealed at the counter for a draft on Philadelphia,
of about twenty thousand dollars, for which he offered
his note and collateral, he was referred to me, and
I explained to him that our draft was the same as
money; that he could have it for cash, but that we
were already in advance to him some seventy-five or
eighty thousand dollars, and that instead of increasing
the amount I must insist on its reduction. He
inquired if I mistrusted his ability, etc.
I explained, certainly not, but that our duty was
to assist those who did all their business with us,
and, as our means were necessarily limited, I must
restrict him to some reasonable sum, say, twenty-five
thousand dollars. Meiggs invited me to go with
him to a rich mercantile house on Clay Street, whose
partners belonged in Hamburg, and there, in the presence
of the principals of the house, he demonstrated, as