it may, after a careful consideration of the subject,
be, I think, safely stated that at every period of
banking excess it took the lead; that in 1817 and
1818, in 1823, in 1831, and in 1834 its vast expansions,
followed by distressing contractions, led to those
of the State institutions. It swelled and maddened
the tides of the banking system, but seldom allayed
or safely directed them. At a few periods only
was a salutary control exercised, but an eager desire,
on the contrary, exhibited for profit in the first
place; and if afterwards its measures were severe toward
other institutions, it was because its own safety
compelled it to adopt them. It did not differ
from them in principle or in form; its measures emanated
from the same spirit of gain; it felt the same temptation
to overissues; it suffered from and was totally unable
to avert those inevitable laws of trade by which it
was itself affected equally with them; and at least
on one occasion, at an early day, it was saved only
by extraordinary exertions from the same fate that
attended the weakest institution it professed to supervise.
In 1837 it failed equally with others in redeeming
its notes (though the two years allowed by its charter
for that purpose had not expired), a large amount
of which remains to the present time outstanding.
It is true that, having so vast a capital and strengthened
by the use of all the revenues of the Government,
it possessed more power; but while it was itself by
that circumstance freed from the control which all
banks require, its paramount object and inducement
were left the same—to make the most for
its stockholders, not to regulate the currency of the
country. Nor has it, as far as we are advised,
been found to be greatly otherwise elsewhere.
The national character given to the Bank of England
has not prevented excessive fluctuations in their
currency, and it proved unable to keep off a suspension
of specie payments, which lasted for nearly a quarter
of a century. And why should we expect it to be
otherwise? A national institution, though deriving
its charter from a different source than the State
banks, is yet constituted upon the same principles,
is conducted by men equally exposed to temptation,
and is liable to the same disasters, with the additional
disadvantage that its magnitude occasions an extent
of confusion and distress which the mismanagement
of smaller institutions could not produce. It
can scarcely be doubted that the recent suspension
of the United State Bank of Pennsylvania, of which
the effects are felt not in that State alone, but
over half the Union, had its origin in a course of
business commenced while it was a national institution,
and there is no good reason for supposing that the
same consequences would not have followed had it still
derived its powers from the General Government.
It is in vain, when the influences and impulses are
the same, to look for a difference in conduct or results.
By such creations we do, therefore, but increase the