and private credit, a depreciation in the market value
of real and personal estate, and has left large districts
of country almost entirely without any circulating
medium. In view of the fact that in 1830 the whole
bank-note circulation within the United States amounted
to but $61,323,898, according to the Treasury statements,
and that an addition had been made thereto of the
enormous sum of $88,000,000 in seven years (the circulation
on the 1st of January, 1837, being stated at $149,185,890),
aided by the great facilities afforded in obtaining
loans from European capitalists, who were seized with
the same speculative mania which prevailed in the United
States, and the large importations of funds from abroad—the
result of stock sales and loans—no one
can be surprised at the apparent but unsubstantial
state of prosperity which everywhere prevailed over
the land; and as little cause of surprise should be
felt at the present prostration of everything and
the ruin which has befallen so many of our fellow-citizens
in the sudden withdrawal from circulation of so large
an amount of bank issues since 1837—exceeding,
as is believed, the amount added to the paper currency
for a similar period antecedent to 1837—it
ceases to be a matter of astonishment that such extensive
shipwreck should have been made of private fortunes
or that difficulties should exist in meeting their
engagements on the part of the debtor States; apart
from which, if there be taken into account the immense
losses sustained in the dishonor of numerous banks,
it is less a matter of surprise that insolvency should
have visited many of our fellow-citizens than that
so many should have escaped the blighting influences
of the times.
In the solemn conviction of these truths and with
an ardent desire to meet the pressing necessities
of the country, I felt it to be my duty to cause to
be submitted to you at the commencement of your last
session the plan of an exchequer, the whole power
and duty of maintaining which in purity and vigor
was to be exercised by the representatives of the people
and the States, and therefore virtually by the people
themselves. It was proposed to place it under
the control and direction of a Treasury board to consist
of three commissioners, whose duty it should be to
see that the law of its creation was faithfully executed
and that the great end of supplying a paper medium
of exchange at all times convertible into gold and
silver should be attained. The board thus constituted
was given as much permanency as could be imparted
to it without endangering the proper share of responsibility
which should attach to all public agents. In order
to insure all the advantages of a well-matured experience,
the commissioners were to hold their offices for the
respective periods of two, four, and six years, thereby
securing at all times in the management of the exchequer
the services of two men of experience; and to place
them in a condition to exercise perfect independence