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There have been several notable "wars," or struggles, having to
do with silver as money; gold versus silver as money (bimetallism versus
monometallism); precious metals in general versus full fiat paper systems;
and silver users versus silver miners and silver owners. The kind of silver
war we will research is the usual type, having to do with financial and
political subversion such as, unfortunately, we have not seen an end to.
Before we look at the critically important silver war that transpired from
about 1870 through 1895, we'll read of a different kind of silver war, the
sort fought by more basic methods---killing and death. In the article,
"Silver Mining In Spain," which appeared in Merchants Magazine
& Commercial Review, New York, March 1853, pages 381-382, we read---
"Spain was for a great length of time considered richer in silver
than any other country in the world. The Phoenicians found so much silver
there, that their ships could not bring it all away, so that they even made
their anchors of that metal. The Carthagenians brought great quantities from
thence. Under Hannibal, the silver mines of Andalusia were worked in a
scientific manner, and out of the same he defrayed the expenses of the war
which he made at that time against the Romans. Long after the Romans had
taken possession of the land and mines, the old workings were called
Hannibal's Shafts. Cato deposited in one year, 25,000 pounds of silver in the
Roman treasury. In the first nine years after the Romans, in the second Punic
war, had driven the Carthagenians out of Spain, 111,542 pounds of silver were
taken to Rome. In the time of the Romans, the greatest quantity of silver was
found in Andalusia by Hipo and Lisapon. The silver mines by Carthagena were,
according to Polybius, the most extensive in Spain; the Romans employed
40,000 people at this place daily. But the silver mines of Spain, in earlier
times, were not confined alone to the Sierra Morena; silver was also found in
the middle and southern provinces, in the mountains of Toledo, Granada, and
Asturia. Concerning the mines worked by the Goths and Saracens, after the
time of the Romans, nothing is known. In the year 1571, the old Carthagenian
silver mine at Guadalcanal on the borders of the provinces Sevila and
Cordova, was reopened by the Earl Fugger, who took it on lease for 36 years,
and it produced so much silver that a royalty of one-fifth amounted in some
years, to more than a million and a half dollars. As the lease expired, this
mine was again abandoned, and is said to have purposely laid under water.
Since then, all efforts to unwater it have proved fruitless."
Silver has been the object of many struggles across the ages. Those 40,000
Roman employees spoken of above were undoubtedly slaves. The Spanish colonial
empire in the New World had acquisition of silver and gold high atop its
priorities. The Conquistadors wrested fantastic wealth from the Peruvian
Incas and Mexican Aztecs. Sir Francis Drake, as a British privateer, seized
Spanish treasure galleons crossing the Atlantic en route to Spain. Fed up
with another thief relieving them of what they stole, Spain sent its mighty
naval Armada to attack England in 1588. The English defeated the greater
force by means of smaller, faster, more maneuverable boats that moved among
the Spanish fleet, setting fire to the vessels. That was one of the great
battles that altered the course of history, giving partial rise to the
expression "Britannia Rules The Waves;" and that great battle was
fought, in part, over silver.
When those seeking power use openly violent methods to gain what they
crave, their means and motives are on display for all to see. I submit,
however, that the more dangerous seekers of power resort to subterfuge,
political subversion, distraction, false issues, and the use of disclaimers
to advance the actual purpose. The craftiest power seekers hold meetings in
secret, far out of public view, and they send emissaries to consort with
selected members of legislative bodies, who then in turn enact laws giving
abusive interests cart-blanche to fleece the great masses of working people.
They sponsor economists in universities to teach economic theories that
reinforce their currency monopolies. They install editors and reporters in
major media who censor items deemed against their interests.
We will now consider some information, which exists in the open public
record, concerning silver during the approximate period, 1870-1895. We will
see that the old Bank of the United States, the War of 1812, and the struggle
between President Andrew Jackson and Daniel Webster, against predatory
banking interests emanating from London, was not the end of the British
Empire attempts to weaken America. Before we proceed, be warned there is some
length involved. If you lack the stamina for the education being offered, I
suggest you scroll all the way down past the final graphic image, and read
the brief closing section concerning the Silver Surprises. It contains one
explosive suggestion, legal of course, that to my knowledge has never been
done before; it's an idea whose time has come!
Great Britain had been on a monometallic gold standard since 1816 (some
sources state 1819). This is the same nation that has been the greatest
colonial power in history. If you lose dominance militarily, having control
financially might be even better. We will consider details pertaining to the
"Crime of '73," in which the American Congress demonetized silver,
except for transactions up to $5, and in so doing impoverished millions of
Americans. They lost their farms and became tenants. President Grant signed
the bill into law on February 12, 1873. There was a tide of silver
demonetization gaining force at this time. The German military defeat of
France in 1871 contributed to silver being demonetized. Without going into
complex genealogies, certain trans-national marriages and relationships
linked to London powers played their role of influence; as indeed they do in
2004. Nothing has changed, as long range plans are handed down through
generations. In order to assist us in understanding what was taking place in
silver during 1870-1895, we will evaluate some excerpts from articles on the
subject. First we will consider statements made by representatives of
elitists, and by one notable elitist himself, who were opposed to silver
money, and the real reasons why!
THE FORCES OF GREED SPEAK!
The North American Review for June 1885, pages 485 through 489, ran an
editorial by Yale professor and so-called "social Darwinist"
William Graham Sumner (1840-1910)---see image following---
Consider some of Sumner's remarks about silver---
"The people of the United States never have used silver as a
circulating medium, and they have shown that they do not want to use it
unless at such a ratio to the old standard of value that the debtors of the
moment can win a percentage on their contracts. In 1873 the dollars were
demonetized, never having existed as a circulating medium. Neither the United
States nor any other country ever had a concurrent circulation of the two
metals. Such a thing is as impossible as perpetual motion, and it makes no
difference how large the coinage union may be that tries to enact it."
Do you find any errors of fact in his statements? Geez---silver has never
been used as circulating medium in this country? Kind of like saying, nobody
ever ate breakfast here. Sumner spoke of debtors wanting to use silver to
advantage to pay down obligations. When silver was demonetized at the behest
of foreign interests acting in concert with our domestic robber barons, it
caused severe financial damage to common people. Some of these robber barons
no doubt were among the trustees of Yale University at the time, and in
gratitude for giving him a secure job, Sumner belched out his views against
silver. He alleged that America never saw simultaneous use of gold and silver
coins. Bizarre how anyone would be so lunatic as to make such a claim, yet it
was probably true---in Sumner's outhouse! Let's hear from oddball professor
Sumner again---
"The Persians advanced from silver to gold when the extent of their
commerce made the latter more convenient. The Greeks did the same. The Romans
went from copper to silver, and from silver to gold, as the same expansion
took place. In the Middle Ages, as the trade and industry of Europe shrank,
gold went out of use, and in Charlemagne's time silver was readopted. Within
a century or two there has been another reversion to gold on the part of the
leading nations, and in the order of their industrial rank. Our law of 1873
would have given us as good a monetary system as any nation now has, but in
1878 the silver dollar was arbitrarily restored. There never was any call for
the silver dollar. The people have plainly shown that they do not want silver
as a circulating medium. Silver is not wanted today as a circulating medium
by any civilized nation."
I find no evidence to sustain his claim that ancient nations abandoned
silver, but rather that, at times, silver was more or less important than
gold. Always those at the summit of the financial world seek to impoverish
the common man by manipulating his means of buying and selling, his medium of
exchange. Silver cannot be made de facto worthless, because of any law or
edit originating from elites. Sumner spoke of the Bland-Allison act of 1878,
resuming coinage of the silver dollar, then known as the Morgan series.
According to Sumner, no one wanted silver dollars. If that were the case,
there would have been no Bland-Allison Act in 1878. It came in response to
hardships and severe miseries inflicted upon the American people in the wake
of the silver demonetization of 1873. These were people struggling to muster
some semblance of recovery in the aftermath of a truly devastating Civil War,
and there is abundant evidence to indicate that the same London financial
powers behind silver demonetization in 1873 were also behind the Civil War.
Sumner said nobody wanted silver, and no "civilized" nation (banker
run nation) wanted silver as circulating medium of exchange. So, his view of
India (that is to say, of British exploited India) would evidently have been,
that this was not a civilized nation because the locals used silver as money.
Then there was China and its silver money. Continuing, Sumner stated---
"The Bland bill, so far as it perpetuates another and continued
interference with the world's market for silver, prolongs and intensifies the
mischief. The fact that no nation, except the United States, is willing to
use silver, is the plainest proof that the fall in silver is not accidental,
nor due to anybody's whim, but due to economic forces of unmistakable
direction and scope. The movement against silver as a circulating medium is
one that cannot be reversed, but must go on until it develops into a new
order of things. The cheapening of silver would be a favorable event."
We will consider remarks from Richard Bland, Democrat Congressman from
Missouri, later. The fact is that professor Sumner and his sponsors were
against the common man having and using silver as money, since most common
men owned little or no gold, the silver demonetization concealed in the
Coinage Act of 1873 was intended to make average people poorer, which it did.
The "economic forces of unmistakable direction and scope" of which
Sumner spoke was a veiled reference to the North American robber barons and
bankers in collusion with London interests, acting to impoverish most
Americans by dealing a blow against silver. Concluding, Sumner ranted---
"But it is most of all on account of the mischievous effects that
would be produced, that the use of silver would be a calamity. We do not want
or need silver as a circulating medium."
Remember how Charles Darwin spoke of "survival of the fittest"
in nature, apparently Sumner's being a "social Darwinist" justified
in his reasoning, the financial crushing of the middle class by a small group
of ultra-powerful financiers, by demonetizing the only money most people had.
Let's hear now from the next rogue.
SILVER PROPAGANDA MACHINE, 1889-1895
In The New Englander & Yale Review, December 1889, page 444, article
by George A. Butler, president of Tradesmen's Bank, New Haven Connecticut,
entitled, "Danger of Silver Coinage," page 445, we read---
"Silver is inferior for monetary purposes. To continue to coin it in
large quantities cannot be a wise measure."
Interesting how the bankers had such a bellyache against silver. Another
spokesman for the bankers was Frank W. Taussig (1859-1940), a Harvard
University economics professor who served as chairman of the United States
Tariff Commission, 1899 through 1919. In The Forum magazine, October 1890,
pages 165 through 173, article titled, "The Working Of The New Silver
Act," he said---
"The present act makes no important change from the provisions of the
Bland act of 1878, except in the amount of silver currency to be issued.
Instead of silver dollars and silver certificates we are to have treasury
notes, redeemable at the government's option in gold or silver coin, which
notes are made legal tender for debts. Under the act of 1878 the silver
dollars were a legal tender, and the silver certificates were practically so.
Both were redeemable either in gold or silver; directly of course in silver,
and indirectly, but nonetheless effectually, in gold. This indirect
redemption arose because the government was always willing to accept the
certificates and dollars freely in payment of all public dues; while on the
other hand, it was always willing and able to pay each one of its creditors
gold, if he wanted it. The effect was to keep the silver currency always
equal in value to gold, and the new legislation does no more than to simplify
matters by making the treasury notes redeemable in gold or silver coin
directly. It is safe to say---even without the express declaration wedged
into the act, that "the established policy of the United States to
maintain the two metals on parity on the present legal ratio"---that
every administration, in the future as in the past, will wish to keep the
notes equal to gold, and will redeem them in gold whenever that metal is
demanded. The only important change, therefore, from the act of 1878, is as
to amount. In both measures the annual increment of new silver currency is
determined depending on the price of silver bullion. The outcome under the
old act was an annual issue of about thirty millions of dollars; under the
new one it will be between fifty and sixty millions---for several years
probably nearer sixty millions than fifty." (Reads okay up till this
point, watch the change in tone.)
"Upon passage of the silver act of 1878, the banks, and more
especially the banks of New York City, which give the tone to the banking
operations of the country at large, "boycotted" the silver
currency. They did not refuse to accept it in payment or on deposit, but they
refused to use it as a reserve against their outstanding deposit obligations,
and tacitly agreed not to use it in settlement of balances between each other
at the clearinghouses. Any amounts which came into their hands and which did
not immediately flow out in the process of cashing checks, were quietly
turned in to the government treasury in payment of public dues. Consequently,
the silver issues exercised no effect on that bank currency of checks and
deposits whose importance I have tried to bring out. The notes of the
national banks have filled the same place in our currency as the silver
issues. In the end, the treasury will have to pay out the (silver) notes. Then
we shall have a forced issue of new currency, and a period of inflation, with
all its intoxicating and demoralizing effects. It carries us at least very
close to the verge of danger."
Notice the New York banks boycotted silver dollars, since the financial
community, acting as a monolithic force in cahoots with London interests, was
intent on de-emphasizing silver money. Silver as money creates inflation;
silver is demoralizing; silver takes us to the verge of danger! So spoke the
shill for financial tycoons whose identities we shall consider in due course.
In "History of the Great American Fortunes" by Gustavus Myers
(1907), pages 578-579 we find---
"In 1894 the Government had been drawn into handing over two bond
issues of $50,000,000 each to these bankers. Their profits, it is estimated,
reached tens of millions. With the advent of the year 1895 the United States
Treasury was again emptied of gold. Where had the gold, which the Government
had purchased only a short time previously at usurious rates, gone? The
reports of the large banks gave the answer. Banks in New York City had in
their vaults a hoard of $129,000,000 in gold. The Government shrieked in
helplessness; President Cleveland was reported as saying privately that
"the banks have got the country by the throat." At the appropriate
moment a syndicate of bankers appeared in the open and magnanimously offered
to supply gold to the Government in exchange for bonds. This syndicate was
composed of J.P. Morgan & Company, August Belmont & Company, representing
the Rothschilds, the National City Bank and other extremely powerful
banks."
One of those other "extremely powerful" banks was Chase National
Bank, in which oil mega-pirate John D. Rockefeller was leading shareholder.
President Cleveland made a show of opposing these financiers, however. Myers
observed that Francis Stetson, J.P. Morgan's leading attorney, was "a
frequent and confidential caller at the White House." This was the same
President Cleveland who called a special session of Congress in 1893 to
repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890, which supplanted the
Bland-Allison Act of 1878. We will learn items concerning John Sherman as we
continue, which will illustrate that his loyalties were actually with the
manipulative financiers.
Above, we see image of Grover Cleveland, elected New York Governor in 1882
with the backing of the robber-baron financiers. Cleveland became President,
1885-1889 and packed his cabinet with financiers and fellow travelers; and
again, when re-elected to the Presidency, 1893-1897. The New York Times, page
1, June 25, 1908, presented a long list of condolence-givers upon Cleveland's
passing, including the super-notorious British agent Andrew Carnegie, Herbert
Satterlee, J.P. Morgan's son-in law, and another dangerous British agent,
Nicholas Murray Butler, for thirty years President of Columbia University.
Historian William Manchester quoted Butler as saying---
"Totalitarian regimes brought forth men of far greater intelligence,
far stronger character, and far more courage than the system of
elections."
("The Glory And The Dream," pages 67-68, 1974). In "Who Was
Who In America, 1897-1942," page 231, we find---
"In 1896 the Democratic Party having declared for the free coinage of
silver in the platform of its National Convention, Mr. Cleveland withheld his
support from the ticket and endorsement."
(Recall the famous "Cross of Gold" speech by Democratic
Presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan). After that, Grover Cleveland
was made a trustee of the Equitable Life Assurance Society, of which Jacob
Schiff (watch for him below) was a trustee, as well as Edward Harriman
(railroads and banking); George Gould, whose father, Jay Gould, was a central
figure in the "Black Friday" gold panic of September 24, 1869;
August Belmont, a Rothschild family agent in the North during the War Between
the States; John Astor, of the family long the wealthiest in the United
States, being supreme British agents, now residing mainly in England; one
time New York governor Levi P. Morton, vice president of the U.S., 1888-1892,
a beneficiary of the $44 million Credit Mobilier swindle beginning in 1867;
and Alfred G. Vanderbilt, son of Cornelius Vanderbilt, railroad magnate.
Apparently the Vanderbilts held an interest in Eastman Kodak (Silver Users
Association), as William S. Vaughn, who became chairman of Kodak in 1967, was
president of the board of trustees of Vanderbilt University. The financial
and industrial trail of subversion against the use of silver as money, and
the commodity price of silver, is incredibly intricate. Ferdinand Lundberg in
"America's 60 Families," 1937, page 59) said Levi Morton was
"long entangled in many shady deals."
A mutual acquaintance of Grover Cleveland and Andrew Carnegie, Edward
Atkinson, went on record in The Forum, October 1891, pages 215 through 227 as
opposing silver money. Atkinson's article was titled, "Real Meaning Of
The Free Coinage Agitation," Atkinson started out sounding right on, then
went bad---
"In order to discriminate between bad money and good money, it is
necessary to separate in distinct terms the function of the government in
making provision as to what kind of money shall be a legal tender for the
payment of debts. When a government attempts to make bad money a legal
tender, it perpetrates the worst fraud that can be inflicted upon a trusting
people. It matters not whether the money consists of discredited paper or of
discredited coin. In either case it is beyond the power of a government to
maintain any kind of bad money in circulation to which the people refuse to
give credit, whether paper or coin. If the quality of the coined money be
kept at the highest standard, its credit will be established. If the quality
of the money is not maintained, the credit of the money itself cannot be
maintained, no matter how many acts of legal tender or attempts to force its
circulation may be made. It lies with the community which makes use of the
money, and not with Congress, to determine whether money is good or
bad."
"Although the writer has put the question to many men learned in law,
he has been unable to get a reply to the question, "In what country, at
what time, and under what circumstances did the first conception of legal
tender arise?" May it not be held that no such conception could have
entered the minds of men controlling the government of a country, except in
contemplation of a fraud upon their own people? Must not the very conception
of a forced circulation of any kind of money under an act of legal tender
have been born in fraud and nursed in corruption? The silver dollar is
discredited in the markets of the world, and the government of the United
States is powerless to remove that discredit."
The anti-silver crowd of 1873 through 1895 would have been shocked had
they foreseen that future actions would be taken to demonetize gold also and
flood the world with diseased, unbacked paper! After the California gold rush
that peaked in 1849, paper money was originally ILLEGAL in California, because
it was remembered that the old Continental paper notes issued by the federal
government during the Revolutionary War, became worthless, and that many
banks failed. It was, however, the same elite, which changed course during
the 20th century in its manipulations to impoverish everyone else. Let's hear
from a member of that elite, Jacob Schiff, a New York financier. In an
article titled, "Should The Silver Law Of 1890 Be Repealed?" which
appeared in The Forum, December 1891, page 472 through 476, we note two
items---
"The Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York at its October
meeting passed this resolution---
"In the opinion of the Chamber of Commerce, the existing law
compelling the purchase by the government of 4,500,000 ounces of silver per
month is against the public welfare, and should be repealed."
This same organization continued to burp out pronouncements against silver
over the years, representing as it did the interests of silver using concerns
and also being interlocked with the miserable paper money crowd. Towards the
close of his article, Jacob Schiff observed---
"Unfortunately it is more than doubtful whether a majority of our
people are at this time prepared to grant new privileges to the banks; but
those in whose power it lies, and whose duty it is to educate public opinion,
should first direct their energies to the economic education of our people,
until the unjustified hostility to the banks, for which no good motive
exists, shall cease, rather than suggest measures which, even were they
attainable, would be fraught with danger, and might cause disaster. For the
present, and until a safe and satisfactory substitute can be found for our
fast-disappearing bank-note circulation, a repeal in toto of the silver
legislation of 1890 does not appear desirable, though its modification is
imperative."
Schiff wanted "new privileges" for the banks (expanded powers to
loot the public) and called for "economic education"
(propagandization) aimed at the public so they'd let go of their
"unjustified hostility" (resentment at being whip-sawed, cheated
and fleeced), and suggested that if the bankers didn't get their way
entirely, disaster could follow. J.P. Morgan and other money magnates
engineered the Panic of 1893, probably with input from Schiff, and the Silver
Purchase Act of 1890 was repealed. Schiff's son in law was Felix Warburg,
brother of Paul Warburg, acknowledged as mastermind of the Federal Reserve
Act! As Schiff said, the big banks wanted "new privileges," and got
them, after engineering the Panic of 1907. Paul Warburg's son James told the
U.S. Senate on February 17, 1950 (Congressional Record)---
"We shall have world government whether or not you like it---conquest
or consent."
No wonder, in speaking of Jacob Schiff, Gustavus Myers in "History of
the Great American Fortunes" (page 611) has a paragraph about Schiff
titled, "Dark Days For Respectability." In "International Year
Book & Statesmen's Who's Who" (Burke's Peerage, London, 1969) we
find on page 881 that James Warburg was a member of President Roosevelt's
"brain trust;" that he was financial advisor to the U.S. delegation
to the World Economic Conference in London, 1933; that he was director of the
Bank of Manhattan and president of the International Acceptance Bank; and that
he was deputy director of the Office of War Information during World War II.
The same people who manipulated silver in 1873 and after, and gold in
1933, are still on the scene. The Warburg curse on people's money
continues---Texas Senator Phil Gramm, who helped Enron before the fraud was
revealed, is now with UBSWarburg (his wife Wendy chaired the CFTC during
silver leasing years and took no action against any COMEX silver fraud).
These dynastic family names are associated over the centuries, with
destroying middle class wealth (UBS Warburg and Phil Gramm have apparently
caused losses to the City of New Orleans in an amount threatening to exceed
$200 million, by a bond scheme connected to firefighters pensions linked to a
portfolio of risky investments---January 28, 2004 Fort Worth Texas Star
Telegram, page 14-B). Schiff was among the financial backers, with J.P.
Morgan and the Harkness family (Standard Oil) of the League to Enforce Peace,
which, according to Ferdinand Lundberg in "America's 60 Families"
(1937, page 265) was founded to---
"…carry on a systematic press campaign for drawing the United States
into the war."
Below, consider image of Jacob Schiff---
To return to the period after repeal of the Silver Purchase Act of 1893,
however, we note that in 1895 the U.S. Government was on the brink of another
gold crisis, and guess who stepped in, to offer a solution (to the problem
they jointly caused)? None other than J.P. Morgan and N.M. Rothschild &
Sons, London ("The Incredible Pierpont Morgan" by Cass Canfield,
1974, page 83). The Warburgs became powers in the Bank of Manhattan, which
merged in 1955 with Rockefeller's Chase National Bank, to form Chase
Manhattan Bank. This has since merged to become JPMorgan-Chase, now a $1.1
trillion institution with the recent acquisition of Bank One. Eventually we
shall see the rise of gold and silver to embarrass those bloated paper
assets. Another example of a voice against silver at that time was Professor
Hermann Von Holst of the Rockefeller sponsored University of Chicago. In the
Review of Reviews, September 1893, pages 281-282, Von Holst said silver
advocates were "maniacs," and said---
"If in any manner and to any extent whatever the silver craze is to
be retained as the basis of our policy, the catastrophe is inevitable."
Meaning, unless America took a path against silver money, the financiers
would crack down on us! If it occurs to the reader that certain aspects
haven't been dealt with---patience---these will come out as you read on.
Let's hear from some of the good guys on the subject of silver money, 1873
through the early 1890's. Incredibly, some of them were allowed to voice
opinion in establishment-oriented periodicals. Be assured this would not be
the case today.
HONEST TALK ON SILVER MONEY!
We will consider some examples of more honest talk on silver in those
times, 1885 through 1891, but rather than place these in exact chronological
order, we will consider them on the basis of starting with what seems to be
important, then progressing to the more important, commentaries. Most of
these speak for themselves. The Forum, November 1886, featured an article
titled, "The Restoration of Silver" by Richard P. Bland, pages 243
through 249. He was author of the Bland Act, amended by Senator Allison as
the Bland-Allison Act of 1878, resuming coinage of the silver dollar. Bland
(1835-1899) was a Missouri Democrat who had some silver interests in Nevada,
as he also served as treasurer of Carson County from 1860 through 1865. Consider
portions of this good article---
"The occasion does not call for an extended review of the
considerations which induced the governments of Western Europe and the United
States to decree the demonetization of silver and the establishment of a
single gold standard; nor need we here inquire into the motives that actuated
the parties conspiring to accomplish this disastrous monetary revolution. It
may be said, however, that the main argument for it was to unify the coinage
system of the commercial world. This was claimed to be feasible only upon the
adoption of one of the metals as the sole standard of value among the
nations. Such was the view advocated at the monetary conference held at Paris
in 1867, at which Mr. Ruggles was the delegate representing the United
States. The states of the Latin Union, Great Britain, Germany, and the United
States were represented, and resolutions were passed recommending to the
governments of these countries the adoption of the gold standard. Great
Britain was already on the gold standard. Her example was followed by Germany
in 1870, and by the United States in 1873. France and other states of the
Latin Union, in 1874, suspended silver coinage. All this seems to have been
the result of the conspiracy entered into at Paris in 1867. We will not here
inquire into motives, nor undertake to divine what may have been the hidden
but controlling aim of this conspiracy."
"In stating results, however, it cannot be denied that all bonds,
mortgages, and other debts contracted to be paid in money based upon both
gold and silver, were necessarily enhanced in value; for the demonetization
of silver left nothing but gold as the medium of payment. All creditors were
enriched by the change, while the burdens of the debtors were made heavier.
The demonetization of silver has affected prices everywhere. Gold, being the
sole standard of value, must constantly rise in consequence of the increased
demand for it."
"Evidently the gold standard proclaimed by the Paris conference of
1867 has proven a disastrous failure. It has brought all countries which have
adopted it to the verge of civil war. The distress of the common people in
this and the other countries has resulted in mobs, labor strikes, and
mutterings of the people against the powers of government, and has alarmed
and aroused the most patriotic men to ponder the subject and discuss means of
relief. Relief will come only when lawmakers heed the voice of the people,
who demand the restoration of silver to its ancient status as a standard of money."
"Our currency system must be, in the near future---indeed, it is
now---the subject most urgently requiring readjustment by Congress. The
people almost unanimously demand that all surplus revenues of the government
shall be paid out in extinguishments of the interest bearing debt. Silver
coinage, under the Act of February 28, 1878, provides for the purchase and
coinage, monthly, of not less than $2,000,000 nor more than $4,000,000 worth
of silver bullion. This law, as it is now executed, is wholly inadequate to
supply the place of retired national bank notes. Were the law executed by
coining the maximum amount authorized to be coined, it might have the effect
of steadying prices and preventing a general collapse of the business
interests of the country."
"But the true solution of the gold and silver question is to give
free and unlimited coinage to both at our mints, and to issue coin-notes on
the deposit of gold and silver coin or bullion; these notes to be redeemed on
demand in standard gold or silver coin, at the option of the government.
These notes would go into general circulation, would do away with all
distinction between gold and silver, and would stand at par with either metal
the world over. They should be made a legal tender, just as gold certificates
are today. Nor can it be validly objected that by this coinage system we
should gain more of the two metals than is necessary so to maintain prices as
to promote a general revival of business. Indeed, the difficulty would be to
secure the amount of metals needed to supply the great demand for money. A
system of paper money based upon coin, dollar for dollar, cannot be inflated;
it is absolutely safe, and would inspire confidence in its stability. This
should be the first step taken by Congress, in whatever readjustment of the
currency question may be attempted. There is no doubt but that the silver
question must be finally considered. We cannot afford to wait the action of
other governments, but must mark out a financial road of our own."
Note especially that Bland called the silver demonetization of 1873 a
"conspiracy." Frequently those who propound any notion of
conspiracies as being the major cause of large-scale adverse events are
ridiculed. Indeed, ridiculing the concept of conspiracies is an informal
sport. This stupid mentality allows conspiracies to prevail, where otherwise
they would not. What would you have done to your Congressman or Senator when
he came home from voting to demonetize silver in February 1873, when you had
all or most of your savings and money in silver, and he cast his vote at the
behest of a cutthroat English economist spreading around bribe money--- sent
by the Governors of the Bank of England, to financially throttle the American
people, just as you were attempting to recover from the catastrophe of the
Civil War, which was also favored by those same London interests? However, as
we will discover, many on Capitol Hill weren't even aware of the
demonetization clause!
ANOTHER HONEST VOICE ON SILVER!
In The Chautauquan (Meadville, Pennsylvania), November 1890, Thomas H.
Hamilton commented (pages 180-184)---
"The new law, under which the United States Treasury is buying
4,500,000 ounces of silver per month and paying for it with legal tender
notes, is exerting a tremendous influence upon the markets of the world. The
sharp advance in the price of silver makes the value of the bullion in our
dollar today worth 91 cents, whereas two years ago when silver was at its
lowest the bullion value of the dollar was only 70.5 cents. The rise while
affecting trade everywhere, has had a particularly marked effect upon the
trade between Great Britain and India. The latter country having only a
silver currency, was placed at a great disadvantage by the low price of that
metal."
"The lower silver fell in the London market, the greater the number
of rupees it took to purchase a gold sovereign; and all the taxes, debts, and
obligations of India to Great Britain are payable in sovereigns, that is to
say in gold. As the British importer pays for the wheat, cotton, and other
products of India in silver, it is obvious that the greater number of rupees
he could get in exchange for a sovereign, the less those products would cost
him. And this is where the phenomenal depression of silver pinched the cotton
planters of the South and the wheat growers of the West who sent their
products abroad in competition with those of India. Our new law had been in
operation only ten days when the Bombay Chamber of Commerce held a meeting to
consider the changes it had already wrought in the conditions of trade. Every
cabinet in Europe is discussing our new departure."
"The production of gold in California following its discovery in
1848, led many to think that the world would be flooded with that metal.
French statesmen advocated the demonetization of gold, and in 1857 it was
actually demonetized by the German states. France was restrained from
discarding gold only by the influence of England, which had adopted the
single gold standard as early as 1819, and clung to it. Fears of a flood of
gold were groundless. Again, twenty years later, the output of the famous
Comstock Lode and increased production of silver elsewhere was coincident
with the decline in that metal which continued until two years ago. Whether
that decline was due to the natural increase or to the action thereafter
taken against silver by various governments, is a moot point between the
"silverites" and the "gold-bugs" as the friends and
enemies of the white metal have respectively been dubbed."
"The prolonged depression of business together with the
unprecedentedly low prices for farm products led a very large
element---particularly in the West and South where the debtor classes
predominate---to adopt the theory of Senator Jones of Nevada and other silver
advocates, that the trouble was due to a lack of sufficient money in the
country owing to the demonetization of silver and to the consequent low price
of that metal. Their clamor was ringing throughout the land when Congress met
in the present session. They reminded their representatives that the platform
on which General Harrison was nominated in 1888 contained a declaration that
"the Republican party is in favor of the use of both gold and silver as
money and condemns the policy of the Democratic administration in its efforts
to demonetize silver."
"This was the situation when Congress met. The extreme silver men of
the West and South with the representatives of the great silver producing
states at their head were so powerful in their demands for more silver money
that Congress was practically unanimous in favor of some increase. But this
was the only point on which they agreed. As to how much silver should be
bought and as to whether it all should be coined into dollars or should be stored
as bullion and have notes issued against it, opinion was divided. Some wanted
notes issued redeemable in the bullion itself at the market price when
redeemed; others wanted them redeemed in the same amount of bullion issued
against them irrespective of its market price. Some wanted the notes made a
partial legal tender; others would give them full legal tender quality."
"The most effective argument of the extreme silver men was that there
was not gold enough in existence to serve as the measure of the world's
values. They quoted English economists to the effect that from 1819, when
England demonetized silver and adopted the single gold standard, up to the
discovery of the gold fields of Australia and California, there was such an
advance in gold as precipitated and was equivalent to a fall of 59 percent in
the prices of commodities. Again, they argued that following the
demonetization of silver in 1873, gold had until the present year advanced 35
to 40 percent; and they cited ex-Chancellor of the British Exchequer to that
effect; and also the report of the British Royal Commission in 1886 saying,
"This country is largely a creditor country of debts payable in gold;
and any change which entails a rise in prices of commodities generally, that
is to say a diminution of the purchasing power of gold, would be to our
disadvantage."
"All the governments of Europe, it was contended, had hoards of
silver which they were awaiting an opportunity to dispose of, and if our
government undertook to buy any considerable quantity, this country would be
made the dumping ground of the world. Every old salver and tea-pot would be
melted up and sold to take advantage of the government purchases. The bill
became a law through the compromise effected in committee. But it was denounced
by leading men on both sides before the vote was taken and afterward; it was
satisfactory to neither. Mr. Bland denounced it as "a murder of
silver" since the notes issued against the bullion were made redeemable
in gold. He declared that Senator Jones and his associates who had fought for
free coinage but now agreed to support the bill had "sold out;"
bribed by the offer of a market for their bullion." Senator Dolph of
Oregon in voting for the bill said he did so because "it distinctly
announced the fact that it is the intention of Congress by this bill to
maintain the present standard---the gold standard." Representative McRae
of Arkansas said it was a deal between "the gold-bugs of the East and
the silver kings of the West."
"Senator Blair discreetly remarked that while he voted for the bill
he gave notice that neither on the floor of the Senate nor elsewhere would he
ever attempt to explain his vote. Senator Vest did not see how gentlemen who
supported this measure for the storage of silver bullion and the issue of
notes against it, could refuse to listen to farmers when they demanded the
similar storage of grain, or pig iron producers who should demand that the
government take their product and issue paper against it. To this it was
answered that neither wheat nor pig iron was in use as money in any part of
the civilized world, but silver was in use as currency everywhere. The fears
that we should be flooded with silver from all parts of the world and that
gold would leave us were declared to be groundless, as the similar
predictions made in 1885. Instead of gold flowing out of the country after
Congress decided to continue the coinage, our stock of gold constantly
increased from the time the Bland Act was passed---indeed the quantity had
trebled. We as a nation exported more than we imported, and therefore we had
no balance to pay to Europe; on the contrary Europe owed us money at the end
of every year and must send us gold. While we held this position we would not
have any balances to pay abroad and consequently would not be obliged (as the
gold monometalists feared) to buy gold at a premium to settle debts
abroad."
"It was further argued that as this country produced about one-half
the world's supply of silver it was in our interests to maintain its price
like that of any other product, and as the chief demand for silver in all
history had been for currency purposes it was our interest to re-establish
its credit and restore it to its proper place. Gentlemen went so far as to
assert that Congress was misled into demonetizing silver in 1873, by agents
of the British government whose interests as a purchaser of the white metal
were obviously opposed to our own as a producer. It was conceded that Mr.
Ernest Seyd, the London economist, had been active in suggestions touching
the Demonetization Act of 1873, and it was even asserted that the text of the
bill was in his hand-writing. It must be admitted that up to this date the
operation of the new law has justified the prediction of the friends of
silver rather than those of its opponents."
Here we see clearly that the driving force for demonetization of silver in
1873 was the ever-Frankensteinean British Empire; or, we should say, the
elements in control of the Bank of England. England over time became less of
a military and colonial power, but as financial power is the trump card to
all other power, this seems to have been retained. In order to make the
retention complete, tycoons, financiers, industrialists and robber barons of
the United States were drawn into the cooperative plan. By demonetizing
silver in 1873, British power was tremendously increased. In fact you must
wonder would the War Between the States have erupted, had we had the Federal
Reserve System 50 years earlier. The Queen recently knighted Greenspan. Since
he deals in "created" money, rather than the real thing, you could
say, Greenspan is the "Barnabus Collins" of the precious metals
scene (the vampire on "Dark Shadows," 1966-1967). We need an
America in which decisions are made in Washington in response to the will of
the majority of voters---not government by intermarried financial elites in
London and New York.
Franklin Sanders in "Silver Bonanza" (1993) referred to the
August 1873 issue of Bankers Magazine, and other sources have made note of
what was said therein---
"In 1872, silver being demonetized in France, England, and Holland, a
capital of $500,000 was raised and Ernest Seyd of London was sent to this
country with this fund, as the agent of foreign bondholders and capitalists
to effect the same object here, which was accomplished."
When you think London as the world's money center, you have to think names
like Rothschild; Warburg; Grosvenor; Milner; Kleinwort; Cecil (intermarried
with Vanderbilts); Astor; and Windsor (Royal family).
CONGRESSMAN BLAND SPEAKS AGAIN!
In the North American Review, September 1890, Richard Bland, Missouri
Democrat and one time Nevada silver man, had more remarks on the subject of
silver money. Before we note some of these, recall that the Bland Act was
amended by Senator Allison to become the Bland-Allison Act of 1878, resuming
coinage of silver dollars, and it was enacted into law, overriding the veto
by President Rutherford B. Hayes. Speaking of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act
of 1890, Bland said---
"The new law is a radical departure from the law of 1878 in respect
to the basis or ratio of utilizing silver for monetary purposes. The law of
1878 compelled the coinage of the bullion as fast as purchased. The coin
could be deposited and silver certificates issued thereon. Whether the coin
or certificate was in circulation, it went into circulation at the ratio of
16 to 1. This is the established legal ratio between the two metals. The new
law, however, provides for issuing notes on silver bullion at its gold value---not
coining value. The metal is not to be coined at all after July 1891, except
at the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, and in amounts sufficient
only for the redemption of the notes. But as pointed out before, the notes
must be redeemed in gold if the theory of the gold standard is to be adhered
to; hence no redemption in silver will be made. The net result is the
practical suspension of the coinage of silver at the legal ratio. The only
use to be made of the metal is as a bankable commodity on which notes may be
issued, based upon the market value in gold of this bankable commodity. Thus
silver is virtually demonetized and discredited as a standard of value, and
gold, and gold only, fixed as the standard of payments."
"In closing this article I must be indulged while attempting to urge
the practicability of and the absolute necessity for the unlimited coinage of
silver. There is no probability of the people of this country in the near
future electing a House of Representatives favorable to any system of
national banks. The only mode at this time of augmenting our circulating
medium, to meet the needs of growing business and the rapid increase of
population, is the issuing of circulating notes upon the deposits of gold and
silver coin. Our policy now is to issue these notes, dollar for dollar, on
the coin or bullion. The bankers rule would permit the issuing of three
dollars of notes for one of specie. This we are not doing. We require a
dollar of coin to be held for the redemption of every note outstanding. What
greater security than this could be reasonably asked? It will not do to say
that the silver dollar is depreciated, for as to the coin that is not true,
and as to bullion the depreciation would disappear with the demand for it
which free coinage would give. The reserve of dollar for dollar would so
restrict the issue of notes as to guarantee their par."
"The contention that we would be flooded with a dump of the silver of
the world is not tenable. The conditions at present, as well as the history
of the world, are against it. There is no country now having a surplus of
silver to be dispensed with at a loss. No coined silver could be sent to our
mints from the old world except at a loss of about three cents on the dollar,
owing to the difference in our ratio of coinage and theirs. The history of
all ages shows that from the beginning of civilization the precious metals
have been held in such high esteem and so largely sought for that
nothing---not excepting wars, pestilence, and famine---will not be endured
before a people will consent to part with their stock of these metals. To
show the passion of mankind for the acquisition of precious metals, we might
instance the dangers and privations endured in the search for them."
"The truth is that, no matter how we accumulate silver or gold,
whether by purchase in open market or by the open mint, the stock of precious
metals so accumulated will prove a source of wealth and power, which in the
near future will enable us to dominate the commerce of the world and make New
York, instead of London, the world's clearing-house for the exchange of gold
and silver at our present ratio, or such as we may reasonably establish. The
annual product of gold is rapidly declining. The richest of our silver mines
are also being rapidly worked out. It cannot be expected that the present
yield of silver will long continue. With gold mines now failing the world
over, and the great probability that the yield of silver will lessen from
year to year, the world in the near future will be compelled to draw upon the
treasury stock that we must accumulate if we enter upon free coinage. It is
the aim of wise statesmanship to lay up wealth for a rainy day."
Recall that Frank Taussig, Harvard economist, said that the only difference
between the Bland-Allison Act of 1878 and the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of
1890 was in the quantity of silver to be purchased by the Treasury? According
to what Richard Bland said, Taussig was a liar! Prostitute economists lying
for money manipulators---absolutely! As for John Sherman (1823-1900), for
whom the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 was named, background is now in
order.
Sherman was a Republican representative in Congress from Ohio, 1854
through 1861; Senator from Ohio, 1861 through 1877; United States Treasury
Secretary, March 10, 1877 through March 3, 1881; Senator from Ohio, 1881
through 1897; and Secretary of State, 1897 through 1898. Under President
Rutherford Hayes, who attempted to block the Bland-Allison Act of 1878
resuming coinage of silver dollars, Sherman as Treasury Secretary insisted
that the government redeem all its obligations in gold. While Sherman was a
member of the Senate Finance Committee he helped to plan Treasury Secretary
Salmon P. Chase's National Banking System, and while a Senator, Sherman
fought against currency backed by silver. In "History of the Great
American Fortunes" by master archivist Gustavus Myers we find on pages
558-559---
"The extraordinary financial laws passed during the Civil War were
only the forerunners of other laws which the bankers and the creditor class
in general caused to be passed in following years, and by which they
instantly and vastly increased their wealth and power, and were enabled far
more effectually than ever before to put the screws upon the producing class.
The most noted of these laws was that passed by Congress on February 12,
1873, practically accomplishing the demonetization of silver as coin. This
was the same Congress which, as we have seen, was bribed with a million
dollars to pass an act granting an additional subsidy of $5,000,000 to the
Pacific Mail Steamship Company. The demonetization act went through by
evasion; not a word was directly mentioned in it of the demonetization of
silver; few knew of its purport; even the advocates of bimetallism voted for
it. It was one of the most adroit bills ever put through Congress, and it was
only after it had become law that its concealed provisions came to public
attention."
"Then a terrific cry of rage went up from the middle class from one
end of the country to the other; the excitement was intense. The middle class
was struck at hard; the supply of money was at once contracted, the
purchasing power of gold was enhanced, and the power of the large creditor
capitalists and banking institutions over the small property owning class was
greatly augmented. This law was passed at the same time that the Standard Oil
Company was rising to give the death blow to free competition in trade. The
middle class representatives in Congress now began an agitation which lasted
many years. The charge that the demonetization of silver had been brought
about by the conspiracy of John Sherman and a few other prominent men in
Congress, with the financiers of Wall Street and Europe. Successive volumes
of the Congressional Record of those years were full of speeches in which
this charge was brought out over and over again. But the law stood; and what
was more galling to the middle class, John Sherman, denounced so bitterly as
a traitor, and as a mercenary of the bankers, was appointed a few years later
to be Secretary of the United States Treasury. From that time on, the
bankers, national and international, came out more and more in the open in
direct dictatorship of the financial laws and policy of the United States.
The great government bond issue of 1877, by which the bankers made colossal
profits, followed Sherman's appointment."
In "America's 60 Families" by Ferdinand Lundberg (1937), we note
on pages 59-60, and 64---
"Sherman had well served the Rockefellers and other Wall Street
denizens in his long political career. It was Senator Sherman who in 1875 put
through the Specie Resumption Act; and Henry Stoddard, New York Republican
newspaper publisher for many decades, notes in his memoirs that Sherman's
"relations with the First National Bank of New York were so close during
the resumption crisis that the institution was popularly called Fort
Sherman." John Sherman was a Rockefeller man from his boots up."
STILL ANOTHER GOOD GUY ON SILVER!
The December 1891 North American Review, pages 728 through 736 featured an
article entitled, "The Workingman And Free Silver" by Terence
Vincent Powderly (1849-1924), General Master Workman of the Knights of Labor,
apparently a Masonic type fraternity. Powderly was United States Commissioner
of Immigration, 1897 through 1902. Let's look at some of his remarks on
silver and money matters---
"It may be said of the laborer that he is in favor of a circulating
medium that will be a full legal tender for all debts public and private, the
same to be issued by his government, as authorized by the Constitution of the
United States, without the intervention of any banking concern whatever. It
shall not be of a material that may be monopolized and withdrawn from
circulation through war, panic, or speculation. He saw a nation pass through
the throes of a civil war equaled in bitterness and fury by none; he saw the
hard money of the nation, or rather, the hard money men of the nation take
themselves to Europe for safety, and on the strength of their hard cash
attempt to loan money to this government---not gold and silver, but paper, at
rates of interest ranging to 33 percent; he saw a patriot President stand up
between the nation and the usurers in a demand upon Congress to issue a full
legal tender paper currency; he saw $60,000,000 of a full legal tender paper
currency circulate until children old enough to read of the war that had
ended, and who had never seen a piece of gold or silver money, were told that
years ago gold and silver were money, but were no longer used as such. Then
in Congress, at the behest of the owners of gold, silver was secretly and
stealthily demonetized."
"This the laborer did not see, nor the President who signed the bill;
and within the last few months statesmen who were Senators and Congressmen in
1873, when the demonetization of silver was accomplished, have admitted
voting for the bill without knowing that it contained the demonetization
clause. One statesman has not denied a knowledge of that act of treachery to
the people---John Sherman---and he is today the subject of adverse criticism
by nearly every living man who sat with him in the Senate when that bill was
adopted without question, on his word that it contained nothing that
interfered with the coinage of the silver dollar. Gold is the legal standard
today because the bankers, brokers, and gold owners of the world influenced
Congress to make it so; the people never demanded it, never uttered a sentiment
that could be construed in favor of monometallism, never petitioned Congress
or a Congressman to pass such a law. It was done when a bill, with
sixty-seven sections, was under discussion, and was passed through Congress
without question, because that body had faith in the honor of a committee of
three of which Mr. Sherman was chairman." (See image of Terence Powderly
below, then his remarks resume again.)
"It could not have been the American needs of finance that urged
Congress to demonetize silver, for neither gold nor silver had been in
circulation for years. (Not totally factual.) The enactments of July 17,
1861, and February 12, 1862, authorized the issue of $60,000,000 treasury
notes that were a full legal tender, without exception, for all debts, dues,
and demands. Within a week after the adoption of this last act the bankers of
New York, Boston, and Philadelphia held a convention in Washington, and
resolved to protest against the government issuing the currency directly to
the people. If a full legal tender paper money should continue to issue to
the people, there would be no further demand for gold, and Shylock would be
cheated out of his pound of flesh. The result of the deliberations of that
convention were made known to the country when Congress, on the 25th of
February, 1862, passed an act which declared that the greenback should be a
"legal tender for all debts, public and private, except duties on
imports and interest on the public debt," which from that time on should
be paid in coin."
"The adoption of that act, known as the "exception clause
act," created a demand for a metallic money. Gold and silver had been
withdrawn from circulation, and for years after the Civil War were known as money
only in the resorts of the money changers. (Not totally factual.) Shortly
after the ending of the Civil War the resumption of specie payments began to
be agitated, and if that should come to pass, with gold and silver standing
on the same ground of equality which they had occupied from the founding of
the government, the bondholder would have to accept the interest accruing on
his bonds in coin of either metal. A bill to revise the laws relating to the
mints was adopted by Congress early in 1873, and in it was concealed the
clause which demonetized the silver dollar and gave gold the monopoly.."
"Then came the Resumption Act of January 24, 1875, and from that time
forward the interest on the public debt must be paid in gold. The public debt
at the time the Demonetization Act (Crime of '73) was passed was
$2,234,482,993.20. The Resumption Act did not intend that those who earned
money through labor should be paid in specie; its intent was to pay the
bondholder a different kind of money from that with which he purchased his
bonds, and as the principal and interest of that debt must be paid by labor
or not at all, it will be seen that the burden has fallen upon the shoulders
of those who labor in the United States. The difference of half a billion of
dollars on the principal, and the interest on the whole ever since 1873,
coming from the sweat of the mechanic and the laborer, ought to cause him to
take an interest in the free coinage of silver."
"Every argument that has been or will be used against silver can with
equal force be directed against gold. The cry that "we will have too
much money if silver is remonetized and made the equal of gold" is
unworthy of consideration. No nation ever yet complained of having too much
money or suffered through that cause. Hard times and panics are due to
contractions and not expansions of the currency. Contraction of the currency
is not possible where the government itself, acting under its constitutional
right, issues the currency directly to the people without the intervention of
individuals or corporations. There will be more money in the hands of the
people, in bona-fide circulation, if free coinage of silver is restored to
where it was up to 1873. We are warned against interfering with vested rights
by those who object to free coinage."
"From 1792 up to 1873, a period of eighty-one years, silver stood
side by side with gold as the constitutional money of the United States. The
right of silver was a vested right in 1873. No party platform or demand from
the people called for its debasement by Congress. It was not because silver
was less valuable than gold that it was demonetized, for at the passage of
that act it was worth three cents more than gold. All legal decisions and
precedents are against that act of Congress; it was not demanded by the
people, has never been approved by them, and cannot be defended from any
other standpoint than as an act stealthily perpetrated in the interest of the
power that controlled gold, that hoped to control the nation through the use
of gold. It was to make money scarce that the act was passed, and it
succeeded. If anything in existing circumstances warranted the belief even
that the volume of gold would be sufficient to transact the business of the
nation, there would have been an excuse for the action of Congress, but such
was not the case."
"The total production of gold in the United States in 1890 was valued
at $32,800,000. I do not know what percentage of that amount is consumed in
the fine arts and in the jewelry trade, but it is safe to assume that at
least one-half will be devoted to these uses, leaving about one-half, or
$16,400,000, for use at the mints. The total volume of currency as given in
official reports last year, including gold, silver, and paper, was
$2,096,344,895. Of that amount $634,010,285 was gold, $458,134,057 silver,
and $1,004,200,553 was made up of the different issues of paper currency.
With less than a third of the currency composed of gold, and a total of over
two billions of dollars required for use each year, it is simply impossible
for gold to constitute an equitable basis for our currency. It must not be
forgotten that less than $295,806,831 of the gold coin was in actual
circulation; but if we add to that the gold certificates, amounting to
$57,862,759, we would then have only $353,669,590 of gold and its
representatives in actual circulation."
"With a population of 62,000,000 people in the United States, we have
but a fraction over six dollars per capita of gold in circulation; and with
gold as the basis, with the law in existence which authorizes the citizen to
demand gold, we find ourselves at the mercy of cliques, rings, and cabals, if
they should conspire to ruin our credit as a nation. Three citizens of the
United States, Jay Gould, William Waldorf Astor, and John D. Rockefeller, own
a combined total of $360,000,000; over six millions more than the actual
circulation of gold coin in the United States." (Below, see image of
John D. Rockefeller, grandfather of the present David Rockefeller, sometimes
called "chairman of the world's cash flow.")
Above, we see the pre-eminent "robber baron" in all history!
Continuing, Powderly commented---
"If we are to regard gold as the basis on which our currency is to
rest, as at present, the three men named have it in their power to withdraw
every gold dollar from circulation without any warning or notice whatever;
they may absorb and carry out of the country the basis of our national
currency, and do it under authority of law. The census returns estimate the
wealth of the nation at $1,000 per capita, and with gold as the basis each
$1,000 worth of property must be represented by a fraction over six dollars
in gold. It is necessary that we have a basis or measure of values, and if
gold is to perform that function, those who are wealthy enough to corner gold
may corner the nation itself if they desire. The workman's home may be worth
from one to five thousand dollars; but the moment the gold gamblers begin to
call in the money made of that metal, the mines and work shops will shut down
or go on short time, and he has to mortgage his home in order to live."
"This could not be done with the currency of the nation composed of
gold, silver, and paper based upon the faith and resources of the nation and
circulating as legal tender for all debts public and private. The workman is
therefore in favor of silver, for it is a step toward supplying the country
with a sufficient volume of money to transact the business of the same. A circulating
medium based upon the resources of the nation is not so easily tampered with
as one based on gold; it is safer and more patriotic; besides it is not so
easy to take $1,000 worth of property out of the country as it is to carry
six gold dollars beyond the border of the seas."
"If free and unlimited coinage is restored, it will benefit the
owners of silver mines and give us an eighty-cent dollar to circulate with
the gold dollar," is another fear entertained. Such an argument applies
with equal force against the use of gold, for our present system gives the
owners of gold mines a monopoly over all others. The monopoly enjoyed by gold
employs but little labor in comparison with what would be employed if silver
were admitted to free coinage---a stimulus would be given to labor in the
West, and the prosperity of that part of the country could not possibly have
a bad effect on the East. In any event, to ask for free coinage is not the
heretical demand the apologists for gold would have us believe, for it is
only a demand for what we had and enjoyed from the founding of the republic
up to 1873."
Although Powderly was shaky on a few points (you should see what I didn't
make reference to), he was correct that silver is needed along with gold
money; that these are constitutional money.
A TRIO OF PRO-SILVER VOICES!
The North American Review, November 1885, pages 491 through 507, featured
three individuals with brief essays on silver money. The first was N.P. Hill,
for whom I found no biographical data. Mr. Hill had these things to say---
"In his report upon the Mint, 1791, Alexander Hamilton summed up the
whole matter by saying, that "to annul the use of either of the metals
as money is to abridge the quality of the circulating medium." To the
effect that abridgement was the avowed object of the persons who originated,
thirty years ago, the plan of employing one and the same metal in all
commercial countries. They at first proposed that this metal should be
silver, and they actually persuaded some European countries to demonetize
gold. They soon changed their tactics, and proposed the demonetization of
silver as a more practical method of accomplishing the object of
"abridging the quantity of the circulating medium."
"The motives of the men who have kept up the war upon silver down to
the present time are the same as they were then, although not so openly
avowed. Those who marshal, victual, and pay the forces by which this war is
waged, formulate the battle cries and direct the maneuvers, are the bankers,
as a class, those who hold credits secured upon the property of others, and
those who own the enormous and almost fabulous public debts, not less of all
kinds than forty thousand millions of dollars. It is in the interest of these
classes of men to have as few dollars as possible, that each dollar may have
an augmented command over the necessities, comforts, and luxuries of life,
and they know that there is no more direct road to an appreciated money than
to strike down the monetary use of one of the metals. There has been a
continuous fall, since 1873, in the prices of all the principal commodities
which enter into human consumption. Unless the settled judgment of mankind,
that the price of commodities, labor, land, and all kinds of property depends
upon the volume of money is a delusion, it must be obvious that the
demonetization of silver and restrictions upon its coinage in important
countries must have been one of the powerfully contributing causes of the
fall of prices."
"In the British House of Commons, May 8, 1883, the condition of India
being under consideration, Mr. Cross said---
"Debt is not so easy to pay as it formerly was. A pound of debt was
discharged by remittance of a sovereign's worth of produce; but,
unfortunately for the debtor nations of the world, a good deal more produce
had to be remitted to discharge a pound of debt than when most of the debts
of the world were contracted. This told heavily against India."
"Silver dollars, if they were current in the market at only their
bullion value, instead of their face value, would still have a purchasing
power greater than any kind of dollars had in 1860. In view of the disasters
to debtors, taxpayers, and all kinds of property, which the war upon silver
has already caused, and the greater disasters which it threatens, and in view
of the fact that an immense majority of the people of this country are
debtors, taxpayers, or laboring men, how amazing does it seem that the
administration of the national finances is now, and for many years has been,
in the hands of men who are subservient to the interests of the few
money-lenders, and antagonistic to the interests of the great mass of the
people who are engaged in productive industry, and who are compelled to
borrow money. So long as men are selfish, and these conditions exist, we may
expect that every discrimination which human ingenuity can devise will be
invoked to depreciate the value of silver."
"Professor Laughlin has been at the trouble of preparing a wood-cut,
with the value of gold between 1870 and 1884 exhibited by a straight line as
the standard of comparison, and with the value of silver relatively to gold
during the same period exhibited by another line, which is very crooked and
erratic; but he must know that if he had represented the value of silver by a
straight line, and made that the standard for comparison, and had represented
the relative value of gold by another line, the latter would have been
equally crooked and erratic. But what is more important, and what the
Professor may have failed to remember, is that if the general range of the
prices of commodities be represented by a straight line, the correspondence
with it of a line representing the value of silver would be much closer than
of a line representing the value of gold."
"Professor Sumner says that a fear that American money is to be
depreciated by the continued coinage of silver is the reason "why so few
are now willing to become creditors, and why industry and commerce are
stagnant." With due deference to the opinions of so able a theorist as
Professor Sumner, the least that can be said is that this statement shows a
misconception of the situation as a matter of fact, and that it is erroneous
as a matter of philosophy. Of the persons possessing moneyed capital, instead
of there being only a few who wish to become creditors, they nearly all want
to loan it. This situation of loanable capital is as conspicuous in Great
Britain, where no silver coinage is either in progress or impending, as in
New York or Boston. The cause of the almost universal desire in Europe and
the United States to lend money, rather than to invest it in productive
enterprises, is the common apprehension that money will appreciate in value,
and that the position of a creditor with any tolerable security is more
desirable than that of the holder of property. This is the true reason
"why industry and commerce are stagnant," while interest bearing
deposits with bankers, trust companies, and savings banks are multiplying.
Nobody wishes to produce commodities while they are falling in price."
"From time immemorial both gold and silver have been used as money
without bimetallic treaties. The relative value of gold and silver, disturbed
for a time by the disproportionate yield of silver following the discovery of
America, finally settled in 1650 to between 15 and 16 to 1, and so remained
for 225 years, although the first case of an international arrangement, the
Latin Union treaty, did not occur till 1865. These fluctuations, in the
opinion of Professor Walker, are so intolerable, that in order to avoid them
we must give up silver; and in the same article he admits that the
abandonment of silver will result in "the enhancement of the burden of
all debts and fixed charges, acting as a steady drag upon production,"
and the "suffocation, strangulation, are words hardly too strong to
express the agony of the industrial body when embraced in the fatal coils of
a contracting money."
"Suffering our currency, by discarding silver, to be appreciated to
any height to which selfish bankers and money capitalists in this country and
in Europe may be able and disposed to carry gold."
So spoke N.P. Hill, now, let's briefly hear from Alexander Del Mar, Mining
Commissioner of the Monetary Commission of 1876---
"The silver dollar of the United States always has been, and is, and
always must be, worth a dollar, and, under existing laws, can never be worth
less than a gold dollar. No man has ever lost a cent from the employment of
the silver dollar as money; yet there issues from the banking centers a
persistent clamor to demonetize this coin, a clamor which, strange to say, is
strengthened by the ill-concealed sympathy of officials whose duty it is less
to impugn the wisdom of our laws than to uphold them. For example, the Comptroller
of the Currency, in his report for 1884 (pp. 20, 21), impudently alludes to
the "folly" of Congress with respect to the coinage of
silver."
"Money is a subject with which the most unlettered person is apt to
deem himself conversant. Does he not every day handle coins or notes; is he
not familiar with their appearance and use; has he not been taught that money
is merely pieces of merchandise, weighed and verified by the State; that the
value of these pieces or coins conforms to the cost of their production; that
the ratio of value between silver and gold is due to the relative cost of
producing these metals; that paper notes are not money, but its
representatives; and that their value is due to the probability of their
redemption in coins?"
"To demonetize the silver dollars will be to diminish the money of
the country by about one-fifth and increase in like proportion the value of
all interest bearing securities, including bonds and mortgages and other
indebtedness. It will also be to lower the prices of wheat, corn, fruits,
hay, cotton, tobacco, sugar, wool, meats, butter, cheese, and all farm
produce about one-sixth. It will still further depress trade by depriving our
merchants of markets and our mechanics and laborers of employment. It will
increase the moral hazard of insurance. It will hand over from one-sixth to
one-fifth of the wealth of the country substantially to the banks, and
disarrange all those interests and relations of society upon whose permanency
largely rests the welfare of the State."
"To demonetize two hundred millions of silver dollars is to destroy
one-fifth of the measure of value, and to undermine to this extent the basis
of all contracts made since these silver dollars were coined; and this solely
to the profit of the banks and other capitalists. More than this, it will
practically relegate the future control of money to the banks, whose
interests, at times, will lend them to as wild an inflation as now to a
ruinous contraction. They already have absolute control over their own notes,
they have secured a large proportion of the gold coin and are trying to
monopolize it all, and they are increasing their reserves of greenbacks which
are payable in coin. The only portion of the money of the country not
amenable to their control is the silver dollars; and this explains their
hostility to them."
Recall that dishonest Harvard economist, Frank Taussig, banker shill,
mentioned that when silver dollar coinage was resumed in 1878 in defiance of
the financiers who harmed the public in the 1873 act, the New York banks
boycotted these coins. Silver has been the object of downside price
manipulation at least since 1873 (for purposes of this study) and
demonetization. The entire matter ties into the Bank of England; to the
wealthy dynasties behind it; and to the Federal Reserve System and its U.S.
kingpins. We know how later, gold was also attacked several times such that
as of 2004, the International Monetary Fund, which David Rockefeller called
for strengthening as far back as 1962, declares quite bizarrely "gold
and silver are non-monetary assets." Now we have big silver short
American International Group, in which Barclay's Bank, London, holds a huge
interest, acting to hold silver down. If these intermarried British Empire
and Anglo-American financiers have their way, everyone will be on electronic
"money" and the use of gold and silver might be a death penalty.
They may say, only terrorists, drug dealers and money launderers, want
precious metals! George Ambush or Mellon-Heinz Kerry can make an appeal to a
national emergency basis. It appears that two Presidents have been
assassinated for going against the financiers, Lincoln for issuing greenbacks
without banker participation; and Kennedy over precious metals and the
Federal Reserve note!
While they have the stupid Americans hypnotized with professional sports
teams they own, and with know-nothing TV talk shows, they are sending us down
the drain through control of Congress. If we can re-take Congress, these
parasites can be neutralized. For that reason, the silver political action
committee, or precious metals action committee I called for recently, is
imperative, and it must have wide support among mining companies. We must
force remonetization of the metals and enforce private ownership rights---no
Roosevelt style "license" necessary, (to be given only to members
of the right organizations!) Is your football game so vital that you don't
care what Congress does? Apply the same concern to Congress and the tide
turns! We can have a good-guy "team" in Congress to carry the
"ball" of issues towards the right goal post, and with that as our
new passion, we can start winning the "game!"
The last of this trio of writers from the North American Review, November
1885, we will consider was William A. Phillips, a member of the Committee on
Banking & Currency of the 43rd Congress. Phillips had this to say---
"The elaborate and persistent attempts made of late to discredit one
of the standard American coins render it necessary to make the inquiry
whether there is anything unlawful or dishonest in the coinage of the silver
dollar. The Constitution of the United States gives to Congress the power
"to coin money and regulate the value thereof." Those who are
objecting to the standard silver dollar would, logically, object just as much
to the exercise by Congress of this constitutional function. The essence of
their demand seems to be that our coin shall be a mere commodity, not a
standard. Since the foundation of the government the United States has been
bimetallic---gold and silver. The silver dollar is the unit of our values,
the gold fives, tens, twenties, and fifties being multiples of it."
"Since our government first coined money the purchasing power of both
gold and silver has fallen. Why not demand that gold and silver be put in
coins to bring them to the old value? The relative commercial value of gold
and silver has changed more than once. Shortly after the discovery of gold in
California and Australia, gold was, by the standards, relatively the cheaper
metal. Since the application of machinery to silver mining, that metal has
declined in commercial value; but the decline in silver in late years is
largely due to the demonetization of silver by Germany, which thus ceased to
be a buyer, and threw a large amount on the market. Owing to that fact,
silver fell in 1876 to forty-six and a half pence per ounce. In 1881 it had
risen to fifty-one and three quarters pence. During fifty years, from 1830 to
1880, the supply of silver was not sufficient, as Mr. Mulhall states that
5,230 tons of old candlesticks, etc., were during that period melted down for
current uses."
"Britain has been the persistent advocate for a single gold standard
for more than fifty years. Since that time silver has, at times, been dearer
than gold, but her purpose was to strike down one of the standards, owing to
the great accumulation of silver. A nation which, like England, does not owe
any other nation, and one to whom nearly every foreign nation is debtor, is
of course deeply interested in keeping up the value of metallic standards.
Current business soon adjusts itself to any standard, but with debts it is
different; the creditor is interested in raising or keeping them up, the
debtor in keeping them down. As the chief value of gold and silver comes from
their use as coin, the discontinuance of one standard would greatly enhance
the value of the other."
"Between 1873 and 1879, Germany, in the attempt to join England on a
monometallic basis, sold 3,220 tons of silver. She seriously depressed her
business. Scandinavia has attempted to do the same. Austria has a silver
standard. All the other nations, like the United States, are bimetallic.
Russia has also attempted the single standard, but her circulation is chiefly
irredeemable paper. The Asiatic nations are large customers for and users of
silver. While Britain has a single gold standard, British India has a silver
circulation of enormous proportions. China coins neither gold nor silver, but
has a large circulation of foreign silver. The annual report of the director
of the Mint for 1883, shows the amount of coin of a few great nations. France
had full legal tender circulation $543,000,000 in gold, and $873,000,000 in
silver. The United States at that time, $606,197,000 in gold, and $159,479,000
in silver. This latter has since become about two hundred millions. Great
Britain, $587,683,000 in gold. Germany, $342,720,000 in gold, and
$109,480,000 in silver. Mr. Mulhall states that the volume of paper money in
the world is increasing much more rapidly than specie. In 1848 paper money
was about twenty per cent of all the money in use; in 1880 it was
thirty-eight percent. It will thus be seen that France has a circulation of
silver four times as great as ours, and it looks a little singular that the United
States, the great silver producing nation, should aid in driving silver from
circulation, thus destroying the value of one of its chief products."
"This is not the first attempt to force the United States to adopt
the single gold standard. A revision of the laws had been directed, and the
report of the commission came before the forty-third Congress. It had simply
been authorized to make a code including the recent laws, and leaving out
what had been repealed. No authority was given to make any CHANGE in
legislation. The voluminous reports were read at night sessions, attended by
few; and in fact, the writer, who attended many of them, found it, as
doubtless other members did, impossible to follow the reading and know
whether changes had been made or not, as a person to have done so would have
been required to compare every section with the whole seventeen volumes. No
act of Congress had ever passed demonetizing the silver dollar, or suspending
its coinage. When the revision came to be printed, it was found that several
changes had ACCIDENTALLY got in. One of these left out the provision for
coining American standard dollars. If there has ever been anything dishonest
connected with our standard dollar, it was that transaction. If anyone ever
believed the change resulted from "an accident," the powerful lobby
and press used to prevent its remonetization were sufficient to dispel that
idea."
"There was a strong popular sentiment in favor of correcting this
"mistake." A number of bills were introduced. As the writer was a
member of the Subcommittee on Banking and Currency, to whom they were
referred, he claims to be tolerably familiar with the history of the bill. As
matured in the committee, and as it passed the House, the bill simply placed
our silver coinage where it was before. In many countries, including Britain,
coinage of gold and silver, according to the standard, was free. Our act was
copied from an old English law. Any person could take gold and silver to the
Mint and have it assayed and coined on paying mintage fees. That is the law
in regard to gold now, and a man can deposit his gold bullion and get a
certificate for it, which circulates as money. The Senate amended the House
bill, striking out free coinage, and inserting a provision for buying silver
bullion at market rates, and coining two millions a month. It had been
evidently expected by the enemies of the measure that this difference of
opinion would cause the bill to fail, but as amended it became law."
"Since then a continuous and persistent war has been made on the
silver dollar. On the 31st of last October our circulation of national bank
notes was $332,473,693, and of legal tender notes, $346,681,016. There is
also an amount of State bank notes, old demand notes, and other currency. These,
with the subsidiary silver, and the gold and silver already stated,
constitute our business circulating medium. The silver certificates should
not be added, as they represent standard coin in the treasury. As it is the
banks and dealers in money that are carrying on the war against the silver
dollar, if money is too abundant they can withdraw their national bank notes.
The real secret of their hostility is because the silver dollar is the only
part of the currency they are unable to control. To show that our circulation
is not much too large, Mr. Mulhall gives the total amount of all kinds of
money, gold, silver, and paper, per inhabitant, as in Britain, five pounds
six shillings; in France, ten pounds ten shillings; in the United States,
five pounds fifteen shillings. Holland stands eight pounds five shillings.
The nations having little business and no great amount of wealth have small
amounts of circulating medium, Russia having only one pound fifteen
shillings, a great part of which is irredeemable paper."
"The argument that the silver dollars are bulky and inconvenient is
shallow. If silver certificates were issued in ones, twos, fives, besides the
tens, the whole amount would pass immediately into circulation. Gold can
hardly be said to circulate except in certificates. A paper circulation that
has standard coin behind it can scarcely be called in question. We freely
store gold for everybody, surely we can store our own silver. To establish
and maintain an international standard of money is impracticable. Changing
standards is always a very doubtful expedient where great debts have been
incurred, and we as a nation, with our city, county, state, railway and other
debts, owe enormously. Gold may be discovered, or by improvements in
machinery be mined in great quantities very soon, and once more disturb
relative values. If the bimetallic standard can be maintained, it will
materially aid one of our great industries. If a change in the standards must
eventually be made, the United States should approach it cautiously."
Congressman Phillips spoke of a "continuous and persistent war
against silver," and we have surely seen it ferociously waged in our
time by many entities acting in planned concert. Phillips described the
purposeful clouding of the waters in Congress, concerning the hidden
provisions of the 1873 bill that demonetized silver without the awareness of
most representatives. Senators are more easily controlled simply because
there are fewer of them. However, Senators are by concept supposed to protect
states rights, rather than acting for the British Crown and its associated
elements. The same type sneaky, spidery, deceptive scenario was played out in
the 1913 Federal Reserve Act. Phillips mentioned that the nation's press,
after the truth of the demonetization was known, propagandized for the
maintenance of the act. This was during the same period in which Standard Oil
was known to be supplying editorials to over 300 newspapers.
AMAZING! A VOICE FOR SILVER HERE?
In The New Englander & Yale Review, November 1889, article titled,
"International Silver Coinage" by Joseph Sheldon, pages 326 through
330, we find---
"Ernest Seyd appeared at Washington to induce the United States
Congress to practically close their mint against the free coinage of silver
and to aid in its demonetization. He succeeded in this most extraordinary
mission in so altering our mint law as in effect to make the people pay back
the amount of the Alabama claims more than ten times over every year for the
next succeeding fifteen years---succeeding in compelling them at their own
enormous expense to build up a rival to themselves in the most important
sources of their wealth---rival to their production of wheat, of cotton, and
of silver itself---succeeded in making by law itself the lawless achievements
of Warren Hastings and Clive, of Cortez and Pizarro, in the wholesale
devastation of nations, appear like the rude bungling of apprentices by the
side of the work of a master in their line. Of course Mr. Seyd had powerful
allies here and powerful clients abroad. Surely no bribery was ever more
successful. No successful bribery ever produced such astounding
results."
Sheldon referred to Hastings and Clive, of the old British East India
Company, who ransacked that country, and of the Spanish conquistadors who
looted the wealth of the New World, and said plainly that Ernest Seyd of
London (and the Bank of England and the Rothschilds) made them look like
small-timers in theft! Continuing, Sheldon commented---
"The money cost of this foreign juggle and domestic blunder with
silver, altogether unprecedented in the history of the world, is not the
whole of it. Its moral aspects effect on the spirit of the people has been
demoralizing and depressing to a very great extent. The gradual decrease in
the value of all property and the simultaneous gradual increase in the weight
of all debts and taxes, have left their marks on the national spirit and
life. The shadow of immense portentious calamities seems darkening over the
land. It is paralyzing the energy and repressing effort among business men;
it is breeding a profound discontent among workingmen; it is teaching a
lesson that may hereafter return to plague the teachers."
"The combination of all these immense, continuous monetary and moral
losses---national and international losses---should make us ready to unite
with our brethren of South America and Central America in measures for a
common relief through a common coinage and an open mint for the coinage of
silver on the same terms as gold, and so to shut up forever the great
fountain whence these bitter waters so long and so abundantly flowed---make
us ready to encounter some serious risks for the chance and the hope of
escaping from the destructive certainties involved in the present
situation."
Sheldon called for Western Hemisphere united action to remonetize silver.
We shall consider that vital matter toward the end of this research.
A TEXAS CONGRESSMAN FOR SILVER!
Roger Quarles Mills (1832 through 1911) was a Texas Democrat in the House
of Representatives, March 4, 1873 (after the bad act of 1873 was passed)
through March 28, 1892, when he became a Senator, until 1899. He was chairman
of the House Ways & Means Committee of the 50th Congress, and chaired the
Committee on Interstate & Foreign Commerce of the 52nd Congress. He was a
far better Texan for silver, than Lyndon Baines Johnson, who in 1965 helped
take us off silver coins to please the Silver Users Association and the
Federal Reserve. See image below---
In the North American Review, May 1890, pages 572 through 585, Mills, in an
excellent article called, "What Shall We do With Silver?"
commented---
"Some persons are easily alarmed by the danger of inflation; but the
increase of the circulation by any addition of gold and silver cannot produce
inflation. It is permanent, not vacillating. It is not, like paper money,
suspended in the air---money which sooner or later must collapse and bring
disaster to the whole country. But a paper circulation is never dangerous
when it is interchangeable with gold and silver over every counter and at the
will of every holder. It is this interchangeability that anchors it sure and
steadfast. It is only dangerous when its anchor hold on gold and silver
slips, and the balloon ascends in the air, taking the business of the country
with it. Sooner or later it must come down, and bring sacrifices in its
train. The business of the country follows its downward movement, and only
realizes a sense of security when it touches the bedrock of gold and
silver."
"It is as rational to fear the inflation of food and clothing as of
gold and silver. Like all other products of labor, they have a commercial
value fixed by the unerring law of demand and supply. The paper which is made
the representative of a dollar has no value except that given to it by
legislation, and that is confined within the jurisdiction of the country
where it is made. On the contrary, the value of gold and silver is fixed by
the demand and supply of the world, and is the same all over the world, when
not interfered with by legislation. There can, therefore, be no danger to the
country in any increase in either or both of the precious metals."
"When prices are so low that products cannot pay the cost of
transportation to the consumer and be sold for enough to pay the cost of
expenses, a farmer in Kansas may freeze for want of coal to burn, and at the
same time a miner in Pennsylvania may starve for want of bread to eat. The
miner would be glad to exchange his coal for corn; and the farmer his corn
for coal; but the low prices of the products make it impossible to overcome
the obstructions in the way of exchange. If it were in the power of the
government of of the man to restrict the wants of the body for food,
clothing, and shelter, then we might accommodate ourselves to the restricted
condition of the circulation without enduring the privations and sufferings
which it entails; but that is not within the range of human power."
"Money levels a vast field of obstructions over which commerce is to
move. Why should we keep our mints closed against the coinage of silver? Why
should we not open the doors to the unlimited coinage of both gold and
silver? They have both been the money of all civilized peoples in all ages of
the world. They have been the money of the world because they are perfectly
adapted to the work which money alone can do. No other metals have ever been
discovered by man that can supply their places. After thousands of years they
still retain their places without a challenge. If the peoples of the world
who are carrying on the vast exchanges of the world would, by agreement, fix
the relative values of silver and gold at 15 or 15.50 or 16 to 1, these
values would remain fixed and invariable throughout the world. But
unfortunately for the welfare of mankind, those who own the money of the
world and who desire to keep it as dear, and labor and its products as cheap
as possible, have now, and have had in the past, too strong a hold on the
governments of the world to permit that to be done, if it is possible for
them to prevent it."
"After the opening of the gold mines of California and Australia,
with the large amount of gold they poured into the markets of the world, this
same class demanded the closing of the mints against that metal, and wished
to make the money of the world stand upon silver because it was the scarcer
metal. Belgium made silver the single standard in 1850, and the German states
and Austria in 1857. The movement for the demonetization of gold was arrested
by the opposition of France. In the course of a decade the two metals changed
positions, and the financial philosophers of the world changed with them. By
1865 silver was the metal of larger production, and the movement was set to
close the mints against it to prevent the consequent rise in the prices of
labor and its products.."
"In 1865 the Latin Union was formed, and Belgium, Italy and
Switzerland declared for the gold standard. In 1873 Germany and the United
States joined the crusade; the next year they were followed by the
Scandinavian states; and by 1875 the mints of France, Belgium, Italy,
Switzerland, Holland, Germany, Spain, and the United States were closed to
silver. This cut off a large part of the demand for its consumption, at a
time when the mines were pouring an extraordinarily large product upon the
market. Any one could foresee the result---silver must fall and gold must
rise. The labor of the world was paralyzed in order to raise the price of
gold to the small, but powerful class."
"We had, in fact, a silver standard country prior to 1834, when, to
prevent the exodus of gold, the relative values of the two metals were
changed from 15 to 1 to 15.98 to 1, while the silver using countries of
Europe continued to coin at 15.50 to 1. After 1834 our silver dollar soon
rose to a premium over the gold dollar, and it was worth four cents more in
Europe than it was at home. These coins were all leaving the country, and it
was only a question of time when they would all be gone. To prevent this,
Congress in 1853 provided for the coinage of fractional silver at the ratio
of 14.95 to 1, and the coinage was limited so that only sixty millions of
dollars were coined between 1853 and 1873, while our mines turned out three
times that amount during the same period."
"Since 1878 we have had a limited coinage of silver of two millions
per month, from which we have now in the country $426,000,000. Why should we
not have the whole product of our mines added to our stock? Why should we not
begin now, and open our mints to the silver of the world? What injury could
possibly result from such a measure? It is said by some that, if we open our
mints to unlimited coinage, we shall be flooded with the cheap silver of the
whole world. Unfortunately for the country, there is no danger of such a
boon. The only cheap silver in the world is the uncoined and unwrought
silver---the raw material just from the mines. There is not enough of that to
submerge us with its incalculable blessings; but there is enough to
contribute very materially to our improvement."
"If the other extreme is reached, as can only be done by discarding
gold and silver and placing the whole business of the country on the wings of
an unlimited volume of paper money---then public confidence is destroyed, and
all departments of business are paralyzed. The only safe course is to cling
to gold and silver---not a part of them, but all of them---and to bind our
paper circulation by indissoluble bonds to them, so that it can never get
beyond the reach of redemption. Where, then, are we to get the large
importation of silver with which we are threatened? There is a considerable
stock in the arts. Its amount cannot even be approximated; but it is far more
valuable than the coined silver, and it would be a great loss to melt it down
and send it to us to be coined into dollars. All of it is worth more than one
hundred cents per 371.25 grains, and much of it is five times as valuable. In
the arts its value is enhanced by the amount of skilled labor bestowed upon
it. That would all be lost in coining it into money. Then there is no silver
that could come to us except from the annual product of the mines."
"The only danger that would menace us, if we should open our mints to
the unlimited coinage of silver, would be that which menaces us now; and that
is such a loss of our silver as occurred after 1850, when silver at our ratio
began to rise in value over gold. It left us then, when the mints of Europe
were open for silver coinage; and when they open again, the same result will
follow, and we shall lose our entire stock of full-weight silver. We should
take steps at once to prevent that; and the way to do it is to change our
ratio from 15.98 to 15.50, and make it conform to that of the silver
countries of Europe. We should coin our standard dollar with the same amount
of fine silver that is now contained in two half dollars, and fractional
coins in the same proportion---that is, 347.22 grains of fine silver, or
385.8 grains of standard silver."
"This is precisely the amount of fine silver in the five-franc piece
of the Latin Union. It is the fineness of the rix dollar of the Netherlands,
of the five-peseta piece of Spain, of the pesos of the Central American
states, of the Argentine Republic, of Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela.
To do this and retain the ratio of 15.50 to 1, we must decrease the fine gold
in our dollar to 22.43 grains and the standard weight to 24.90. Having done
this, if all the mints were opened in all these countries, there would be no
disturbance of our monetary circulation. Our silver would be worth no more in
Europe than it is at home, and our gold would be worth no less. The value of
each would be precisely the same at home and abroad, and nothing could be
accomplished by the importation or exportation of either."
"It would be a calamity to the world if the whole stock of silver
were converted into gold, or that of gold into silver. Gold is adapted to
large transactions; silver to small. When values are to be exchanged which
amount to thousands and millions, gold is the convenient money; but for the
tens of thousands of small transactions that are daily occurring outside the
banking circle silver is the convenient coin. To close the doors even
partially against either gold or silver is a step backward---to throw them
wide for both is to advance forward. It would be an additional convenience to
the people, and further increase the facilities for the movement of our
products to markets, if the government should authorize the Treasury
Department to receive the bullion and coin of both metals and issue to the
depositors in exchange, coin notes invested with the same money functions as
the gold and silver dollars, and redeemable in coin at the pleasure of the
holders."
"It has been very earnestly argued that, if we open our mints to the
unlimited coinage of silver, all our gold coins would leave us. In fact this
was predicted prior to the act of February 28, 1878, as an inevitable result
of a limited coinage of two millions per month. We had in 1877, before we
began the limited coinage of silver, $167,000,000 of gold coinage in the
United States. Instead of that leaving the country, the director of the Mint
informs us that we have now $622,000,000. We had on the 1st of January 1878,
$65,000,000 of silver coins in the United States, and we now have $426,000,000.
Neither has driven the other out."
There is no better method of historical review of a period, than to find
out exactly what was being said on both sides of an issue. We could do with
several dozen men like Roger Mills in our Congress today. That's why it's
important you don't give all your spare time to professional sports viewing.
That's why we really have to have a "hard money lobby," which would
look out for our interests. It would also benefit those without precious
metals investments, by returning the nation to sound money. Meantime, the
bankers hope to keep you stuck on that worthless baseball game, or other
empty-headed professional sport. I could have never presented these research
pieces here, had I been pouring my free time down such a sewer. I've worked a
six-day week for years yet I find time to research. If your house is burning,
you don't worry about a basketball game. And friend---your house is on
fire---financially and politically---because the precious metals wars are
about to heat up. They will say you are making too much money, that you need
to be hit with a windfall profits tax; later they will say, your metals must
be confiscated. I tell you straight out, the loss of one third of the time
you spend watching sports, diverted towards lobbying Congress, can prevent
such a fate. Consider the National Rifle Association as a serious lobby;
those people aren't distracted by sports on TV! They take care of important
business first, then and only then do mere amusements follow.
AND FINALLY---DANIEL VOORHEES!
Daniel Wolsey Voorhees (1827 through 1897) was a Democrat Senator from
Indiana, 1877 through 1897. Before that he served in the House of
Representatives, 1861 through 1866 and 1869 through 1873. He wrote an article
titled, "A Plea For Free Silver" in the November 1891 North
American Review, pages 524 through 535. Let's hear from him---
"The precious metals of the world now in use as money may be
estimated as follows:
Gold .................................$3,727,018,869
Silver ................................$3,820,371,346
"The movement, therefore, in this and other countries for the
demonetization of silver, and for its degradation to a commodity such as
corn, iron, wheat, and pork, has for its plain and specific purpose the
destruction of something more than one-half the specie currency of the world.
The human mind can hardly conceive a more tremendous financial revolution or
one fraught with graver consequences. If it is claimed, however, that the
continued and persistent assaults on silver do not mean its complete
extermination as a financial factor, but only its curtailment and limitation,
the facts of history arise at once to refute such a claim. The position now
assumed by the leading opponents of silver money, to the effect that they
simply wish to limit its coinage to the American product, is not a position
of choice or free will, but is a result of the coercive power of public
opinion. It is the position to which in the last fourteen years they have
been driven, step by step, by an awakened and aroused resistance on the part
of the people to their actual and original scheme for the total overthrow and
extinction of silver money."
"The fatal scope of the legislation of 1873, by which silver was
demonetized, and the sinister and secret methods then adopted, will be
remembered as long as the financial history of this country endures; and the
real purpose of the enemies of silver will be understood and interpreted by
that legislation, rather than by their present enforced attitude. The silent
and surreptitious elimination of the silver dollar from coinage in 1873, and
from circulation as a legal tender except for the sum of five dollars and
under, was intended as the death blow to silver money in this country, and
would have remained and operated as such but for the sweeping popular protest
which a few years later followed the discovery of the wrong and fraud. The
authors of the design against silver at that time played with hidden hands;
so much so that the most vigilant representatives in both branches of
Congress were deceived, and even the President of the United States, when he
signed the bill, was not aware, as his public utterances afterwards
disclosed, of the stealthy and destructive step which had been taken."
"Now, however, those who eighteen years ago wrought under cover for
the destruction of one-half the honest, debt-paying money of the American
people, are well known as if a light had been turned on them, and are as
universally distrusted by the laboring and productive masses as if they had
been caught in the commission of crime. This feeling of distrust is confined
to no one party. The ablest and most distinguished opponents of silver money
in the United States, and, more than any other one man, the author of the
legislation of 1873 on that subject, has been taken before three national
conventions of the Republican party seeking a nomination for the Presidency,
and seeking it in vain. Mr. Sherman of Ohio, is always to be spoken of with
respect as a man of ability and large experience, and more especially so in
connection with the finances of the country."
"It is true he has been on both sides of every financial issue for
more than a quarter of a century past, but it is also true that he has always
veered from one point of the compass to the other at the exact time when his
services were most valuable to the money power, and most oppressive to the
laboring, over-taxed, debt-paying farmers and wage workers of the country.
And yet, with all his eminent services in behalf of the financial centers,
banking corporations, usurers, interest eaters, and parasites on human labor
generally, the leaders of the Republican party in New York have never dared
in national convention to cast the vote of that State for him. The
opportunity was presented in 1880, 1884, and 1888, and the weight of
obligation which the moneyed interests were under to Mr. Sherman was not
denied; but a wholesome fear that the plain people would resent at the polls
his hostility to their interests restrained the impulse of gratitude, if,
indeed, such a sensation as gratitude is ever known to organized
wealth."
"In reaching a conclusion adverse to the sincerity, patriotism, and
public virtue of the leaders of the crusade against silver money, the
American people have been actively and earnestly engaged, especially since
1878, in educating themselves on the subject from every legitimate source of
information. They have examined the history of silver from the days of the
patriarchs to the present time, in order to ascertain wherein it has been at
fault in the world's commerce, trade and traffic, and why now, near the close
of the nineteenth century, it deserves extermination. They have scanned its
career as it has come down through all the ages alongside of gold, in order
to see where and when it has proved a less honorable money metal, or a less
reliable measure of value, than the yellow coin which has borne it
company."
"When some startling crime takes place, when a homicide is committed,
the real motive of the perpetrator becomes the subject of anxious and
vigilant scrutiny; and so when the assassination of silver money occurred in
1873, it put the American people on notice to discover, if possible, the true
meaning of such an unexpected and revolutionary act. They have found nothing
in the origin, history, career, or services of silver during the past four
thousand years to inspire an honest or patriotic motive for its death. Its
origin as money under divine law is the same as that accorded to gold. In
American history the silver dollar has a peculiarly glorious origin, exalted
sanction, and useful career."
"The paternity of the silver dollar of the United States is due to
Thomas Jefferson. In June 1783, that great leader of political and economic
thought in his own country and throughout the world, was appointed by the
Legislature of Virginia a delegate to the Continental Congress, and took his
seat as such at Trenton on the 4th day of November following. With the
achievement of our independence it became necessary to depart from the
English system of pounds, shillings, and pence, and to devise a system of
currency for ourselves---an American system. In his autobiography, written in
1821, Jefferson, in referring to the proceedings of the Congress whereof he
became a member, says---
"They, as early as 1782, had turned their attention to the moneys
current in the several States, and had directed the Financier, Robert Morris,
to report to them a table of rates at which the foreign coins should be
received at the Treasury. That officer, or rather his assistant, Gouverneur
Morris, answered them on the 15th in an able and elaborate statement of the
denominations of money current in the several States, and of the comparative
value of the foreign coins chiefly in circulation with us. He went into the
consideration of the necessity of establishing a standard of value with us,
and of the adoption of a money unit." (Jefferson speaking)
"Jefferson then describes the standard of value and the money unit
reported by the Financier to whom the subject had been entrusted, and
proceeds to point out his objections to the same. Having given his views
against the report, he says on page 53 of his autobiography---
"Such a system of money arithmetic would be entirely unmanageable for
the common purposes of society. I proposed, therefore, instead of this, to
adopt the Dollar as our unit of account and payment, and that its divisions
and sub-divisions should be in the decimal ratio. I wrote some notes on the
subject which I submitted to the consideration of the Financier. I received
his answer and adherence to his general system , only agreeing to take for
his unit one hundred of those he first proposed, so that a Dollar should be
14.40 and a crown 16 units. I replied to this, and printed my notes and reply
on a sheet, which I put into the hands of members of Congress for
consideration, and the committee agreed to report on my principle. This was
adopted the ensuing year, and is the system which now prevails."
(Jefferson speaking)
"In the appendix to his autobiography Jefferson still further
explains the silver dollar as our standard of value and unit of account and
payment, discusses the amount of pure silver and of alloy it should contain,
and points out the proportion which gold should bear to silver, silver being
the standard by which to measure the value of gold, as well as the value of
everything else. The action of the Continental Congress, thus secured by
Jefferson, was immediately endorsed under the federal constitution of 1789,
and received the full sanction of that instrument. Alexander Hamilton,
Washington's first Secretary of the Treasury, universally regarded as one of
the greatest financiers in the world's history, fully concurred with
Jefferson in regard to the coinage and use of silver money. In a report he
made to Congress in 1791 Hamilton said---
"To annul the use of either of the metals as money is to abridge the
quantity of the circulating medium, and is liable to all the objections which
arise from a comparison of the benefits of a full with the evils of a scanty
circulation."
"Washington, in the abundance of his wisdom, gave his strong approval
to the free and unlimited coinage of silver, and the giant intellects of such
men as Madison and John Marshall failed to discover that such legislation was
either dangerous or reckless. From the beginning of the republic, onward in
its marvelous career of development and glory, the dollar of the fathers of
the constitution for eighty-four years rendered its constant and
indispensable aid to the trade, commerce, and prosperity of the American
people. In peace and in war it was honorable par-money, and often higher than
par with gold, in all the gigantic and widespread transactions of American
progress and expansion."
"For more than three quarters of the most enlightened and progressive
century in human history the silver dollar was the honored and unquestioned
currency of the United States. At the most critical and crucial periods of the
government's existence it was far more relied upon than gold. The war of
1812, the war with Mexico, and the war for the union were more indebted for
their success to silver money, both as a circulating medium and as a metallic
basis for the support of a paper currency, than to gold. The gold of the
country in times of peril lies hidden away for speculative purposes, while
silver remains with the masses and bears the brunt of active use. It is
especially endeared to the pioneers and settlers of the new States, admitted
into the Union after the adoption of the constitution, and to their
descendants who have witnessed its blessings."
"With silver money the vast farming regions of the United States have
been bought and paid for, and the homes of millions, and of hundreds of
millions yet to come, secured and improved wholly by its use. In all those
mighty agricultural belts lying in the embrace of the Mississippi and its
tremendous tributaries, it has been known and proudly designated as
"land office money." Up the gradual and fertile slopes of the Rocky
Mountains, onward through their deep cleft canyons, over their ranges of
perpetual snow, and down the other side through lands of fabulous wealth and
tropical beauty, to the waters of the Pacific, the silver dollar has been the
active, ever-present money of advancing civilization, the foremost financial
missionary in the conversion of the wilderness and waste places into smiling
abodes of human happiness. Silver money is the busy, efficient agent of the
laboring millions of the world in their daily transactions involving small
sums, while the functions of gold are mainly adapted to the use of great
operators, the wealthy but powerful few."
"At every stage of American industrial development, the farmer, the
mechanic, the wage worker, and all the sons and daughters of toil, working
their way across the continent, building cities of commerce by its lakes and
rivers, and interlacing it from ocean to ocean with vast thoroughfares of
iron, steel and steam, have never doubted the dollar of their fathers, and
have only wished it more plentiful in exchange for their labor."
"By whom, then, and for what reason, has silver money, with such a
record of usefulness and integrity, been assailed for destruction? The charge
that it is, or ever has been, dishonest money can come only from dishonest
sources. The statement that the legal tender silver dollar ever cheated the
laborer is a self-evident falsehood. Those who speak of it as a debased
currency only debase themselves by first slandering what their selfish
interests and knavish avarice impel them to destroy. Even now, after eighteen
years of assault and defamation, crippled and discredited as silver money has
been by the legislation of 1873, the world bears witness every day that its
purchasing power is as great as that of gold, and that it will purchase gold
itself, dollar for dollar, whenever such a transaction is desirable."
"It may be stated, therefore, without the slightest fear of
contradiction that the attack upon silver money in this and other countries
is based upon no demerit or unsoundness on its part, but is simply a movement
for the contraction of the currency to the extent of more than one-half the
precious metals now in existence. This movement is made by the moneyed
classes who wish to increase the purchasing power of money in their own hands
by making it scarce in the hands of others; by people with large incomes
growing out of monopolies protected by unjust legislation; by those who enjoy
annuities, interest on public securities, fixed salaries under great
corporations, and by the creditor classes in general, including all enormous
loan associations, who join in the movement of silver destruction and
financial contraction in order to enhance two-fold and more, the value and
power of the money they wring from the hands of laboring people. There is a
power in this movement of financial contraction, if successful, which will
result in the practical enslavement of those who are in debt and who toil for
a living."
"The power of money to govern countries and to enslave people is
always to be found where money is concentrated in the hands of the privileged
few, while to the great body of the people, the laboring multitudes, is left
but a meager, scant, and stinted circulation with which to supply their wants
and meet the exactions laid upon them. The policy of contraction is the
policy of organized, unsparing, pitiless avarice, and in its rage to diminish
the amount of money in the hands of the people, one branch of the currency is
no more secure from assault than another. The establishment of a plutocracy,
which is defined as the "paramount influence of wealth, the rule or
supremacy of the rich," is the sole aim and end in view, and neither is
the best secured, best debt paying, legal tender, par-circulating paper money
in the world, nor gold itself, if found to stand in the way of contraction,
any safer than silver from attack by the enemies of a full circulation and
good prices for labor and property."
"Gladstone, in pointing out the dangers which beset England,
says---"We are in danger of engendering both a gerontocracy and a
plutocracy." A gerontocracy signifies the rule of old families---a
danger imminent in this country; but a far greater evil is at our doors. The
power of money, pure and simple, in the hands of a very small percentage of
our population, who are without ability except in money-getting, and without
honorable service to their country in war or in peace, now rules the councils
of this government, and casts its threatening and baleful shadow over the
present and the future of the American people."
"In arriving at a conclusion as to the true motives which inspire the
movement for the demonetization of silver, the history of the production of
the precious metals and the effect of new mines and increased supplies become
of great interest and importance. When gold was found in large quantities in
California and Australia, a panic ensued among the creditor classes
throughout the world, for fear that the amount of gold then in use would be
so increased as to weaken its purchasing power, and make it too easily
attainable by the producing classes in exchange for their commodities. He who
examines the current history of the times forty years ago will find that upon
the discovery of the new gold fields of that period an excited and alarmed
discussion sprang up in regard to the threatened evils of a gold inflation
produced by an overabundant supply of that metal. Many writers throughout
Europe and in this country engaged their talents on the subject. They
regarded the expansion of the currency by the new streams of gold pouring
into it as a frightful calamity, and raised their vehement and doleful
protests against it."
"Many authors might be cited, and numerous extracts given, all
evincing the same hostility to gold because of the quantity, not the quality,
of the money it was likely to afford. So great, in fact, was the alarm
created that gold was actually demonetized in Austria and in most of the
German states within a period of seven years after California and Australia
commenced pouring their treasures into the channels of trade and commerce.
This action was reversed, and silver was selected as the victim for
demonetization, only when the discovery of silver in such mighty deposits as
the Comstock Lode and in other great mines seemed to threaten a greater
increase in silver than in gold."
"In a speech of very great ability and research delivered in the
Senate on the 12th of May, 1890, Senator Jones of Nevada made the following
statement---
"As soon as the discoveries of gold were made in the alluvial
deposits of California and Australia, or, rather, as soon as it was suspected
that money would thereby become considerably increased in volume, the
creditors everywhere, took steps to avert what they characterized as a great
calamity. They openly declared their purpose, by every means in their power,
to prevent a decline in the value of money, so that the purchasing power of
their incomes might not be reduced. They determined to go to any length in
order to prevent the rise of prices which their aggressive instincts led them
to fear would follow the addition to the money volume of the world by the
natural and much needed yield of the mines. The fiat therefore went forth
that one of the metals must be discarded. If anything were needed to
demonstrate that the reason for the demonetization of silver was the cupidity
of the creditor classes, the money lenders, and that it was not any defect in
the metal silver, nor any change in its adaptability to serve the purposes of
money, it is found in the significant fact that the metal first selected for
demonetization was not silver, but gold---that metal which has since become
the idol of the money changers, and which is now declared to be the only
natural money. The openly avowed determination was to increase the power of
money, and in order to accomplish that purpose the metal which promised the
largest yield was to be condemned and stripped of its ancient monetary
function. So strongly was this determination set forth, se earnestly was it
presented, and so urgently pressed on the ground of duty, that its
achievement came to be regarded as the fulfillment of a high moral
purpose." (Senator Jones speaking)
"It is constantly insisted, however, that the coinage and use of
silver money will drive gold out of the country which adopts both metals. The
facts of history not only refute such a statement, but place it beyond
discussion and reduce it to contempt. The dismal prediction of gold exportation
from our shores was repeated a thousand times on the floors of both branches
of Congress when silver was restored to coinage in 1878, and the raven-croak
of coming disaster was taken up and echoed all over the land by the
subsidized agencies of the monometalists, the money power, the plutocracy. It
is enough to say on this point that, while there was $230,000,000 of gold in
this country in 1878, there is about $700,000,000 now. Instead of being
forced abroad by the exigencies of trade, gold has remained at home and
multiplied itself more than three fold. This stupendous fact would of itself
crush the movement for the destruction of silver were it not that insatiate
avarice is deaf to reason and blind to truth. The spirit of Mammon, the
lowest of the fallen angels, can never die, but lives on forever, spanning
the eternities with falsehood, fraud, and false pretence, for the oppression
of the toiling multitudes of the human race."
"Let France be cited in proof of the fraternal relations with which
gold and silver, when equally honored, move along in the affairs of a
government, whether in prosperity or adversity, in sunshine or in storm. The
government of France since 1803, whether under the Napoleons or the Bourbons,
or emerging from the shackles of monarchy into the glorious garb of a
republic, has never discriminated between the free and unlimited coinage of
the two metals, and her financial record, tried by the hardest tests, is
without parallel among the nations. No other people on the globe could have furnished
forth without panic, bank failures, and widespread financial disaster, one
thousand millions of dollars ($1,000,000,000) in gold on the sudden demand of
their conquerors, to be drawn at once in bulk by loaded trains and army
wagons from their country. Through this terrible ordeal the government of
France, without groan of financial distress, passed at the close of the
Franco-Prussian War. Her people, full of employment at fair prices, with a
circulating medium three times as large per capita as their European
neighbors, or as our own, have remained contentedly at home."
"Emigration from France is unknown, while every port on our shores is
crowded from day to day and from year to year by German laborers, the very
bone and sinew of their fatherland, fleeing from oppression and
impoverishment inflicted upon Germany by the demonetization of silver and the
meager amount of money left in circulation. In a recent speech made by Joseph
F. Johnston, president of the Alabama National Bank at Birmingham, the following
very striking and instructive passage occurs---
"Can we not follow in the steps of the great republic of Europe? No
country on the face of the earth has such a financial record as France; in an
incredibly short period of time she not only recovered from the enormous
losses of war, and the heavy exactions of a victorious enemy, but was able to
come to the relief of imperial England and save her from destruction, when
her financial system was tottering, and the monetary repose of the world
threatened by the fall of the Barings. If at that time, she had only one
hundred millions of silver, instead of seven hundred millions, what
destruction would have followed that financial earthquake! The broken wrecks
would have been found on every beach, and desolation and distress would have
swept over the civilized world. If all the silver produced in the world, less
that used in the arts, was coined into dollars by the government of the
United States, it would require the world's product for nearly ten years to
give us the per capita circulation of silver that France now has."
(Johnston speaking, strangely honest for a banker)
"But the opponents of silver in the United States point to Great
Britain as an example for the American people to follow. A more unfortunate reference
could not be made in support of the demonetization of silver. The British
government is based upon an aristocracy of wealth and pauperized labor to an
extent hitherto unknown since the downfall of corrupt, imperial Rome. Her
policy has not only placed her as the leading creditor nation of the earth,
but in the midst of her own people she has made distinctions so deep and
broad that the very few own everything, and their established incomes swallow
up the proceeds of every toiling hand in the United Kingdom. The oppression
of the British laborer arises not from free trade, but from a stringent
contraction of the amount of money in circulation, and the consequent
increase of the purchasing power of money in exchange for labor and what
labor produces."
"A glance at the creditor and income classes on the one hand, and the
toiling multitudes, on the other, throughout Great Britain, is appalling.
According to reliable official statements, the population of the United
Kingdom, embracing England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland, may be put down at
28,000,000, and her lands at 72,119,962 acres. Of these lands 51,885, 148
acres, more than two-thirds of the whole property of the kingdom, are owned
by less than 11,000 persons. These vast land owners draw a rental from an
oppressed tenantry of over $562,000,000 per annum, and as the amount of money
circulating in the kingdom is contracted, and its volume diminished, so is
the purchasing and governing power of these enormous millions increased, and
the privileged few aggrandized by grinding the faces of the poor. The foreign
policy of England is often denounced for its brutal rapacity, but her home
policy, whereby an idle, sensual, income-devouring aristocracy enjoys full
and free license to prey upon her toiling masses, wears a darker hue than
even the perfidious and crimson stains she has left on distant shores, and
with which she has incarnadined the seas. The demonetization of silver is
simply in accord with her general system of wealth aggrandizement and labor
oppression."
"Let those who ape the British system of finances look steadfastly at
the horrible results which have followed its adoption and enforcement at
home. It is there, as it is here, a concoction of educated, sleepless,
ruthless avarice for the purpose of making a shrinkage in all values except
the value of money due to the monopolists of wealth; for the purpose of
cheapening the wages of every laborer and the price of everything labor has
to sell. Such a system of government is fraught with far greater calamities
to the great body of the people than the visitations of war or the scourge of
pestilence. Political organizations may be disturbed by differences of
opinion in their ranks, and may sometimes dodge and evade this great question
as far as possible; but the American people are growing more enlightened
every day, and in the very near future they will re-establish the policy of
Jefferson and the fathers, and restore to themselves the natural and
unrestricted use of silver money. The free and unlimited coinage of silver
will stand as an issue in the elections of this and approaching years until
its complete triumph. No one need expect the silver issue to be ignored, or
to lose its vital importance in the consideration of the people or in the
councils of government."
A very fine fellow, this Senator Voorhees was! We can begin electing more
men like him and Representative Mills, pro-silver and pro-gold men---or
women---if we will give up part of our professional sports watching time (I
was never into that) and lobby Congress. There are numerous other items that
could be brought up on the subject of the silver war of 1873-1893 (the bad
guys won another round in 1893 with the repeal of the 1890 act), but time
nears for brief discussion of the silver surprises. Some finishing details on
the silver wars of 1873-1893 are in order. In the article, "Gold, Silver
And Bimetallism" (Westminster Review, volume 131, January-June, 1889),
we note on page 217---
"Bimetallists are sometimes reviled as lunatics."
If you wanted silver along with gold, you were a lunatic, according to the
bankers. Lord Herschell, then Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, also
president of the Gold & Silver Commission in London, said (page 218) to
return to silver would be "a leap in the dark." In keeping with the
banker mentality of controlling presidential outcomes by controlling the
nominating processes of both parties, the bankers also ran a front called the
Bimetallic League, ran by H.H. Gibbs and H.R. Grenfell, both former governors
of the Bank of England (page 216)---the same entity that sent Ernest Seyd to
help through the demonetization of silver in 1873! Others attacking silver
included Sir John Lubbock (later Baron of Avebury), member of Parliament, and
Prime Ministers like Gladstone, a confidant of the Rothschilds. J. Barr
Robertson, author of this article, commented on page 226---
"The increase in the purchasing power of gold has caused very great
injury in transactions involving the exchanges with countries using
silver."
That was exactly the bankers' intention! Disraeli, another Prime Minister
and Rothschild associate, called for exclusion of silver money (Merchants
Magazine & Commercial Review, December 1853, page 741). And as Senator
Voorhees said, even gold money itself could be attacked should it serve the
bankers' plans. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, July 16, 1964, page
197, quoted former Federal Reserve chairman Marriner Eccles (also opposed to
silver money, C & F Chronicle, April 22, 1939, page 2355) as saying---
"Congress should amend the Federal Reserve Act to repeal the gold
reserve requirement back of Federal Reserve Notes."
Frederick Shull of the Gold Standard League commented on the view given by
Eccles (same page)---
"Since Federal Reserve Notes possess no intrinsic value whatever, no
greater harm could possibly be done to the monetary system of this nation
than removing the gold backing of those Federal Reserve notes."
We know what took place in 1971---the "gold window" was closed.
Below, consider image of J.P. Morgan, "almost lord of creation"
according to biographer John Blum---
J.P. Morgan was active in the silver wars of the last century, and in
many, many large scale financial manipulations, and the bank that bore his
name is now merged with the Rockefeller flagship bank to give us
JPMorganChase, a bank often mentioned in connection with gold shorting and
gold rigging schemes, the same bank that in fall 2001 tried to talk the
silver price down to $3.60 (the low was $4.01). Lord Avebury, chairman of the
London Bankers Association (the same anti-silver fellow we just read about),
and Alfred Rothschild, were among those paying verbal tribute upon Morgan's
death in 1913 ("History of the Great American Fortunes," pages
634-635). We have to understand that the war on silver and later, on gold
also, is led by a closely-knit fraternity of financiers centered in London
and New York. Henry Morgenthau sr., father of Roosevelt's treasury secretary,
was a member of the Order of the British Empire. Leon Fraser, head of the
Bank for International Settlements in the 1930's, blamed U.S. silver coinage
for contributing to the world's money troubles (Commercial and Financial
Chronicle, May 18, 1935, page 3306). There are many hundreds of such items
existing across the public record. This bankers' insanity against real
money---precious metals---must be stopped, if civilization itself is to be
saved! Frederick Shull (Commercial & Financial Chronicle, April 8, 1965,
page 1461) quoted Daniel Webster's speech, "A Redeemable Paper
Currency," delivered in the United States Senate on February 22, 1834---
"All bank notes, to be safe, must be convertible into gold and silver
at the will of the holder. Irredeemable paper money is miserable, abominable,
and fraudulent---a fraudulent policy which attempts to give value to any
paper, of any bank, one single moment longer than such paper is redeemable on
demand in gold and silver."
And as we note in New Englander & Yale Review, December 1889, page
455---
"Under irredeemable paper, constantly increasing in amount, the
disaster when it comes is overwhelming, and bankruptcy general."
FOUR SILVER SURPRISES!
While an understanding of historical background on precious metals is
important in fully comprehending the silver and gold situation, we must also
apply what we know in practice. The first silver surprise I will mention, is
something you most likely were aware of already---investment demand on a
large scale will send metals prices flying. This will be a bitter surprise to
the paper money community. It won't be a complete surprise to them, but it
will surprise the masses who weren't in at the bottom. The next silver
surprise is remonetization of silver and gold. The Government of Malaysia is
returning to circulating gold and silver coins, and has even been a
participant in a private placement of securities with an American mining
company that has a huge metals deposit---one from which a big multinational very
foolishly walked away from. Remonetization of gold and silver is essential to
the stability of civilization. The bankers will fight it bitterly, another
reason we have to have a Precious Metals lobby (the third silver surprise),
similar to the American Rifle Association---a lobby for mining shareholders
and physical investors both. As we find on page 216 of New Englander &
Yale Review, March 1890---
"The economic demand for silver for use as legal tender money, is as
legitimate a demand of it for spoons or watch cases, and will certainly add
to the value of silver as a commodity."
And as we read in Merchants Magazine & Commercial Review, February
1851, page 266 ("The Scarcity Of Silver Coin")---
"The probability of silver becoming scarce in the United States will
have a serious tendency to enhance its value."
And as the same source said the following month (page 277)---
"All persons will gain whose property consists of silver."
THE FOURTH SILVER SURPRISE!
Exxon Mobil is a vertically integrated natural resource company that
explores for petroleum and natural gas, drills it, refines it, and sells it
to the consumer. You can fuel your vehicle at an Exxon or a Mobil station,
and buy a quart of oil there. So the bombshell silver surprise
is---vertically integrated silver companies! For so many decades silver users
have fed off silver miners, pulling strings to hold a lid on the silver
price; whereas, the fabricated price of silver has always given the users
large profits. I propose that we exclude the silver users from receiving the
raw material, as readily as they have been used to getting it. We will now
fabricate lines of consumer products, and there is no need to allow a bully
company like Wal Mart to market these items. This the silver mining firms can
do themselves. Appropriate talent can be hired, and we are on our way. Silver
shareholders need to communicate this concept to their managements. It won't
pass to be told we're in the silver mining business, not other businesses.
Maximization of profits is the goal. I have received favorable commentary
from the investor relations department of a top-tier company.
In this manner, we can enjoy not only the much higher expected market
price for silver, but also fabrication mark-ups, frequently doubling our
profits. If silver reaches $200 an ounce, we can sell sterling silver table
sets, tea and coffee services, special silver pots and pans, such as an
Italian manufacturer already does, and silver jewelry for twice the bullion
rate, via online catalogs, straight to the consuming public. There is no need
to buy silver from Tiffany's, let them prospect for their own ore! This will
prove more profitable than a line of bullion coins, bars and wafers. Let the
shrieks of rage now begin from Silver Users Association headquarters! You
people were so worried about sharply higher prices, now you see the
suggestion that many silver companies won't sell you the necessary raw
material! To you we say, you richly deserve this fate. To you we say--- you
can still have silver---go mine it yourself! Especially now that all the best
mineral sites are locked up! I guess they'd rather have a blind date with
someone named Queenie Burltop! Silver user--- hey you, yeah, you, you
you---how do you like your world? Walter Frankland of the Silver Users
Association, start some serious worrying! As a line from a psychic in
"The Rockford Files" (1974) has it---
"Dangerous forces are gathering around his persona!"
Striking out from London like an octopus that strangles,
Hidden financial alliances, danger that entangles!
Working secretly to take our silver away,
What are these banker lowlifes planning today?
American finances, perverted by the British Empire,
Call for return to silver and gold, bankers catch on fire!
Get away from that empty-headed football game,
And lobby Congress---it's yours to reclaim!
As the economist wipes the pus from his eyes,
We look at him and he's covered with flies!
He stands in supreme disgrace,
Lying for bankers all over the place!
Industrial users, feeding off silver miners for years,
See what's coming, the worst of your fears!
We'll make our own items for the end user,
Looks like you end up the big loser!
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