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The collaboration between Benjamin Strong and Lord Montagu Norman
is one of the greatest secrets of the twentieth century. Benjamin
Strong married the daughter of the president of Bankers Trust
in New York, and subsequently succeeded to its presidency. Carroll
Quigley, in Tragedy and Hope says: "Strong became Governor
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as the joint nominee
of Morgan and of Kuhn, Loeb Company in 1914."87
Lord Montagu Norman is the only man in history who had both his
maternal grandfather and his paternal grandfather serve as Governors
of the Bank of England. His father was with Brown, Shipley Company,
the London Branch of Brown Brothers (now Brown Brothers Harriman).
Montagu Norman (1871-1950) came to New York to work for Brown
Brothers in 1894, where he was befriended by the Delano family,
and by James Markoe, of Brown Brothers. He returned to England,
and in 1907 was named to the Court of the Bank of England. In
1912, he had a nervous breakdown, and went to Switzerland to
be treated by Jung, as was fashionable among the powerful group
which he represented.*
Lord Montagu Norman was Governor of the Bank of England from
1916 to 1944. During this period, he participated in the central
bank conferences which set up the Crash of 1929 and a worldwide
depression. In The Politics of Money by Brian Johnson, he writes,
"Strong and Norman, intimate friends, spent their holidays
together at Bar Harbour and in the South of France." Johnson
says, "Norman therefore became Strong's alter ego. . . .
"Strong's easy money policies on the New York money market
from 1925-28 were the fulfillment of his agreement with Norman
to keep New York interest rates below those of London. For the
sake of international cooperation, Strong withheld the steadying
hand of high interest rates from New York until it was too late.
Easy money in New
__________________________
87 Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope, Macmillan, New York, p.
326
* When people of this class are stricken by guilt feelings while
plotting world wars and economic depressions which will bring
misery, suffering and death to millions of the world's inhabitants,
they sometimes have qualms. These qualms are jeered at by their
peers as "a failure of nerve". After a bout with their
psychiatrists, they return to their work with renewed gusto,
with no further digressions of pity for "the little people"
who are to be their victims.
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York had encouraged the surging American boom of the late 1920s,
with its fantastic heights of speculation."88
Benjamin Strong died suddenly in 1928. The New York Times obituary,
Oct. 17, 1928, describes the conference between the directors
of the three great central banks in Europe in July, 1927, "Mr.
Norman, Bank of England, Strong of the New York Federal Reserve
Bank, and Dr. Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank, their meeting
referred to at the time as a meeting of 'the world's most exclusive
club'. No public reports were ever made of the foreign conferences,
which were wholly informal, but which covered many important
questions of gold movements, the stability of world trade, and
world economy."
The meetings at which the future of the world's economy are decided
are always reported as being "wholly informal", off
the record, no reports made to the public, and on the rare occasions
when outraged Congressmen summon these mystery figures to testify
about their activities they merely trace the outline of steps
taken, and develop no information about what was really said
or decided.
At the Senate Hearings on the Federal Reserve System in 1931,
H. Parker Willis, one of the authors and First Secretary of the
Federal Reserve Board from 1914 until 1920, pointedly asked Governor
George Harrison, Strong's successor as Governor of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York:
"What is the relationship between the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York and the money
committee of the Stock Exchange?"
"There is no relationship," Governor Harrison replied.
"There is no assistance or cooperation in fixing the rate
in any way?", asked Willis.
"No," said Governor Harrison, "although on various
occasions they advise us of the state of the
money situation, and what they think the rate ought to be."
This was an absolute contradiction of
his statement that "There is no relationship". The
Federal Reserve Bank of New York which set
the discount rate for the other Reserve Banks, actually maintained
a close liaison with the money
committee of the Stock Exchange.
The House Stabilization Hearings of 1928 proved conclusively
that the Governors of the Federal Reserve System had been holding
conferences with heads of the big European central banks. Even
had the Congressmen known the details of the plot which was to
culminate in the Great Depression of 1929-31, there would have
been nothing they could have done to stop it. The international
bankers who controlled gold movements could inflict their will
on any country, and the United States was as helpless as any
other.
Notes from these House Hearings follow:
__________________________
88 Brian Johnson, The Politics of Money, McGraw Hill, New York,
1970, p. 63.
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MR. BEEDY: "I notice on your chart that the lines which
produce the most violent fluctuations are found under 'Money
Rates in New York.' As the rates of money rise and fall in the
big cities the loans that are made on investments seem to take
advantage of them, at present, a quite violent change, while
industry in general does not seem to avail itself of these violent
changes, and that line is fairly even, there being no great rises
or declines.
GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: This was all more or less in the interests
of the international situation. They sold gold credits in New
York for sterling balances in London.
REPRESENTATIVE STRONG: (No relation to Benjamin): Has the Federal
Reserve Board the power to attract gold to this country?
E.A. GOLDENWEISER, research director for the Board: The Federal
Reserve Board could attract gold to this country by making money
rates higher.
GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: I think we are very close to the point
where any further solicitude on our part for the monetary concerns
of Europe can be altered. The Federal Reserve Board last summer,
1927, set out by a policy of open market purchases, followed
in course by reduction on the discount rate at the Reserve Banks,
to ease the credit situation and to cheapen the cost of money.
The official reasons for that departure in credit policy were
that it would help to stabilize international exchange and stimulate
the exportation of gold.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Will you tell us briefly how that matter was
brought to the Federal Reserve Board and what were the influences
that went into the final determination?
GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: You are asking a question impossible
for me to answer.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Perhaps I can clarify it--where did the suggestion
come from that caused this decision of the change of rates last
summer?
GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: The three largest central banks in Europe
had sent representatives to this country. There were the Governor
of the Bank of England, Mr. Hjalmar Schacht, and Professor Rist,
Deputy Governor of the Bank of France. These gentlemen were in
conference with officials of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York. After a week or two, they appeared in Washington for the
better part of a day. They came down the evening of one day and
were the guests of the Governors of the Federal Reserve Board
the following day, and left that afternoon for New York.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Were the members of the Board present at this
luncheon?
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GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: Oh, yes, it was given by the Governors
of the Board for the purpose of bringing all of us together.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Was it a social affair, or were matters of
importance discussed?
GOVERNOR MILLER: I would say it was mainly a social affair. Personally,
I had a long conversation with Dr. Schacht alone before the luncheon,
and also one of considerable length with Professor Rist. After
the luncheon I began a conversation with Mr. Norman, which was
joined in by Governor Strong of New York.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Was that a formal meeting of the Board?
GOVERNOR ADOLPH MILLER: No.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: It was just an informal discussion of the
matters they had been discussing in New York?
GOVERNOR MILLER: I assume so. It was mainly a social occasion.
What I said was mainly in the nature of generalities. The heads
of these central banks also spoke in generalities.
MR. KING: What did they want?
GOVERNOR MILLER: They were very candid in answers to questions.
I wanted to have a talk with Mr. Norman, and we both stayed behind
after luncheon, and were joined by the other foreign representatives
and the officials of the New York Reserve Bank. These gentlemen
were all pretty concerned with the way the gold standard was
working. They were therefore desirous of seeing an easy money
market in New York and lower rates, which would deter gold from
moving from Europe to this country. That would be very much in
the interest of the international money situation which then
existed.
MR. BEEDY: Was there some understanding arrived at between the
representatives of these foreign banks and the Federal Reserve
Board or the New York Federal Reserve Bank?
GOVERNOR MILLER: Yes.
MR. BEEDY: It was not reported formally?
GOVERNOR MILLER: No. Later, there came a meeting of the Open-Market
Policy Committee, the investment policy committee of the Federal
Reserve System, by which and to which certain recommendations
were made. My recollection is that about eighty million dollars
worth of securities were purchased in August consistent with
this plan.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Was there any conference between the members
of the Open Market Committee and those bankers from abroad?
GOVERNOR MILLER: They may have met them as individuals, but not
as a committee.
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MR. KING: How does the Open-Market Committee get its ideas?
GOVERNOR MILLER: They sit around and talk about it. I do not
know whose idea this was. It was distinctly a time in which there
was a cooperative spirit at work.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: You have outlined here negotiations of very
great importance.
GOVERNOR MILLER: I should rather say conversations.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Something of a very definite character took
place?
GOVERNOR MILLER: Yes.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: A change of policy on the part of our whole
financial system which has resulted in one of the most unusual
situations that has ever confronted this country financially
(the stock market speculation boom of 1927-1929). It seems to
me that a matter of that importance should have been made a matter
of record in Washington.
GOVERNOR MILLER: I agree with you.
REPRESENTATIVE STRONG: Would it not have been a good thing if
there had been a direction that those powers given to the Federal
Reserve System should be used for the continued stabilization
of the purchasing power of the American dollar rather than be
influenced by the interests of Europe?
GOVERNOR MILLER: I take exception to that term "influence".
Besides, there is no such thing as stabilizing the American dollar
without stabilizing every other gold currency. They are tied
together by the gold standard. Other eminent men who come here
are very adroit in knowing how to approach the folk who make
up the personnel of the Federal Reserve Board.
MR. STEAGALL: The visit of these foreign bankers resulted in
money being cheaper in New York?
GOVERNOR MILLER: Yes, exactly.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: I would like to put in the record all who
attended that luncheon in Washington.
GOVERNOR MILLER: In addition to the names I have given you, there
was also present one of the younger men from the Bank of France.
I think all members of the Federal Reserve Board were there.
Under Secretary of the Treasury Ogden Mills was there, and the
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Schuneman, also, two
or three men from the State Department and Mr. Warren of the
Foreign Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Oh
yes, Governor Strong was present.
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CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: This conference, of course, with all of these
foreign bankers did not just happen. The prominent bankers from
Germany, France, and England came here at whose suggestion?
GOVERNOR MILLER: A situation had been created that was distinctly
embarrassing to London by reason of the impending withdrawal
of a certain amount of gold which had been recovered by France
and that had originally been shipped and deposited in the Bank
of England by the French Government as a war credit. There was
getting to be some tension of mind in Europe because France was
beginning to put her house in order for a return to the gold
standard. This situation was one which called for some moderating
influence.
MR. KING: Who was the moving spirit who got those people together?
GOVERNOR MILLER: That is a detail with which I am not familiar.
REPRESENTATIVE STRONG: Would it not be fair to say that the fellows
who wanted the gold were the ones who instigated the meeting?
GOVERNOR MILLER: They came over here.
REPRESENTATIVE STRONG: The fact is that they came over here,
they had a meeting, they banqueted, they talked, they got the
Federal Reserve Board to lower the discount rate, and to make
the purchases in the open market, and they got the gold.
MR. STEAGALL: Is it true that action stabilized the European
currencies and upset ours?
GOVERNOR MILLER: Yes, that was what it was intended to do.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: Let me call your attention to the recent conference
in Paris at which Mr. Goldenweiser, director of research for
the Federal Reserve Board, and Dr. Burgess, assistant Federal
Reserve Agent of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, were in
consultation with the representatives of the other central banks.
Who called the conference?
GOVERNOR MILLER: My recollection is that it was called by the
Bank of France.
GOVERNOR YOUNG: No, it was the League of Nations who called them
together."
The secret meeting between the Governors of the Federal Reserve
Board and the heads of the European central banks was not called
to stabilize anything. It was held to discuss the best way of
getting the gold held in the United States by the System back
to Europe to force the nations of that continent back on the
gold standard. The League of Nations had not yet succeeded in
doing that, the objective for which that body was set up in the
first place, because the Senate of the United States
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had refused to let Woodrow Wilson betray us to an international
monetary authority. It took the Second World War and Franklin
D. Roosevelt to do that. Meanwhile, Europe had to have our gold
and the Federal Reserve System gave it to them, five hundred
million dollars worth. The movement of that gold out of the United
States caused the deflation of the stock boom, the end of the
business prosperity of the 1920s and the Great Depression of
1929-31, the worst calamity which has ever befallen this nation.
It is entirely logical to say that the American people suffered
that depression as a punishment for not joining the League of
Nations. The bankers knew what would happen when that five hundred
million dollars worth of gold was sent to Europe. They wanted
the Depression because it put the business and finance of the
United States in their hands.
The Hearings continue:
MR. BEEDY: "Mr. Ebersole of the Treasury Department concluded
his remarks at the dinner we attended last night by saying that
the Federal Reserve System did not want stabilization and the
American businessman did not want it. They want these fluctuations
in prices, not only in securities but in commodities, in trade
generally, because those who are now in control are making their
profits out of that very instability. If control of these people
does not come in a legitimate way, there may be an attempt to
produce it by general upheavals such as have characterized society
in days gone by. Revolutions have been promoted by dissatisfaction
with existing conditions, the control being in the hands of the
few, and the many paying the bills.
CHAIRMAN MCFADDEN: I have here a letter from a member of the
Federal Reserve Board who was summoned to appear here. I would
like to have it put in the record. It is from Governor Cunningham:
Dear Mr. Chairman:
For the past several weeks I have been confined to my home on
account of illness and am
now preparing to spend a few weeks away from Washington for the
purpose of hastening
convalescence.
Edward H. Cunningham
This is in answer to an invitation extended him to appear before
our Committee. I also have a letter from George Harrison, Deputy
Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
My dear Mr. Congressman:
Governor Strong sailed for Europe last week. He had not been
at all well since the first of the
year, and, while he did appear before your Committee last March,
it was only shortly after that
that he suffered a very severe attack of shingles, which has
sorely racked his nerves.
George L. Harrison, May 19, 1928
I also desire to place in the record a statement in the New York
Journal of Commerce, dated May 22, 1928, from Washington:
'It is stated in well-informed circles here that the chief topic
being taken up by Governor Strong
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on his present visit
to Paris is the arrangement of
stabilization credits for France, Rumania, and Yugoslavia. A
second vital question Mr. Strong
will take up is the amount of gold France is to draw from this
country.'"
Further questioning by Chairman McFadden about the strange illness
of Benjamin Strong brought forth the following testimony from
Governor Charles S. Hamlin of the Federal Reserve Board on May
23rd, 1928:
"All I know is that Governor Strong has been very ill, and
he has gone over to Europe primarily,
I understand, as a matter of health. Of course, he knows well
the various offices of the European
central banks and undoubtedly will call on them."
Governor Benjamin Strong died a few weeks after his return from
Europe, without appearing before the Committee.
The purpose of these hearings before the House Committee on Banking
and Currency in 1928 was to investigate the necessity for passing
the Strong bill, presented by Representative Strong (no relation
to Benjamin, the international banker), which would have provided
that the Federal Reserve System be empowered to act to stabilize
the purchasing power of the dollar. This had been one of the
promises made by Carter Glass and Woodrow Wilson when they presented
the Federal Reserve Act before Congress in 1912, and such a provision
had actually been put in the Act by Senator Robert L. Owen, but
Carter Glass' House Committee on Banking and Currency had struck
it out. The traders and speculators did not want the dollar to
become stable, because they would no longer be able to make a
profit. The citizens of this country had been led to gamble on
the stock market in the 1920s because the traders had created
a nationwide condition of instability.
The Strong Bill of 1928 was defeated in Congress.
The financial situation in the United States during the 1920s
was characterized by an inflation of speculative values only.
It was a trader-made situation. Prices of commodities remained
low, despite the over-pricing of securities on the exchange.
The purchasers did not expect their securities to pay dividends.
The idea was to hold them awhile and sell them at a profit. It
had to stop somewhere, as Paul Warburg remarked in March, 1929.
Wall Street did not let it stop until the people had put their
savings into these over-priced securities. We had the spectacle
of the President of the United States, Calvin Coolidge, acting
as a shill for the stock market operators when he recommended
to the American people that they continue buying on the
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market, in 1927. There had been uneasiness about the inflated
condition of the market, and the bankers showed their power by
getting the President of the United States, the Secretary of
the Treasury, and the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System to issue statements that brokers' loans
were not too high, and that the condition of the stock market
was sound.
Irving Fisher warned us in 1927 that the burden of stabilizing
prices all over the world would soon fall on the United States.
One of the results of the Second World War was the establishment
of an International Monetary Fund to do just that. Professor
Gustav Cassel remarked in the same year that:
"The downward movement of prices has not been a spontaneous
result of forces beyond our
control. It is the result of a policy deliberately framed to
bring down prices and give a higher
value to the monetary unit."
The Democratic Party, after passing the Federal Reserve Act and
leading us into the First World War, assumed the role of an opposition
party during the 1920s. They were on the outside of the political
fence, and were supported during those lean years by liberal
handouts from Bernard Baruch, according to his biography. How
far outside of it they were and how little chance they had in
1928, is shown by a plank in the official Democratic Party platform
adopted at Houston on June 28, 1928:
"The administration of the Federal Reserve System for the
advantage of the stock-market
speculators should cease. It must be administered for the benefit
of farmers, wage-earners,
merchants, manufacturers, and others engaged in constructive
business."
This idealism insured defeat for its protagonist, Al Smith, who
was nominated by Franklin D. Roosevelt. The campaign against
Al Smith also was marked by appeals to religious intolerance,
because he was a Catholic. The bankers stirred up anti-Catholic
sentiment all over the country to achieve the election of their
World War I protégé, Herbert Hoover.
Instead of being used to promote the financial stability of the
country, as had been promised by Woodrow Wilson when the Act
was passed, financial instability has been steadily promoted
by the Federal Reserve Board. An official memorandum issued by
the Board on March 13, 1939, stated that:
"The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System opposes
any bill which proposes a stable
price level."
Politically, the Federal Reserve Board was used to advance the
election of the bankers' candidates during the 1920s. The "Literary
Digest" on August 4, 1928, said, on the occasion of the
Federal Reserve Board raising the rate to five percent in a Presidential
year:
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"This reverses the politically desirable cheap money policy
of 1927, and gives smooth conditions
on the stock market. It was attacked by the Peoples' Lobby of
Washington, D.C. which said that
'This increase at a time when farmers needed cheap money to finance
the harvesting of their
crops was a direct blow at the farmers, who had begun to get
back on their feet after the
Agricultural Depression of 1920-21.
"The New York World" said on that occasion:
"Criticism of Federal Reserve Board policy by many investors
is not based on its attempt to
deflate the stock market, but on the charge that the Board itself,
by last year's policy, is
completely responsible for such stock market inflation as exists."
A damning survey of the Federal Reserve System's first fifteen
years appears in the "North American Review" of May,
1929, by H. Parker Willis, professional economist who was one
of the authors of the Act and First Secretary of the Board from
1914 until 1920. He expresses complete disillusionment.
"My first talk with President-elect Wilson was in 1912.
Our conversation related entirely to
banking reform. I asked whether he felt confident we could secure
the administration of a
suitable law and how we should get it applied and enforced. He
answered: 'We must rely on
American business idealism.' He sought for something which could
be trusted to afford
opportunity to American Idealism. It did serve to finance the
World War and to revise American
banking practices. The element of idealism that the President
prescribed and believed we could
get on the principle of noblesse oblige from American bankers
and businessmen was not there.
Since the inauguration of the Federal Reserve Act we have suffered
one of the most serious
financial depressions and revolutions ever known in our history,
that of 1920-21. We have seen
our agriculture pass through a long period of suffering and even
of revolution, during which one
million farmers left their farms, due to difficulties with the
price of land and the odd status of
credit conditions. We have suffered the most extensive era of
bank failures ever known in this
country. Forty-five hundred banks have closed their doors since
the Reserve System began
functioning. In some Western towns there have been times when
all banks in that community
failed, and given banks have failed over and over again. There
has been little difference in
liability to failure between members and non-members of the Federal
Reserve System.
"Wilson's choice of the first members of the Federal Reserve
Board was not especially happy.
They represented a composite group chosen for the express purpose
of placating this, that, or the
other big interest. It was not strange that appointees used their
places to pay debts. When the
Board was considering a resolution to the effect that future
members of the reserve system should
be appointed solely on merit, because of the demonstrated incompetence
of some of their number.
Comptroller John Skelton Williams moved to strike out the word
'solely' and in this he was
sustained by the Board. The inclusion of certain elements (Warburg,
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Strauss, etc.) in the Board gave an opportunity for catering
to special interests that was to prove
disastrous later on.
"President Wilson erred, as he often erred, in supposing
that the holding of an important office
would transform an incumbent and revivify his patriotism. The
Reserve Board reached the low
ebb of the Wilson period with the appointment of a member who
was chosen for his ability to get
delegates for a Democratic candidate for the Presidency. However,
this level was not the dregs
reached under President Harding. He appointed an old crony, D.R.
Crissinger, as Governor of the
Board, and named several other super-serviceable politicians
to other places. Before his death he
had done his utmost to debauch the whole undertaking. The System
has gone steadily downhill
ever since.
"Reserve Banks had hardly assumed their first form when
it became apparent that local bankers
had sought to use them as a means of taking care of 'favorite
sons', that is, persons who had by
common consent become a kind of general charge upon the banking
community, or inefficients
of various kinds. When reserve directors were to be chosen, the
country bankers often refused to
vote, or, when they voted, cast their ballots as directed by
city correspondents. In these
circumstances popular or democratic control of reserve banks
was out of the question. Reasonable
efficiency might have been secured if honest men, recognizing
their public duty, had assumed
power. If such men existed, they did not get on the Federal Reserve
Board. In one reserve bank
today the chief management is in the hands of a man who never
did a day's actual banking in his
life, while in another reserve institution both Governor and
Chairman are the former heads of now defunct banks. They naturally
have a high failure record in their district. In a majority of
districts the standard of performance as judged by good banking
standards is disgracefully low among reserve executive officials.
The policy of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia is known
in the System as the 'Friends and Relatives Banks.'
"It was while making war profits in considerable amounts
that someone conceived the idea of
using the profits to provide themselves with phenomenally costly
buildings. Today the Reserve
Banks must keep a full billion dollars of their money constantly
at work merely to pay their own
expenses in normal times.
"The best illustration of what the System has done and not
done is offered by the experience
which the country was having with speculation, in May, 1929.
Three years prior to that, the
present bull market was just getting under way. In the autumn
of 1926 a group of bankers, among
them one of world famous name, were sitting at a table in a Washington
hotel. One of them
raised the question whether the low discount rates of the System
were not likely to encourage
speculation.
"'Yes', replied the famous banker, 'they will, but that
cannot be helped. It is the price we must
pay for helping Europe.'
"It may well be questioned whether the encouragement of
speculation by the Board has been the
price paid for helping Europe or whether
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it is the price paid to induce a certain class of financiers
to help Europe, but in either case
European conditions should not have had anything to do with the
Board's discount policy. The
fact of the matter is that the Federal Reserve Banks do not come
into contact with the community.
"The 'small man' from Maine to Texas has gradually been
led to invest his savings in the stock
market, with the result that the rising tide of speculation,
transacted at a higher and higher rate
of speed, has swept over the legitimate business of the country.
"In March, 1928, Roy A. Young, Governor of the Board, was
called before a Senate committee.
'Do you think the brokers' loans are too high?", he was
asked.
"'I am not prepared to say whether brokers' loans are too
high or too low,' he replied, 'but I am
sure they are safely and conservatively made.'
"Secretary of the Treasury Mellon in a formal statement
assured the country that they were not
too high, and Coolidge, using material supplied him by the Federal
Reserve Board, made a plain
statement to the country that they were not too high. The Federal
Reserve Board, charged with the duty of protecting the interests
of the average man, thus did its utmost to assure the average
man that he should feel no alarm about his savings. Yet the Federal
Reserve Board issued on February 2, 1929, a letter addressed
to the Reserve Bank Directors cautioning them against grave danger
of further speculation.
"What could be expected from a group of men such as composed
the Board, a set of men who
were solely interested in standing from under when there was
any danger of friction, displaying a
bovine and canine appetite for credit and praise, while eager
only to 'stand in' with the 'big men'
whom they know as the masters of American finance and banking?"
H. Parker Willis omitted any reference to Lord Montague Norman
and the machinations of the Bank of England which were about
to result in the Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression.
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