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"Finance and the tariff are reserved by Nelson Aldrich as
falling within his sole purview and jurisdiction. Mr. Aldrich
is endeavoring to devise, through the National Monetary Commission,
a banking and currency law. A great many hundred thousand persons
are firmly of the opinion that Mr. Aldrich sums up in his personality
the greatest and most sinister menace to the popular welfare
of the United States. Ernest Newman recently said, 'What the
South visits on the Negro in a political way, Aldrich would mete
out to the mudsills of the North, if he could devise a safe and
practical way to accomplish it.'"--Harper's Weekly, May
7, 1910."
The participants in the Jekyll Island conference returned to
New York to direct a nationwide propaganda campaign in favor
of the "Aldrich Plan". Three of the leading universities,
Princeton, Harvard, and the University of Chicago, were used
as the rallying points for this propaganda, and national banks
had to contribute to a fund of five million dollars to persuade
the American public that this central bank plan should be enacted
into law by Congress.
Woodrow Wilson, governor of New Jersey and former president of
Princeton University, was enlisted as a spokesman for the Aldrich
Plan. During the Panic of 1907, Wilson had declared, "All
this trouble could be averted if we appointed a committee of
six or seven public-spirited men like J.P. Morgan to handle the
affairs of our country."
In his biography of Nelson Aldrich in 1930, Stephenson says:
"A pamphlet was issued January 16, 1911, 'Suggested Plan
for Monetary Legislation', by Hon. Nelson Aldrich, based on Jekyll
Island conclusions." Stephenson says on page 388, "An
organization for financial progress has been formed. Mr. Warburg
introduced a resolution authorizing the establishment of the
Citizens' League, later the National Citizens League . . . Professor
Laughlin of the University of Chicago was given charge of the
League's propaganda."11
It is notable that Stephenson characterizes the work of the National
Citizens League as "propaganda", in line with Seligman's
exposition of
__________________________
11 Nathaniel Wright Stephenson, Nelson W. Aldrich, A Leader in
American Politics, Scribners, N.Y. 1930
10
Warburg's work as "the education of the country" and
"to break down prejudices".
Much of the five million dollars of the bankers slush fund was
spent under the auspices of the National Citizens' League, which
was made up of college professors. The two most tireless propagandists
for the Aldrich Plan were Professor O.M. Sprague of Harvard,
and J. Laurence Laughlin of the University of Chicago.
Congressman Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr., notes:
"J. Laurence Laughlin, Chairman of the Executive Committee
of the National Citizens' League since its organization, has
returned to his position as professor of political economics
in the University of Chicago. In June, 1911, Professor Laughlin
was given a year's leave from the university, that he might give
all of his time to the campaign of education undertaken by the
League . . . He has worked indefatigably, and it is largely due
to his efforts and his persistence that the campaign enters the
final stage with flattering prospects of a successful outcome
. . . The reader knows that the University of Chicago is an institution
endowed by John D. Rockefeller, with nearly fifty million dollars."12
In his biography of Nelson Aldrich, Stephenson reveals that the
Citizens' League was also a Jekyll Island product. In chapter
24 we find that: The Aldrich Plan was represented to Congress
as the result of three years of work, study and travel by members
of the National Monetary Commission, with expenditures of more
than three hundred thousand dollars.*
Testifying before the Committee on Rules, December 15, 1911,
after the Aldrich plan had been introduced in Congress, Congressman
Lindbergh stated,
"Our financial system is a false one and a huge burden on
the people . . . I have alleged that there is a Money Trust.
The Aldrich plan is a scheme plainly in the interest of the Trust
. . . Why does the Money Trust press so hard for the Aldrich
Plan now, before the people know what the money trust has been
doing?"
Lindbergh continued his speech,
"The Aldrich Plan is the Wall Street Plan. It is a broad
challenge to the Government by the champion of the Money Trust.
It means another panic, if necessary, to intimidate the people.
Aldrich, paid by the Government to represent the people, proposes
a plan for the trusts instead. It was by a very clever move that
the National Monetary Commission was created. In 1907 nature
responded most beautifully and gave this country the most bountiful
crop it had ever had. Other industries were busy too, and from
a natural standpoint all the conditions were right for a most
__________________________
12 Charles A. Lindbergh, Sr., Banking, Currency and the Money
Trust, 1913, p. 131
* In 1911, the Aldrich Plan became part of the official platform
of the Republican Party.
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prosperous year. Instead, a panic entailed enormous losses upon
us. Wall Street knew the American people were demanding a remedy
against the recurrence of such a ridiculously unnatural condition.
Most Senators and Representatives fell into the Wall Street trap
and passed the Aldrich Vreeland Emergency Currency Bill. But
the real purpose was to get a monetary commission which would
frame a proposition for amendments to our currency and banking
laws which would suit the Money Trust. The interests are now
busy everywhere educating the people in favor of the Aldrich
Plan. It is reported that a large sum of money has been raised
for this purpose. Wall Street speculation brought on the Panic
of 1907. The depositors' funds were loaned to gamblers and anybody
the Money Trust wanted to favour. Then when the depositors wanted
their money, the banks did not have it. That made the panic."
Edward Vreeland, co-author of the bill, wrote in the August 25,
1910 Independent (which was owned by Aldrich), "Under the
proposed monetary plan of Senator Aldrich, monopolies will disappear,
because they will not be able to make more than four percent
interest and monopolies cannot continue at such a low rate. Also,
this will mark the disappearance of the Government from the banking
business."
Vreeland's fantastic claims were typical of the propaganda flood
unleashed to pass the Aldrich Plan. Monopolies would disappear,
the Government would disappear from the banking business. Pie
in the sky.
Nation Magazine, January 19, 1911, noted, "The name of Central
Bank is carefully avoided, but the 'Federal Reserve Association',
the name given to the proposed central organization, is endowed
with the usual powers and responsibilities of a European Central
Bank."
After the National Monetary Commission had returned from Europe,
it held no official meetings for nearly two years. No records
or minutes were ever presented showing who had authored the Aldrich
Plan. Since they held no official meetings, the members of the
commission could hardly claim the Plan as their own. The sole
tangible result of the Commission's three hundred thousand dollar
expenditure was a library of thirty massive volumes on European
banking. Typical of these works is a thousand page history of
the Reichsbank, the central bank which controlled money and credit
in Germany, and whose principal stockholders, were the Rothschilds
and Paul Warburg's family banking house of M.M. Warburg Company.
The Commission's records show that it never functioned as a deliberative
body. Indeed, its only "meeting" was the secret conference
held at Jekyll Island, and this conference is not mentioned in
any publication of the Commission. Senator Cummins passed a resolution
in Congress ordering the Commission to report on January 8, 1912,
and show some constructive results of its three years' work.
In the face of this challenge, the National Monetary Commission
ceased to exist.
12
With their five million dollars as a war chest, the Aldrich Plan
propagandists waged a no-holds barred war against their opposition.
Andrew Frame testified before the House Banking and Currency
Committee of the American Bankers Association. He represented
a group of Western bankers who opposed the Aldrich Plan:
CHAIRMAN CARTER GLASS: "Why didn't the Western bankers make
themselves heard when the American Bankers Association gave its
unqualified and, we are assured, unanimous approval of the scheme
proposed by the National Monetary Commission?"
ANDREW FRAME: "I'm glad you called my attention to that.
When that monetary bill was given to the country, it was but
a few days previous to the meeting of the American Bankers Association
in New Orleans in 1911. There was not one banker in a hundred
who had read that bill. We had twelve addresses in favor of it.
General Hamby of Austin, Texas, wrote a letter to President Watts
asking for a hearing against the bill. He did not get a very
courteous answer. I refused to vote on it, and a great many other
bankers did likewise."
MR. BULKLEY: "Do you mean that no member of the Association
could be heard in opposition to the bill?"
ANDREW FRAME: "They throttled all argument."
MR. KINDRED: "But the report was given out that it was practically
unanimous."
ANDREW FRAME: "The bill had already been prepared by Senator
Aldrich and presented to the executive council of the American
Bankers Association in May, 1911. As a member of that council,
I received a copy the day before they acted upon it. When the
bill came in at New Orleans, the bankers of the United States
had not read it."
MR. KINDRED: "Did the presiding officer simply rule out
those who wanted to discuss it negatively?"
ANDREW FRAME: "They would not allow anyone on the program
who was not in favor of the bill."
CHAIRMAN GLASS: "What significance has the fact that at
the next annual meeting of the American Bankers Association held
at Detroit in 1912, the Association did not reiterate its endorsement
of the plan of the National Monetary Commission, known as the
Aldrich scheme?"
ANDREW FRAME: "It did not reiterate the endorsement for
the simple fact that the backers of the Aldrich Plan knew that
the Association would not endorse it. We were ready for them,
but they did not bring it up."
13
Andrew Frame exposed the collusion which in 1911 procured an
endorsement of the Aldrich Plan from the American Bankers Association
but which in 1912 did not even dare to repeat its endorsement,
for fear of an honest and open discussion of the merits of the
plan.
Chairman Glass then called as witness one of the ten most powerful
bankers in the United States, George Blumenthal, partner of the
international banking house of Lazard Freres and brother-in-law
of Eugene Meyer, Jr. Carter Glass effusively welcomed Blumenthal,
stating that "Senator O'Gorman of New York was kind enough
to suggest your name to us." A year later, O'Gorman prevented
a Senate Committee from asking his master, Paul Warburg, any
embarrassing questions before approving his nomination as the
first Governor of the Federal Reserve Board.
George Blumenthal stated, "Since 1893 my firm of Lazard
Freres has been foremost in importations and exportations of
gold and has thereby come into contact with everybody who had
anything to do with it."
Congressman Taylor asked, "Have you a statement there as
to the part you have had in the importation of gold into the
United States?" Taylor asked this because the Panic of 1893
is known to economists as a classic example of a money panic
caused by gold movements.
"No," replied George Blumenthal, "I have nothing
at all on that, because it is not bearing on the question."
A banker from Philadelphia, Leslie Shaw, dissented with other
witnesses at these hearings, criticizing the much vaunted "decentralization"
of the System. He said, "Under the Aldrich Plan the bankers
are to have local associations and district associations, and
when you have a local organization, the centered control is assured.
Suppose we have a local association in Indianapolis; can you
not name the three men who will dominate that association? And
then can you not name the one man everywhere else. When you have
hooked the banks together, they can have the biggest influence
of anything in this country, with the exception of the newspapers."
To promote the Democratic currency bill, Carter Glass made public
the sorry record of the Republican efforts of Senator Aldrich's
National Monetary Commission. His House Report in 1913 said,
"Senator MacVeagh fixes the cost of the National Monetary
Commission to May 12, 1911 at $207,130. They have since spent
another hundred thousand dollars of the taxpayer's money. The
work done at such cost cannot be ignored, but, having examined
the extensive literature published by the Commission, the Banking
and Currency Committee finds little that bears upon the present
state of the credit market of the United States. We object to
the Aldrich Bill on the following points:
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Its entire lack of adequate government or public control of the
banking mechanism it sets up.
Its tendency to throw voting control into the hands of the large
banks of the system.
The extreme danger of inflation of currency inherent in the system.
The insincerity of the bond-funding plan provided for by the
measure, there being a barefaced pretense that this system was
to cost the government nothing.
The dangerous monopolistic aspects of the bill.
Our Committee at the outset of its work was met by a well-defined
sentiment in favor of a central bank which was the manifest outgrowth
of the work that had been done by the National Monetary Commission."
Glass's denunciation of the Aldrich Bill as a central bank plan
ignored the fact that his own Federal Reserve Act would fulfill
all the functions of a central bank. Its stock would be owned
by private stockholders who could use the credit of the Government
for their own profit; it would have control of the nation's money
and credit resources; and it would be a bank of issue which would
finance the government by "mobilizing" credit in time
of war. In "The Rationale of Central Banking," Vera
C. Smith (Committee for Monetary Research and Education, June,
1981) writes, "The primary definition of a central bank
is a banking system in which a single bank has either a complete
or residuary monopoly in the note issue. A central bank is not
a natural product of banking development. It is imposed from
outside or comes into being as the result of Government favors."
Thus a central bank attains its commanding position from its
government granted monopoly of the note issue. This is the key
to its power. Also, the act of establishing a central bank has
a direct inflationary impact because of the fractional reserve
system, which allows the creation of book-entry loans and thereby,
money, a number of times the actual "money" which the
bank has in its deposits or reserves.
The Aldrich Plan never came to a vote in Congress, because the
Republicans lost control of the House in 1910, and subsequently
lost the Senate and the Presidency in 1912.
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