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In steamrolling the Federal Reserve Act through the House of
Representatives, Congressman Carter Glass declared on September
30, 1913 on the floor of the House that the interests of the
public would be protected by an advisory council of bankers.
"There can be nothing sinister about its transactions. Meeting
with it at least four times a year will be a bankers' advisory
council representing every regional reserve district in the system.
How could we have exercised greater caution in safeguarding the
public interest?
Carter Glass neither then nor later gave any substantiation for
his belief that a group of bankers would protect the interests
of the public, nor is there any evidence in the history of the
United States that any group of bankers has ever done so. In
fact, the Federal Advisory Council proved to be the "administrative
process" which Paul Warburg had inserted into the Federal
Reserve Act to provide just the type of remote but unseen control
over the System which he desired. When he was asked by financial
reporter C.W. Barron, just after the Federal Reserve Act was
enacted into law by Congress, whether he approved of the bill
as it was finally passed, Warburg replied, "Well, it hasn't
got quite everything we want, but the lack can be adjusted later
by administrative processes." The council proved to be the
ideal vehicle for Warburg's purposes, as it has functioned for
seventy years in almost complete anonymity, its members and their
business associations, unnoticed by the public.
Senator Robert Owen, chairman of the Senate Banking and Currency
Committee, had said, as quoted in The New York Times, August
3, 1913 before passage of the act:
"The Federal Reserve Act will furnish the bank and industrial
and commercial interests with the
discount of qualified commercial paper and thus stabilize our
commercial and industrial life. The
Federal Reserve banks are not intended as money making banks,
but to serve a great national
purpose of accommodating commerce and businessmen and banks,
safeguard a fixed market for
manufactured goods, for agricultural products and for labor.
There is no reason why the banks
should be in control of the Federal Reserve system. Stability
will make our commerce expand
healthfully in every direction."
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Senator Owen's optimism was doomed by the domination of the Jekyll
Island promoters over the initial composition of the Federal
Reserve System. Not only did the Morgan-Kuhn, Loeb alliance purchase
the dominant control of stock in the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York, with almost half of the shares owned by the five New
York banks under their control, First National Bank, National
City Bank, National Bank of Commerce, Chase National Bank and
Hanover National Bank, but they also persuaded President Woodrow
Wilson to appoint one of the Jekyll Island group, Paul Warburg,
to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
Each of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks was to elect a member
of the Federal Advisory Council, which would meet with the Federal
Reserve Board of Governors four times a year in Washington, in
order to "advise" the Board on future monetary policy.
This seemed to assure absolute democracy, as each of the twelve
"advisors", representing a different region of the
United States, would be expected to speak up for the economic
interests of his area, and each of the twelve members would have
an equal vote. The theory may have been admirable in its concept,
but the hard facts of economic life resulted in a quite different
picture. The president of a small bank in St. Louis or Cincinnati,
sitting in conference with Paul Warburg and J.P. Morgan to "advise"
them on monetary policy, would be unlikely to contradict two
of the most powerful international financiers in the world, as
a scribbled note from either one of them would be sufficient
to plunge his little bank into bankruptcy. In fact, the small
banks of the twelve Federal Reserve districts existed only as
satellites of the big New York financial interests, and were
completely at their mercy. Martin Mayer, in The Bankers, points
out that "J.P. Morgan maintained correspondent relationships
with many small banks all over the country."30 The big New
York banks did not confine themselves to multi-million dollar
deals with other great financial interests, but carried on many
smaller and more routine dealings with their "correspondent"
banks across the United States.
Apparently secure in their belief that their activities would
never be exposed to the public, the Morgan-Kuhn, Loeb interests
boldly selected the members of the Federal Advisory Council from
their correspondent banks and from banks in which they owned
stock. No one in the financial community seemed to notice, as
nothing was said about it during seventy years of the Federal
Reserve System's operation.
To avoid any suspicion that New York interests might control
the Federal Advisory Council, its first president, elected in
1914 by the other members, was J.B. Forgan, president of the
First National Bank of
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30 Martin Mayer, The Bankers, Weybright and Talley, New York,
1974, p. 207.
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Chicago. Rand McNally Bankers Directory for 1914 lists the principal
correspondents of the large banks. The principal correspondent
bank of the Baker-Morgan controlled First National Bank of New
York is listed as the First National Bank of Chicago. The principal
correspondent listed by the First National Bank of Chicago is
the Bank of Manhattan in New York, controlled by Jacob Schiff
and Paul Warburg of Kuhn, Loeb Company. James B. Forgan also
was listed as a director of Equitable Life Insurance Company,
also controlled by Morgan. However, the relationship between
First National Bank of Chicago and these New York banks was even
closer than these listings indicate.
On page 701 of The Growth of Chicago Banks by F. Cyril James,
we find mention of "the First National Bank of Chicago's
profitable connection with the Morgan interests. A goodwill ambassador
was hastily sent to New York to invite George F. Baker to become
a director of the First National Bank of Chicago."31 (J.B.
Forgan to Ream, January 7, 1903.) In effect, Baker and Morgan
had personally chosen the first president of the Federal Advisory
Council.
James B. Forgan (1852-1924) also shows the obligatory "London
Connection" in the operation of the Federal Reserve System.
Born in St. Andrew's, Scotland, he began his banking career there
with the Royal Bank of Scotland, a correspondent of the Bank
of England. He came to Canada for the Bank of British North America,
worked for the Bank of Nova Scotia, which sent him to Chicago
in the 1880's, and by 1900 he had become president of the First
National Bank of Chicago. He served for six years as president
of the Federal Advisory Council, and when he left the council,
he was replaced by Frank O. Wetmore, who had also replaced him
as president of the First National Bank of Chicago when Forgan
was named chairman of the board.
Representing the New York Federal Reserve district on the first
Federal Advisory Council was J.P. Morgan. He was named chairman
of the Executive Committee. Thus, Paul Warburg and J.P. Morgan
sat in conference at the meetings of the Federal Reserve Board
during the first four years of its operation, surrounded by the
other Governors and members of the council, who could hardly
have been unaware that their futures would be guided by these
two powerful bankers.
Another member of the Federal Advisory Council in 1914 was Levi
L. Rue, representing the Philadelphia district. Rue was president
of the Philadelphia National Bank. Rand McNally Bankers Directory
of 1914 listed as principal correspondent of the First National
Bank of New York,
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31 F. Cyril James, The Growth of Chicago Banks, Harper, New York,
1938.
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the Philadelphia National Bank. First National Bank of Chicago
also listed Philadelphia National Bank as its principal correspondent
in Philadelphia. The other members of the Federal Advisory Council
included Daniel S. Wing, president of the First National Bank
of Boston, W.S. Rowe, president of the First National Bank of
Cincinnati, and C.T. Jaffray, president of the First National
Bank of Minneapolis. These were all correspondent banks of the
New York "big five" banks who controlled the money
market in the United States.
Jaffray had an even closer connection with the Baker-Morgan interests.
In 1908, to reinvest the large annual dividends from their First
National Bank of New York stock, Baker and Morgan set up a holding
company, First Security Corporation, which bought 500 shares
of the First National Bank of Minneapolis. Thus Jaffray was little
more than a wage-earning employee of Baker and Morgan, although
he had been "selected" by stockholders of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis to represent their interests. First
Security Corporation also owned 50,000 shares of Chase National
Bank, 5400 shares of National Bank of Commerce, 2500 shares of
Bankers Trust, 928 shares of Liberty National Bank, the bank
of which Henry P. Davison had been president when he was tapped
to join the J.P. Morgan firm, and shares of New York Trust, Atlantic
Trust and Brooklyn Trust. First Security concentrated on bank
stocks which rapidly appreciated in value, and paid handsome
annual dividends. In 1927, it earned five million dollars, but
paid the shareholders eight million, taking the rest from its
surplus.
Another member of the initial Federal Advisory Council was E.F.
Swinney, president of the First National Bank of Kansas City.
He was also a director of Southern Railway, and lists himself
in Who's Who as "independent in politics".
Archibald Kains represented the San Francisco district on the
Federal Advisory Council, although he maintained his office in
New York, as president of the American Foreign Banking Corporation.
After serving as a Governor of the Federal Reserve Board from
1914-1918, Paul Warburg did not request another term. However,
he was not ready to sever his connection with the Federal Reserve
System which he had done so much to set up and put into operation.
J.P. Morgan obligingly gave up his seat on the Federal Advisory
Council, and for the next ten years, Paul Warburg continued to
represent the Federal Reserve district of New York on the Council.
He was vice president of the council 1922-25, and president 1926-27.
Thus Warburg remained the dominant presence at Federal Reserve
Board meetings throughout the 1920s, when the European central
banks were planning the great contraction of credit which precipitated
the Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression.
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Although most of the Federal Advisory Council's "advice"
to the Board of Governors has never been reported, on rare instances
a few glimpses into its deliberations were afforded by brief
items in The New York Times. On November 21, 1916, The Times
reported that the Federal Advisory Council had met in Washington
for its quarterly conference.
"There was talk about absorbing Europe's extension of credit
to South America and other
countries. Federal Reserve officials said that to maintain a
position as one of the world's bankers
the United States must expect to be called upon to render a good
deal of the service performed
largely by England in the past, in extending short term credits
necessary in the production and
transportation of goods of all kinds in the world's trade, and
that acceptances in foreign trade
require lower discounts and the freest and most reliable gold
markets." (The First World War
was at its zenith in 1916.)
In addition to his service on the Board of Governors and the
Federal Advisory Council, Paul Warburg continued to address bankers'
groups about the monetary policies they were expected to follow.
On October 22, 1915, he addressed the Twin City Bankers Club,
St. Paul, Minnesota during which speech he stated,
"It is to your interest to see the Federal Reserve banks
as strong as they possibly can be. It
staggers the imagination to think what the future may have in
store for the development of
American banking. With Europe's foremost powers limited to their
own field, with the United
States turned into a creditor nation for all the world, the boundaries
of the field that lies open for
us are determined only by our power of safe expansion. The scope
of our banking future will
ultimately be limited by the amount of gold that we can muster
as the foundation of our banking
and credit structure."
The composition of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and
the Federal Reserve Advisory Council, from its initial membership
to the present day, shows links to the Jekyll Island conference
and the London banking community which offers incontrovertible
evidence, acceptable in any court of law, that there was a plan
to gain control of the money and credit of the people of the
United States, and to use it for the profit of the architects.
Old Jekyll Island hands were Frank Vanderlip, president of the
National City Bank, which bought a large portion of the shares
of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 1914; Paul Warburg
of Kuhn, Loeb Company; Henry P. Davison, J.P. Morgan's righthand
man, and director of the First National Bank of New York and
the National Bank of Commerce, which took a large portion of
Federal Reserve Bank of New York stock; and Benjamin Strong,
also known as a Morgan lieutenant,
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who served as Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
during the 1920's.*
The selection of the regional members of the Federal Advisory
Council from the list of bankers who worked most closely with
the "big five" banks of New York, and who were their
principal correspondent banks, proves that the much-touted "regional
safeguarding of the public interest" by Carter Glass and
other Washington proponents of the Federal Reserve Act was from
its very inception a deliberate deception. The fact that for
seventy years this council was able to meet with the Federal
Reserve Board of Governors and to "advise" the Governors
on decisions of monetary policy which affected the daily lives
of every person in the United States, without the public being
aware of their existence, demonstrates that the planners of the
central bank operation knew exactly how to achieve their objectives
through "administrative processes" of which the public
would remain ignorant. The claim that the "advice"
of the council members is not binding on the Governors or that
it carries no weight is to claim that four times a year, twelve
of the most influential bankers in the United States take time
from their work to travel to Washington to meet with the Federal
Reserve Board merely to drink coffee and exchange pleasantries.
It is a claim which anyone familiar with the workings of the
business community will find impossible to take seriously. In
1914, it was a four-day trip each way for bankers from the Far
West to come to Washington for a council meeting with the Federal
Reserve Board. These men had extensive business interests which
demanded their time. J.P. Morgan was a director of sixty-three
corporations which held annual meetings, and
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* "The Federal Advisory Council has great influence with
the Federal Reserve Board. Conspicuously upon that council is
J.P. Morgan, the leading member of J.P. Morgan Company and son
of the late J.P. Morgan. Every one of the twelve members of the
Advisory Council, as you well know, was educated in the same
atmosphere. The Federal Reserve Act is not only a special privilege
act but privileged persons have been placed in control and are
its advisors in its administration. The Federal Reserve Board
and the Federal Advisory Council administer the Federal Reserve
System as its head authority, and no one of the lesser officials,
even if they wished, would dare to cross swords with them."
(FROM: "Why Is Your Country At War?" by Charles Lindbergh,
published in 1917). The above paragraph explains why Woodrow
Wilson ordered government agents to seize and destroy the printing
plates and copies of this book in the spring of 1918.
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could hardly be expected to travel to Washington to attend meetings
of the Federal Reserve Board if his advice was to be considered
of no importance.**
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** The J.P. Morgan connection has remained predominant on the
Federal Advisory Council. For the past several years, the prestigious
Federal Reserve District No. 2, the New York District, has been
represented on the Federal Advisory Council by Lewis Preston.
Preston is Chairman of J.P. Morgan Company and also Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of Morgan Guaranty Trust, New York.
An heir to the Baldwin fortune (a company controlled by Morgan),
Preston married the heiress to the Pulitzer newspaper fortune.
On February 26, 1929, The New York Times noted that a merger
had been effected between National Bank of Commerce and Guaranty
Trust, making them the largest bank in the United States, with
a capital of two billion dollars. The merger was negotiated by
Myron C. Taylor, president of U.S. Steel, a Morgan firm. The
banks occupied adjoining buildings on Wall Street, and, as The
New York Times noted, "The Guaranty Trust Company long has
been known as one of 'the Morgan group' of banks." The National
Bank of Commerce has also been identified with Morgan interests.
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