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When Paul Warburg resigned from the Federal Reserve Board of
Governors in 1918, his place was taken by Albert Strauss, partner
in the international banking house of J & W Seligman. This
banking house had large interests in Cuba and South America,
and played a prominent part in financing the many revolutions
in those countries. Its most notorious publicity came during
the Senate Finance Committee's investigation in 1933, when it
was brought out that J & W Seligman had given a $415,000
bribe to Juan Leguia, son of the President of Peru, in order
to get that nation to accept a loan.
A partial list of Albert Strauss' directorships, according to
"Who's Who", shows that he was: Chairman of the Board
of the Cuba Cane Sugar Corporation; director, Brooklyn Manhattan
Transit Co., Coney Island Brooklyn RR, New York Rapid Transit,
Pierce-Arrow, Cuba Tobacco Corporation, and the Eastern Cuba
Sugar Corporation.
Governor Delano resigned in August, 1918, to be commissioned
a Colonel in the Army. The war ended on November 11, 1918.
William McAdoo was replaced in 1918 by Carter Glass as Secretary
of the Treasury. Both Strauss and Glass were present during the
secret meeting of the Federal Reserve Board on May 18, 1920,
when the Agricultural Depression of 1920-21 was made possible.
One of the main lies about the Federal Reserve Act when it was
being ballyhooed in 1913 was its promise to take care of the
farmer. Actually, it has never taken care of anybody but a few
big bankers. Prof. O.M.W. Sprague, Harvard economist, writing
in the Quarterly Journal of Economics of February, 1914, said:
"The primary purpose of the Federal Reserve Act is to make
sure that there will always be an
available supply of money and credit in this country to meet
unusual banking requirements."
There is nothing in that wording to help the farmer.
The First World War had introduced into this country a general
prosperity, as revealed by the stocks of heavy industry on the
New York Exchange in 1917-1918, by the increase in the amount
of money circulated, and by the enormous bank clearings during
the whole of 1918. It was the assigned duty of the Federal Reserve
System to get back the vast amount
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of money and credit which had escaped their control during this
time of prosperity. This was done by the Agricultural Depression
of 1920-21.
The operations of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee in
1917-18, while Paul Warburg was still Chairman, show a tremendous
increase in purchases of bankers' and trade acceptances. There
was also a great increase in the purchase of United States Government
securities, under the leadership of the able Eugene Meyer, Jr.
A large part of the stock market speculation in 1919, at the
end of the War when the market was very unsettled, was financed
with funds borrowed from Federal Reserve Banks with Government
securities as collateral. Thus the Federal Reserve System set
up the Depression, first by causing inflation, and then raising
the discount rate and making money dear.
In 1914, Federal Reserve Bank rates had dropped from six percent
to four percent, had gone to a further low of three percent in
1916, and had stayed at that level until 1920. The reason for
the low interest rate was the necessity for floating the billion
dollar Liberty Loans. At the beginning of each Liberty Loan Drive,
the Federal Reserve Board put a hundred million dollars into
the New York money market through its open market operations,
in order to provide a cash impetus for the drive. The most important
role of the Liberty Bonds was to soak up the increase in circulation
of the medium of exchange (integer of account) brought about
by the large amount of currency and credit put out during the
war. Laborers were paid high wages, and farmers received the
highest prices for their produce they had ever known. These two
groups accumulated millions of dollars in cash which they did
not put into Liberty Bonds. That money was effectively out of
the hands of the Wall Street group which controlled the money
and credit of the United States. They wanted it back, and that
is why we had the Agricultural Depression of 1920-21.
Much of the money was deposited in small country banks in the
Middle West and West which had refused to have any part of the
Federal Reserve System, the farmers and ranchers of those regions
seeing no good reason why they should give a group of international
financiers control of their money. The main job of the Federal
Reserve System was to break these small country banks and get
back the money which had been paid out to the farmers during
the war, in effect, ruin them, and this it proceeded to do.
First of all, a Federal Farm Loan Board was set up which encouraged
the farmers to invest their accrued money in land on long term
loans, which the farmers were eager to do. Then inflation was
allowed to take its course in this country and in Europe in 1919
and 1920. The purpose of the inflation in Europe was to cancel
out a large portion of the war debts owed by the Allies to the
American people, and its purpose in this country was to draw
in the excess moneys which had been distributed to
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the working people in the form of higher wages and bonuses for
production. As prices went higher and higher, the money which
the workers had accumulated became worth less and less, inflicting
upon them an unfair drain, while the propertied classes were
enriched by the inflation because of the enormous increase in
the value of land and manufactured goods. The workers were thus
effectively impoverished, but the farmers, who were as a class
more thrifty, and who were more self-sufficient, had to be handled
more harshly.
G.W. Norris, in "Collier's Magazine" of March 20, 1920,
said:
"Rumor has it that two members of the Federal Reserve Board
had a plain talk with some New
York bankers and financiers in December, 1919. Immediately afterwards,
there was a notable
decline in transactions on the stock market and a cessation of
company promotions. It is
understood that action in the same general direction has already
been taken in other sections of the country, as evidence of the
abuse of the Federal Reserve System to promote speculation in
land and commodities appeared."
Senator Robert L. Owen, Chairman of the Senate Banking and Currency
Committee, testified at the Senate Silver Hearings in 1939 that:
"In the early part of 1920, the farmers were exceedingly
prosperous. They were paying off the
mortgages and buying a lot of new land, at the instance of the
Government--had borrowed money
to do it--and then they were bankrupted by a sudden contraction
of credit and currency which
took place in 1920. What took place in 1920 was just the reverse
of what should have been taking
place. Instead of liquidating the excess of credits created by
the war through a period of years, the
Federal Reserve Board met in a meeting which was not disclosed
to the public. They met on the
18th of May, 1920, and it was a secret meeting. They spent all
day conferring; the minutes made
sixty printed pages, and they appear in Senate Document 310 of
February 19, 1923. The Class A
Directors, the Federal Reserve Advisory Council, were present,
but the Class B Directors, who
represented business, commerce, and agriculture, were not present.
The Class C Directors,
representing the people of the United States, were not present
and were not invited to be present.
Only the big bankers were there, and their work of that day resulted
in a contraction of credit
which had the effect the next year of reducing the national income
fifteen billion dollars,
throwing millions of people out of employment, and reducing the
value of lands and ranches by
twenty billion dollars."
Carter Glass, member of the Board in 1920 as Secretary of the
Treasury, wrote in his autobiography, Adventure in Constructive
Finance published in 1928; "Reporters were not present,
of course, as they should not have been and as they never are
at any bank board meeting in the world."85
__________________________
85 Carter Glass, Adventure in Constructive Finance, Doubleday,
N.Y. 1928
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It was Carter Glass who had complained that, if a suggested amendment
by Senator LaFollette were passed, on the Federal Reserve Act
of 1913, to the effect that no member of the Federal Reserve
Board should be an official or director or stockholder of any
bank, trust company, or insurance company, we would end up by
having mechanics and farm laborers on the Board. Certainly mechanics
and farm laborers could have caused no more damage to the country
than did Glass, Strauss, and Warburg at the secret meeting of
the Federal Reserve Board.
Senator Brookhart of Iowa testified that at that secret meeting
Paul Warburg, also President of the Federal Advisory Council,
had a resolution passed to send a committee of five to the Interstate
Commerce Commission and ask for an increase in railroad rates.
As head of Kuhn, Loeb Co. which owned most of the railway mileage
in the United States, he was already missing the huge profits
which the United States Government had paid during the war, and
he wanted to inflict new price raises on the American people.
Senator Brookhart also testified that:
"I went into Myron T. Herrick's office in Paris, and told
him that I came there to study
cooperative banking. He said to me, 'as you go over the countries
of Europe, you will find that
the United States is the only civilized country in the world
that by law is prohibiting its people
from organizing a cooperative system.' I went up to New York
and talked to about two hundred people. After talking cooperation
and standing around waiting for my train--I did not specifically
mention cooperative banking, it was cooperation in general--a
man called me off to one side and said, 'I think Paul Warburg
is the greatest financier we have ever produced. He believes
a lot more of your cooperative ideas than you think he does,
and if you want to consult anybody about the business of cooperation,
he is the man to consult, because he believes in you, and you
can rely on him.' A few minutes later I was steered up against
Mr. Warburg himself, and he said to me, 'You are absolutely right
about this cooperative idea. I want to let you know that the
big bankers are with you. I want to let you know that now, so
that you will not start anything on cooperative
banking and turn them against you.' I said, 'Mr. Warburg, I have
already prepared and tomorrow
I am going to offer an amendment to the Lant Bill authorizing
the establishment of cooperative
national banks.' That was the intermediate credit act which was
then pending to authorize the
establishment of cooperative national banks. That was the extent
of my conversation with Mr.
Warburg, and we have not had any since."
Mr. Wingo testified that in April, May, June and July of 1920,
the manufacturers and merchants were allowed a very large increase
in credits. This was to tide them through the contraction of
credit which was intended to ruin the American farmers, who,
during this period, were denied all credit.
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At the Senate Hearings in 1923, Eugene Meyer, Jr. put his finger
on a primary reason for the Federal Reserve Board's action in
raising the interest rate to 7% on agricultural and livestock
paper:
"I believe," he said, "that a great deal of trouble
would have been avoided if a larger number of
the eligible non-member banks had been members of the Federal
Reserve System."
Meyer was correct in pointing this out. The purpose of the Board's
action was to break those state and joint land stock banks which
had steadfastly refused to surrender their freedom to the banker's
dictatorship set up by the System. Kemmerer in the ABC of the
Federal Reserve System had written in 1919 that:
"The tendency will be toward unification and simplicity
which will be brought about by the state
institutions, in increasing numbers, becoming stockholders and
depositors in the reserve banks."
However, the state banks had not responded.
The Senate Hearings of 1923 investigating the causes of the Agricultural
Depression of 1920-21 had been demanded by the American people.
The complete record of the secret meeting of the Federal Reserve
Board on May 18, 1920 had been printed in the "Manufacturers'
Record" of Baltimore, Maryland, a magazine devoted to the
interests of small Southern manufacturers.
Benjamin Strong, Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, and close friend of Montagu Norman, the Governor of the
Bank of England, claimed at these Hearings:
"The Federal Reserve System has done more for the farmer
than he has yet begun to realize."
Emmanuel Goldenweiser, Director of Research for the Board of
Governors, claimed that the discount rate was raised purely as
an anti-inflationary measure, but he failed to explain why it
was a raise aimed solely at farmers and workers, while at the
same time the System protected the manufacturers and merchants
by assuring them increased credits.
The final statement on the Federal Reserve Board's causing the
Agricultural Depression of 1920-21 was made by William Jennings
Bryan. In "Hearst's Magazine" of November, 1923, he
wrote:
"The Federal Reserve Bank that should have been the farmer's
greatest protection has become his
greatest foe. The deflation of the farmer was a crime deliberately
committed."
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