NEW BOOKS ON HAMILTON AND NEW YORK HISTORY 上市 Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 39, September 26, 2004, Article 24

    NEW BOOKS ON HAMILTON AND NEW YORK HISTORY

    Arthur Shippee forwarded reviews of two books which also
    caught my eye. They are not directly numismatic, nor do they
    dwell only on financial matters. But Ron Chernow's "Alexander
    Hamilton", and Russell Shorto's "The Island at the Center of the
    World." look like very interesting books related to the early
    history of New York City and the roles played by the founding
    fathers of the U.S. financial and monetary system.
    The reviews are by Walter Isaacson and was published in
    New York Magazine, 17 May 2004. Here are some
    excepts:

    "In addition to The Federalist Papers, Hamilton made one
    other great contribution. As Washington's choice to be the
    first Treasury secretary, he created the financial structures
    that tied the nation together and made it, and New York, a
    commercial power. The capital was then in lower Manhattan,
    and on his second day in office, Hamilton arranged a large
    loan from the Bank of New York. He then set to work on
    a plan for the government's fiscal machinery, which resulted
    in his famous 40,000-word Report on Public Credit."

    "Hamilton wanted New York to become the nation's capital,
    which likewise aroused Jefferson's opposition. The city was
    so associated with Hamilton and his commercial vision that
    his enemies called it Hamiltonopolis. "They saw it," writes
    Chernow, "as an Anglophile bastion dominated by bankers
    and merchants who would contaminate the republican
    experiment." Washington and Jefferson were pushing instead
    for a rural site alongside the plantations of the Potomac.

    Realizing that Madison had the votes to block his cherished
    debt plan, Hamilton was willing to trade away the capital as
    a compromise. The stage was thus set for the most historic
    dinner party ever held in Manhattan. Present at Jefferson's
    rented house on Maiden Lane were Hamilton and Madison.
    The Virginians pointed out that the plan unduly penalized their
    state, which had paid off most of its debts. They would need
    something in return: a national capital on the banks of the
    Potomac.

    In some ways, Hamilton struck the better bargain. The debt
    plan determined forever that the states would be weaker than
    the central government. Creating this foundation for federal
    power and taxation in America was more important to
    Hamilton than winning the capital for New York. Indeed, the
    creation of vibrant financial markets helped make New York
    what it is today, and helped New York make America what
    it is today. In the realm of economics, if not politics,
    Hamilton's New York vision of America would end up
    prevailing. "He was the messenger of America's economic
    future, Chernow notes, "setting forth a vision of an urban
    manufacturing society."

    "Hamilton had succeeded in binding the country together
    under one central economic and fiscal system. Hamilton
    had promoted a forward-looking agenda of a modern
    nation-state with a market economy and an affirmative
    view of central government," Chernow writes. "It was the
    northern economic system that embodied the mix of
    democracy and capitalism that was to constitute the
    essence of America in the long run."

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  • 2004-09-26
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