The national bank, money, credit and debt, 1776-1820
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Bibliographic Information
The national bank, money, credit and debt, 1776-1820
(The emergence of a national economy : the United States from independence to the Civil War / series editors, Warren J. Samuels ... [et al.], v. 3-4)
Pickering & Chatto, 2004
- pt. 1
- pt. 2
- Other Title
-
American economy : independence to Civil War
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Note
Facsim. repr. from various sources
Pt. 2: edited by Malcolm Rutherford
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Table of Contents
- Volume 1: Organization of the National Economy General Introduction, From Independence to the Civil War
- Note on Copy-Texts
- Thomas Jefferson, 'The Present State of Manufactures, Commerce, Interior and Exterior Trade' (1785)
- Tench Coxe, An Enquiry into the Principles on Which a Commercial System for the United States of America Should be Founded (1787)
- Tench Coxe, An Address to the Assembly of Friends of American Manufactures (1787)
- Alexander Hamilton, Report on Manufactures (1791)
- Tench Coxe, Reflections on the State of the Union (1795)
- George Logan, An Address on the Natural and Social Order of the World, as Intended to Produce Universal Good (1798)
- George Logan, A Letter to the Citizens of Pennsylvania on the Necessity of Promoting Agriculture, Manufactures, and the Useful Arts (1800)
- Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Benjamin Austin ([1816] 1903) Volume 2: Creating a National System of Taxation John Jay, A Circular Letter from the Congress of the United States of America to Their Constituents (1779)
- Pelatiah Webster, A Sixth Essay on Free Trade and Finance (1783)
- Samuel Wales, The Dangers of Our National Prosperity (1785)
- Fisher Ames, Letter to George Richards Minot, ([1789] 1854)
- Excerpt of a Letter to George Richards Minot, ([1790] 1854)
- Letter to Christopher Gore, ([1797] 1854)
- 'Speech on Mr Madison's Resolutions' ([1794] 1854)
- all from The Works of Fisher Ames: With a Selection from His Speeches and Correspondence (1854)
- George Logan, Fourteen Experiments on Agriculture (1791)
- James Thomson Callender, A Short History of the Nature and Consequences of Excise Laws (1795)
- James Swan, National Arithmetick (1786)
- John Woolman, 'A Plea for the Poor' ([1793] 1922)
- Thomas Paine, Agrarian Justice Opposed to Agrarian Law and to Agrarian Monopoly (1797)
- Page Conversions Volume 3: The National Bank, Money, Credit and Debt 1776-1820 Pelatiah Webster, Essays on Free Trade and Finance (1779-85)
- Pelatiah Webster, An Essay on Credit (1786)
- Robert Morris, Plan for Establishing a National Bank (1781)
- Robert Morris, Propositions Respecting the Coinage of Gold, Silver, and Copper (1785)
- William Barton, Observations on the Nature and Use of Paper-Credit (1781)
- William Barton, The True Interest of the United States Considered (1786)
- Samuel Gale, On the Nature and Principles of Public Credit (1784)
- John Witherspoon, Essay on Money as a Medium of Commerce (1786)
- Tench Coxe, Thoughts Concerning the Bank of North America (1787) Volume 4: The National Bank, Money, Credit and Debt 1776-1820 Alexander Hamilton, First Report on Public Credit (1790)
- Alexander Hamilton, Report on a National Bank (1790)
- Thomas Jefferson, Opinion Against the Constitutionality of a National Bank ([1791] 1903)
- Alexander Hamilton, Constitutionality of the Bank of the United States (1791)
- Pelatiah Webster, An Address to the Stock-Holders of the Bank of North-America (1791)
- James Sullivan, The Path to Riches (1792)
- George Logan, Letters Addressed to the Yeomanry of the United States, Containing Some Observations on Funding and Bank System (1793)
- John Taylor, A Definition of Parties
- or the Political Effects of the Paper System Considered (1794)
- Alexander Hamilton, Second Report on Public Credit ([1795] 1904)
- Thomas Jefferson, Letter to John W Eppes ([1813] 1903) Volume 5: Nationalism and Applied Issues: 1820 to the Civil War Part I: Asserting American Intellectual Independence Daniel Raymond, Thoughts on Political Economy (1820)
- Mathew Carey, Addresses on Political Economy ([1822] 1968)
- Alexander H Everett, New Ideas on Population with Remarks on the Theories of Malthus and Godwin (1823)
- Jacob N Cardozo, Notes on Political Economy ([1826] 1960)
- Willard Phillips, A Manual of Political Economy ([1828] 1968) Part II: A Special Case of Analytic Ingenuity John Rae, Statement of Some New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy (1834) Part III: Divergent Perspectives on Contemporary Issues Albert Gallatin, Considerations on the Currency and Banking System of the United States (1831)
- William M Gouge, A Short History of Paper Money and Banking (1833)
- George Tucker, The Theory of Money and Banks Investigated (1839)
- John C Calhoun, Original Draft of the South Carolina Exposition (1855)
- Henry Clay (Speeches), 'On Nullification, Etc.', speech delivered at Cincinnati, 3 August 1830, and 'On the Reduction in Duties on Imports', speech delivered in the Senate of the United States, 11 January 1832 (1855)
- Condy Raguet, The Principles of Free Trade (1835)
- Page Conversions Volume 6: Sectionalism: 1820 to the Civil War Part I: Sectionalism in Instructional Materials Francis Wayland, The Elements of Political Economy ([1837] 1860)
- Henry Vethake, Introductory Lecture on Political Economy (1831)
- Thomas Cooper, Lectures on the Elements of Political Economy ([1829] 1791)
- Thomas R Dew, Lectures on the Restrictive System (1829) Part II: Sectionalism in the 1840s and 1850s Nathaniel A Ware, Notes on Political Economy ([1844] 1967)
- Henry C Carey, The Harmony of Interests ([1851] 1868)
- J D B De Bow, The Industrial Resources ([1854] 1966)
- George Tucker, Political Economy For the People ([1859] 1970)
- Calvin Colton, Public Economy For the United States ([1848] 1969)
- Stephen Colwell, The Claims of Labor (1861)
- Index
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