登陆注册
15478300000008

第8章 CHAPTER II. TRADE AND INDUSTRY(3)

The business depression which very naturally followed the short revival of trade was so serious in its financial consequences that it has even been referred to as the "Panic of 1785." The United States afforded a good market for imported articles in 1788 and 1784, all the better because of the supply of gold and silver which had been sent into the country by England and France to maintain their armies and fleets and which had remained in the United States. But this influx of imported goods was one of the chief factors in causing the depression of 1785, as it brought ruin to many of those domestic industries which had sprung up in the days of nonintercourse or which had been stimulated by the artificial protection of the war.

To make matters worse, the currency was in a confused condition.

"In 1784 the entire coin of the land, except coppers, was the product of foreign mints. English guineas, crowns, shillings and pence were still paid over the counters of shops and taverns, and with them were mingled many French and Spanish and some German coins . . . . The value of the gold pieces expressed in dollars was pretty much the same the country over. But the dollar and the silver pieces regarded as fractions of a dollar had no less than five different values."* The importation of foreign goods was fast draining the hard money out of the country. In an effort to relieve the situation but with the result of making it much worse, several of the States began to issue paper money; and this was in addition to the enormous quantities of paper which had been printed during the Revolution and which was now worth but a small fraction of its face value.

* McMaster, "History of the People of the United States", vol. I, pp. 190-191.

The expanding currency and consequent depreciation in the value of money had immediately resulted in a corresponding rise of prices, which for a while the States attempted to control. But in 1778 Congress threw up its hands in despair and voted that "all limitations of prices of gold and silver be taken off," although the States for some time longer continued to endeavor to regulate prices by legislation.* The fluctuating value of the currency increased the opportunities for speculation which war conditions invariably offer, and "immense fortunes were suddenly accumulated." A new financial group rose into prominence composed largely of those who were not accustomed to the use of money and who were consequently inclined to spend it recklessly and extravagantly.

* W. E. H. Lecky, "The American Revolution," New York, 1898, pp.

288-294.

Many contemporaries comment upon these things, of whom Brissot de Warville may be taken as an example, although he did not visit the United States until 1788:

"The inhabitants . . . prefer the splendor of wealth and the show of enjoyment to the simplicity of manners and the pure pleasures which result from it. If there is a town on the American continent where the English luxury displays its follies, it is New York. You will find here the English fashions: in the dress of the women you will see the most brilliant silks, gauzes, hats, and borrowed hair; equipages are rare, but they are elegant; the men have more simplicity in their dress; they disdain gewgaws, but they take their revenge in the luxury of the table; luxury forms already a class of men very dangerous to society; I mean bachelors; the expense of women causes matrimony to be dreaded by men. Tea forms, as in England, the basis of parties of pleasure; many things are dearer here than in France; a hairdresser asks twenty shilling a month; washing costs four shillings a dozen."*

* Quoted by Henry Tuckerman, "America and her Commentators,"

1886.

An American writer of a later date, looking back upon his earlier years, was impressed by this same extravagance, and his testimony may well be used to strengthen the impression which it is the purpose of the present narrative to convey:

"The French and British armies circulated immense sums of money in gold and silver coin, which had the effect of driving out of circulation the wretched paper currency which had till then prevailed. Immense quantities of British and French goods were soon imported: our people imbibed a taste for foreign fashions and luxury; and in the course of two or three years, from the close of the war, such an entire change had taken place in the habits and manners of our inhabitants, that it almost appeared as if we had suddenly become a different nation. The staid and sober habits of our ancestors, with their plain home-manufactured clothing, were suddenly laid aside, and European goods of fine quality adopted in their stead. Fine rues, powdered heads, silks and scarlets, decorated the men; while the most costly silks, satins, chintzes, calicoes, muslins, etc., etc., decorated our females. Nor was their diet less expensive; for superb plate, foreign spirits, wines, etc., etc., sparkled on the sideboards of many farmers. The natural result of this change of the habits and customs of the people--this aping of European manners and morals, was to suddenly drain our country of its circulating specie; and as a necessary consequence, the people ran in debt, times became difficult, and money hard to raise.*

* Samuel Kercheval, "History of the Valley of Virginia," 1833, pp. 199-200.

The situation was serious, and yet it was not as dangerous or even as critical as it has generally been represented, because the fundamental bases of American prosperity were untouched. The way by which Americans could meet the emergency and recover from the hard times was fairly evident first to economize, and then to find new outlets for their industrial energies. But the process of adjustment was slow and painful. There were not a few persons in the United States who were even disposed to regret that Americans were not safely under British protection and prospering with Great Britain, instead of suffering in political isolation.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 无限世界之地狱

    无限世界之地狱

    在一次偶然中主角吴天权进入了主神世界,并且得到了独特的天赋,开启了无限之旅,在一次次的经历中成长!在这个主神的无限世界,没有谁对谁错,只有能够生存下去的人是对的!
  • 主人.我是掉入凡间的天使

    主人.我是掉入凡间的天使

    在这个虚无、想象的故事里,一定会有让你感动的地方。不管是父母的关爱还是狗狗的报恩;不论是闺蜜的友情还是龟龟的疼惜。自然也有闺蜜的背叛和父母的不理解。但终归还是爱。/这个世界上永远不缺少爱,只是你不会发现爱——朵拉(妞妞)。
  • 驭水者

    驭水者

    李澈是桂林大学的一名新生,在报道时,机缘巧合下发现了隐藏在普通人中的异类——异能者,并也因此获得了自己的异能:控水。且看李澈如何在这庞大神秘的异能界书写自己的一段传奇!
  • 树·远歌

    树·远歌

    诗集是诗人张树超的诗歌作品集,作品分四部分,以“黄河故道”、“旅途”、“不再走远的雨声”、“相信”四个篇名辑录了诗人的131首诗歌作品。诗歌文字优美,语言流畅,清新,雅致,体现了作者对人生的体悟和情思。
  • 竹马总裁:青梅娇妻萌萌哒

    竹马总裁:青梅娇妻萌萌哒

    沐思妍知道,嫁给他,就会有无尽宠爱,但还是准备考验一下。"沐思妍,你可以给我解释下你为什准备逃婚么?"男子有些生气的声音传进沐思妍的耳朵里。沐思妍白了男子一眼,"苏男神,我没有逃婚啊!我只是没找到没有找到厕所而已啦!""哦?是么?还以为你准备逃跑,如果不是更好,如果是的话,呢我们先结婚,完了晚上再收拾你!"
  • 中国历代名人精粹(大中国上下五千年)

    中国历代名人精粹(大中国上下五千年)

    本书在总结众多历史书籍的基础上,选取了对中国乃至世界历史具有重大影响的一百余位著名人物,将他们的生平事迹和历史作用精要地介绍给读者。内容涉及政治名人、军事名将、科学巨匠、文豪泰斗、艺术大师、商界巨子等六大门类,时间跨度从先秦到近现代,描述了三千余年的中国历史进程。
  • 修仙记忆

    修仙记忆

    一丝仙缘,苦求大道,从懵懂少年成长为一方枭雄,他执着着仙道之路,这更像是回顾一段记忆,虽不是一梦成仙,但那条路却越走越近……正义与邪恶,杀伐与仙魔,一个人站在了前方。
  • 豪门婚姻之不依不饶

    豪门婚姻之不依不饶

    深更半夜,丁太太偷偷溜进丁先生的房间。据说,保险柜里藏着完败丁先生的重要证据。丁太太试了丁先生的生日,丁先生他妈的生日和丁先生他爸的生日,结果都不能打开。就在这时,黑暗里响起一个凉凉的声音:“干嘛不试试你自己的生日?”一对流氓夫妻斗志斗勇的日常生活。
  • 被遗忘的时空

    被遗忘的时空

    一个自称风的男子,记忆尘封,来自一阵狂风之后。一个平凡小镇,却有不平凡的故事,随着一位不速之客,风的到来,将渐渐揭开不为人知的一幕。众所周知,道士乃是亲近大自然者,所修的是外在风水术。然,异能者重在自身潜能,所遵循的是体内自形风水。
  • 缘分惹的祸

    缘分惹的祸

    都说缘分是一种奇妙的东西,然而我感觉缘分这种事可求不可遇。我想每个人或许都有那么一段让自己终身难忘的缘分,或许曾经有时候上天给了你一份让你终身难忘的缘分,但是这种缘分它让你相知相识,但不让你至死不渝。