The
New Nation, By Merrill Jensen
The Myth
Robert Morris was “Financier of
the Revolution.”
The Reality
To give Morris the title of financier of the revolution is inappropriate. Jensen suggests the myth is absurd, “if for
no other reason than the fact that he did
not take office until the revolution was virtually over.” He took office in September 1781, about one
month before Yorktown!
Yet there are other reasons.
At the end of the Confederation, he stilled owed money to the United States.
In 1790, the books of the government showed him to be the largest individual debtor. (Page 57, 60, emphasis added)
No attack on Morris was more
extreme than that by William Lee who declared him a most dangerous man in
America. He said that Morris was
bankrupt at the beginning of the war, left the country bankrupt at the end of
it, but that at the same time “amassed an immense fortune for himself….” (Page
367)
At least a little justice was served. Morris lost his fortune in 1798 due to failed
land speculation.
The Man who Put Crony
in Crony Capital
The concerns about Morris arose as early as 1775:
Laurens swore that men like Morris
made “patriotism the stalking horse to their private interests” and hid behind
Washington as they did so. (Page 368)
Makes one wonder why Morris signed the Declaration of
Independence….
There is so much discussion these days about the revolving
door between Washington and Wall Street. Robert Morris didn’t bother with a door; he
insisted that there be little more than a breezeway:
He
must be allowed to continue his own private business; he must appoint all
officers in the department; he must have absolute power to appoint and dismiss
anyone having to do with the spending of money.
Unless he had such powers he insisted the “the business of reformation”
could not be managed. (Page 57, emphasis added)
Congress agreed to these conditions, although not without
opposition.
The multiple hats worn by Morris did not go unnoticed:
…many of the merchants began to
look at Mr. Morris with jealous eyes, and conceive that a connection of the
financier, the president of the bank, and the receiver of continental taxes
have a flow of money at their command which may be employed to the great
prejudice of all…. (Page 228)
Their suspicions proved valid:
Morris assured that good bills
drawn on Dutch and French banks were applied in favor of his business
associates, while other creditors received little, if any, relief. (Page 370)
According to Dr. Edward Bancroft:
…Morris would resign as soon as he
could “extricate some of his friends” and that he was endeavoring to do this
“by the money borrowing in Holland…” (Page 370)
The man makes Henry Paulson, who also stayed in office long
enough to extricate his friends from financial woe, look like an altruistic public
servant.
One such friend was William Bingham, an agent in Martinique
during the war and during Morris’s tenure over the treasury:
He went there as a clerk. He returned to the United States after the
war as one of the wealthiest men in the new nation. Before the end of 1781 he had claimed and
been paid over a half million livres Martinique, for sixty per cent of which he
presented no vouchers. (Page 381)
After the war, and under a board of Treasury independent
from Morris, it was determined that Bingham owed the United States nearly 2.5
million livres Martinique. (Page 381)
The Planned Military
Coup
Robert Morris’s name is well known,
but the significance of his public life is but dimly realized. …he was for a
time the figure around which centered all those men who sought to give the new
nation a powerful central government and who, in 1783, contemplated without
many qualms the possibility of doing so by force. (Page 366)
They saw in him the spearhead of a
movement to overthrow the federal government and to establish a
dictatorship. His fulsome protestations
of disinterested patriotism did not convince his enemies, nor even many of his
friends. (Page 57)
The nationalists, among which Morris was a leading figure,
looked at the possibility of bringing together the army – with its disgruntled members
who were owed back pay and who also dreamt of the possibility of life-long
pensions – and the creditors: an early type of military-industrial complex
almost two centuries before Eisenhower’s warning.
They began this work in early 1783. Members of the military held official
meetings with Congress…
…but…also engaged in unofficial
meetings with some of the nationalist politicians, including Robert Morris,
Gouverneur Morris, Alexander Hamilton, and James Wilson. Such men saw in the clamors of the creditors,
and the discontent of the officers, an opportunity to unite the two groups to
secure national revenue, and even, perhaps, the kind of government they had
been unable to get by either constitutional amendment or interpretation. (Page
69)
It was these backroom and unofficial meetings that the
agenda was established. The army decided
to throw their lot in with Congress for the settlement of accounts, and not the
individual states – the desire was to establish a permanent national revenue. This was backed with a threat regarding the
possible actions that disgruntled soldiers might take absent Congressional
action. (Page 69, 70)
Ultimately Washington spoiled the plot, as he did not throw
in with the scheme. As many officers
would be certain to follow Washington, the planned coup died, stillborn.
Bank of North America
A couple of specific examples of Morris’ dealings will add
some color to the picture.
The Bank of North America was funded with the receipt of
specie borrowed by Congress from France.
Morris, responsible for the Treasury, used some of this cash to buy
stock in the bank! The bank then loaned
money to the United States at interest – money that the United States had
borrowed in the first place. (Page 228)
Morris and his friends held a controlling interest in the
bank once all shares were considered. The
bank made money from the beginning.
Shortly after the peace, the bank declared a dividend of 6.5% for the
six months beginning January 1783.
During the next six months, the dividend rose to 8 percent.
French Farmers
General
(Page 202 – 203, except as noted)
One of the complaints regarding the time under the Articles
of Confederation was that trade and the economy were weakened by the lack of a
coercive central government. While also
another myth, to the extent that there were reasons to complain it turns out
Morris played a leading role.
France was long the largest export market for American
tobacco. With the end of the Revolution,
this trade no longer had to be routed through England. The powerful and corrupt French Farmers
General, in control of the importation of tobacco, did not like the price of
American tobacco, and found a willing partner in Robert Morris to help drive
the price down.
A contract was placed with Morris to be the monopoly
provider of tobacco to France. The
Farmers General agreed to pay a price of thirty-six livres per hundred for the
tobacco. They advanced 1,000,000 livres
to Morris such that he had capital to manipulate the American market.
Morris was able to drive the market price down from forty
shillings of Virginia money to twenty-four shillings. He was able to drive down both the price of
tobacco and the discount rate offered by the Bank of North America.
More and more it seemed to Virginia
planters that they had merely gotten new chains in place of old, but now they
came from Philadelphia and Baltimore instead of from London and Glasgow. (Page
238)
Makes you wonder whose
independence was won.
Conclusion
The nationalists, of which Morris was a leading figure,
constantly pushed for a coercive central government with an independent income.
They pushed for this throughout the Revolution and throughout the period under
the Articles. They finally got their
wish under the Constitution.
The behavior of Robert Morris should make abundantly clear
the intent of those behind the Constitution.
The desire for independence was a desire to shed foreign control in
favor of local control, with the proceeds accruing to an American government as
opposed to a British government.
This is the reality within which Robert Morris played a
leading part.
Thanks for turning me on to book
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