212 BANKING THEORIES IN UNITED STATES
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that is, funds in the hands of banks and agents in New York
and Boston, which they can draw for at sight, yet, should there
be a suspension of specie payments in those cities, these specie
funds would not be available as such.” ! Following the crisis
of 1857 the New York superintendent of banking wrote that
experience ‘‘for the first time has shown the bankers of New
York that there is such a thing as suspending specie payments
from an internal demand for coin.” And the great lesson of
the crisis he found in the demonstration that ‘the greatest
danger to the banker, as well as to the public, lies in the large
amount of his deposits, and the least in the currency he issues.”
Such a statement, he added, if made six months before, ‘would
have stamped its promulgator as a tyro in banking.” 2 He then
pointed out the manner in which New York served as the reserve
center for other parts of the country, and urged that the New
York banks be required to keep a twenty per cent reserve against
deposits.
Whatever demand for coin in unusual quantities may be made in this
State or elsewhere, New York city must furnish it, either through the banks
or citizens located within her borders. Upon no other point in this State can
come a demand that can lead to a general suspension; and by a necessity
that knows no law the suspension of that city is followed throughout this
State and the Union.3
1 Report, 1848, in U. S. House of Representatives, 3oth Congress, 1st Session,
Document 77, p. 195.
2 Report, 1857, Bankers’ Magazine (Dec., 1857), xii, 622.
3 Ibid., p. 632. Related to the problem presented by the holding at New York
of large balances due to other banks was the practice engaged in by outside banks
of investing part of their funds in commercial paper in New York City — a phenom-
enon that was incidental to the rise of the latter to a position of importance as
financial center of the country. The bank commissioners of Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, and Connecticut made frequent reference to it, beginning about 1840,
usually to protest against it on the score that it implied neglect of potential borrow-
ers at home. From the point of view of the New York money market, however, the
difficulty lay in the fact that such outside funds represented but a fair-weather
support, since they would probably be promptly withdrawn for use at home in
times of widespread distress. The stringency in the New York money market would
then be accentuated by the necessity of assuming the added burden of liquidating
these assets of the outside banks. The bank commissioners of Connecticut, indeed,
in their report of 1848, and the New Hampshire commissioners the following year,
approved of such investments at New York on the very ground that they consti-
tuted a secondary reserve. since their liquidation in times of revulsion would fortify