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National banking under the Federal Reserve System

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Bibliographic data

Object: 10 Jahre Wiederaufbau

Monograph

Identifikator:
1689579730
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-103299
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Freese, Heinrich http://d-nb.info/gnd/118535153
Title:
Nationale Bodenreform
Edition:
Zweite Auflage
Place of publication:
Berlin
Publisher:
Druck und Verlag von U. Weichert
Year of publication:
[1926]
Scope:
XVI, 472 Seiten
Digitisation:
2020
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
5. Die Bodenreformer in Berlin
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Essays of Benjamin Franklin
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • I. Plan for settling two western colonies in North America, with reason for the plan
  • II. The interest of Great Britain considered, with regard to her colonies and the acquisitions of Canada and Guadaloupe
  • III. Letter concerning the gratitude of America
  • IV. The examination of Dr. Benjamin Franklin in the british house of commons
  • V. Protective duties on imports and how they work
  • VI. Trade with England
  • VII. Causes of the american discontents before 1768
  • VIII. Positions to be examined, concerning national wealth
  • IX. To M. Dubourg
  • X. Plan for benefiting distant unprovided countries
  • XI. To Joseph Galloway
  • XII. Rules for reducing a Great Empire to a small one
  • XIII. An edict by the King of Prussia
  • XIV. Hints for conversation upon the subject of terms that might probably produce a durable ubion between Britain and the colonies
  • XV. To Mr. Strahan
  • XVI. To Joseph Priestley
  • XVII. The british nation, as it appeared to the colonists in 1775
  • XVIII. Vindication and offer from congress to parliament
  • XIX. Sketch of proposition for a peace
  • XX. Comparison of Great Britain and the United States in regard to the basis of credit in the two countries
  • XXI. To General Washington
  • XXII.From the count de Schaumbergh to the Baron Hohendorf, commanding the hessian troops in America
  • XXIII. To Gen. Washington
  • XXIV. A dialogue between Britain, France, Spain, Holland, Saxony, and America
  • XXV. To George Washington
  • XXVI. To Count de Vergennes
  • XXVII. To Benjamin Vaughan
  • XXVIII. To Mrs. Sarah Bache
  • XXIX. The international State of America; Being a true description of the interest and policy of that vast continent
  • XXX. To Bejamin Vaughan
  • XXXI.To Francis Maseres
  • XXXII. Proposales for consideration in the convention for forming the constitution of the United States
  • XXXIII. An adress to the public from the Pennsylvania Society for promoting the abolition of slavery, and the relief of free negroes unlawfully held in bondage

Full text

Benjamin Franklin [1760 
ings, rents, and the value of land and of the produce 
of land; even if he goes back no farther than is within 
man’s memory. Let him compare those countries 
with others on the same island, where manufactures 
have not yet extended themselves; observe the 
present difference, and reflect how much greater our 
strength may be, if numbers give strength, when our 
manufactures shall occupy every part of the island 
where they can possibly be subsisted. 
But, say the objectors, “there is a certain distance 
from the sea, in America, beyond which the expense 
of carriage will put a stop to the sale and consump- 
tion of your manufactures; and this, with the diffi- 
culty of making returns for them, will oblige the in- 
habitants to manufacture for themselves; of course, 
if you suffer your people to extend their settle- 
ments beyond that distance, your people become 
useless to you’’; and this distance is limited by some 
to two hundred miles, by others to the Appalachian 
mountains. 
Not to insist on a plain truth, that no part of a 
dominion from whence a government may on occa- 
sion draw supplies and aids both of men and money 
(though at too great a distance to be supplied with 
manufactures from some other part) is therefore to 
be deemed useless to the whole, I shall endeavour to 
show that these imaginary limits of utility, even in 
point of commerce, are much too narrow. The in- 
land parts of the continent of Europe are farther 
from the sea than the limits of settlement proposed 
for America. Germany is full of tradesmen and 
artificers of all kinds, and the governments there, 
40
	        

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Essays of Benjamin Franklin. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1927.
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