BIBLIOGRAPHY
For convenience of reference I have divided my bibliography into
the following parts:
1. THE ENGLISH BACKGROUND.
2. THE COLONIAL BACKGROUND.
3. THE PERIOD 1780-1860.
(a) Secondary Sources.
{(b) Primary Sources.
1. THE ENGLISH BACKGROUND
Andreades, A. M. History of the Bank of England. Translated by Christabel
Meredith. London, 1909.
Cannan, Edwin. The Paper Pound of 1797-1821. (Reprint of the Bullion
Report, with a substantial introduction.) London, 1919.
Davis, A. M. Currency and Banking in the Province of Massachusetts Bay,
part II, chapters 1-4. Cambridge, Mass., 1go1.
Hollander, J. H. “Development of the Theory of Money from Adam Smith
to David Ricardo,” Quarterly Journal of Economics (191 I), XXV, 420-470.
Laughlin, J. L. The Principles of Money. New York, 19003.
Macleod, H. D. Dictionary of Political Economy, vol. i. London, 1863.
——. Theory and Practice of Banking, 4th ed., 2 vols. London, 1883, 1886.
——. Theory of Credit, 2 vols. London, 1891.
M’Culloch, J. R. A Select Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts and other
Publications, on Paper Currency and Banking. London, 1857.
Mill, J. S. Principles of Political Economy, edited by W. J. Ashley. London,
1920.
Overstone (Lord). Tracts and other Publications on Metallic and Paper Cur-
rency. London, 1858.
Palgrave, R. H. I. Dictionary of Political Economy, 3 vols. London, 1894-
1899.
Pierson, N. G. Principles of Economics. Translated by A. A. Wotzel, pp. 434-
461. London, 1902.
Silberling, N. J. British Theories of Money and Credit, 1776-1848. Unpub-
lished Harvard thesis, 1919.
——. “Financial and Monetary Policy of Great Britain during the Na-
poleonic Wars,” part II, Quarterly Journal of Economics xxviii, (1924),
397-439.
Smith, A. Wealth of Nations, edited by Edwin Cannan. London, 1904.
Tooke, T. A Letter to Lord Grenville on the Effects Ascribed to the Resumption
of Cash Payments on the Value of the Currency, Appendix, pp. 117-127.
London, 1829.
Walker, F. A. Money. New York, 1877.