NATIONAL BANKING UNDER THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
tion, passed a bill permitting the extension of charters of existing
national banks for 20 more years.
Thus closed what may be described as the formative period of the
National Banking System. During the first 20 years of its existence,
the system had been subject to attacks first from one side, then from
another; one Secretary of the Treasury would be its warm defender;
another would view it with apathy. Not infrequently, the issues
which brought various phases of the National Banking System up for
Congressional action, were not issues of a fundamental banking na-
ture, but were of a strictly political character, and were dealt with
accordingly.
But, in the period covered by the first charters of the earliest
national banks, the system established itself on a thoroughly firm
basis. It proved its great usefulness to the financial organization of
the country, and laid a firm foundation for the growth and strength
which came to the national banks with each succeeding year. Since
the passage of the recharter act in 1882, no effort has been made from
any responsible source either to legislate the national banks out of
existence, or to restrict the scope of their banking practices. In fact,
the more recent tendency of Federal legislation has been to further
broaden the national banks’ field of operation.
| |
NATURAL DEVELOPMENT
Fis
Tue period 1883-1899 was one of natural development in the history
of the National Banking System in that those national banks already
in existence were developing normally along the lines of scientific
and modern banking principles, and that the new sections of the
country were from year to year getting much needed banking facili-
ties through the organization of additional national banks.
National banks during the period were neither disturbed nor
aided to any considerable extent by Federal legislation. The cur-
rency phase of the nation’s financial problem occupied the major
share of attention. Those who wished the country to go on a silver
basis were pressing their case with unremitting vigor, and were
[14]