THE BACKGROUND
Few periods could have been more auspicious for the starting
of a stock exchange than the years between 1830 and 1837. This
was the period which saw the bith of the American railroads.
It was the period, too, which witnessed the extinguishment of
the government debt and the return to the various states, by the
United States treasury, of more than thirty millions of surplus
tevenues. It was also the period of settlement for a number of
foreign difficulties, particularly between England and France,
and a corresponding growth in the available investment and
speculative capital of those two countries. Due to the high
state of American credit, by reason of the liquidation of the
national debt, large amounts of this English and French money
sought an outlet in the United States. True, in 1834, a crisis
was precipitated by the withdrawal of government funds from
the United States Bank and a constriction of credit followed,
but by the end of the year, when the local Exchange was
launched, this adverse factor had been well discounted, and
the country was preparing for the years 1835 and 1836, long
known as the “golden age of borrowing.”
The availability of capital was a great stimulant to the pio-
neering spirit of all the Atlantic seaboard cities, and particularly
of Boston. At the start, the available securities, as stated, were
very limited, consisting largely of the stocks of banks and insur-
ance companies, of the local mill and canal projects, of small
mining enterprises, and of the various types of public debts;
but, with the growing exploitation of national resources and
industrial upbuilding, the supply was an expanding one.
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