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Langdon Cheves
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===Tenure=== The day after Cheves took office, the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court [[John Marshall]] delivered his opinion in the case ''[[McCulloch v. Maryland]]'', upholding the Bank's exemption from state taxation,{{sfn|Huff|1977|p=109}} harboring the Bank against its political opponents at the state level. Shortly after he entered office, Cheves also presided over the establishment of a new bank building at Chestnut Street in Philadelphia. The building was completed in 1821.{{sfn|Huff|1977|p=113}} ====Monetary policies==== Cheves's early tenure focused on rectifying the failed promises of Jones's administration, enforcing monetary contractions at the branch level by ordering branches in the South and West to stop issuing notes and eastern branches to stop receiving them. He also reduced salaries and opened a correspondence with Secretary of the Treasury [[William H. Crawford]].{{sfn|Huff|1977|p=109}} On April 9, he called a meeting of the board of directors to outline his six proposals, which the board approved overwhelmingly:{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=110β11}} * that the curtailment of loans begun by Jones be continued; * that southern and western offices be forbidden to issue notes whenever such notes would drain the eastern offices of specie; * that state banks be required to begin immediate specie payments for debts to the Bank; * that the Treasury give the Bank advance notice when it proposed to withdraw funds from a branch where no government deposits had been made; * that debentures be paid in the same currency for which they were originally issued; and * that additional specie be purchased from abroad to secure the Bank's obligations. Crawford voiced his displeasure at the requirement of Treasury notice. Cheves himself acknowledged that the curtailment of loans was only a temporary measure adopted at the insistence of Bank officers; he determined to lift the restriction as soon as possible. To Crawford, he wrote that the cause of the reforms was "the restraint put upon the offices, with which exchanges were adverse, in the issue of their notes." Circulation dropped about 25 percent.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=110β11}} Though his policies likely ensured the Bank's institutional stability, hard money advocate [[William M. Gouge]] blamed his restrictions for the continued depression: "The Bank was saved and the people were ruined."{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=116β17}} Within Cheves's first six months as president, a movement was instigated to remove him and return to Jones's policy, but it fizzled and he was re-elected unanimously in 1820.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=116β17}} In 1820, drawing on the works of [[Adam Smith]], [[David Ricardo]], [[Thomas Malthus]], and [[J.B. Say]], Cheves anonymously defended his policies (under the pen name "Say") an essay titled ''Inquiry into the Causes of Public Prosperity and Distress''.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=119β20}} He argued that war-time prosperity had ended because of the failure of the foreign export market, the "diminution and depreciation of our currency," the "failure of manufacturing establishments," and the resulting "diminished demand for labor and capital." Amid this depression, a "pernicious system of banking" had cheapened the currency and produced "a kind of general paralysis," which his policies had reversed.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=119β20}} In time, he predicted, agriculture would be restored, though manufacturing would only grow at the same pace as population in the cities and towns.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=119β20}} In January 1821, in an effort to placate the South and West, Cheves proposed a more lenient loan policy provided it was compatible with maintenance of a sound currency. He was opposed only by Nicholas Biddle.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=119β20}} He also established a dividend in July 1821 of 1.5%, which increased to 2.5% by January 1822.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=119β20}} ====Structural reforms==== Also in 1819, Cheves deputized director [[Nicholas Biddle (1786-1844)|Nicholas Biddle]] to investigate James A. Buchanan, George Williams, and James W. McCulloch for illegally purchasing bank stock worth nearly $3,500,000 and accumulating large and unauthorized personal indebtedness against the Bank.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=114β15}} Biddle's investigation revealed fraudulent inflation in the price of the Bank's stock and personal enrichment by all three men. McCulloch was removed as cashier and Buchanan resigned as president.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=114β15}} In 1820, subordinate officers in Richmond and Philadelphia were forced to resigned for misconduct and unreported deficiencies.{{sfn|Huff|1977|pp=116β17}} Cheves called for investigations into the business policies of western branches and legal protections for the Bank by Congress amending the charter:{{sfn|Huff|1977|p=118}} *the term of Bank directors to be extended to more than three years; *legal protection for the Bank against frauds committed by its own officers; *officials other than the President and cashier deputized to sign bank notes; and *branches required by charter to accept only their own notes or those of the parent bank in Philadelphia. These calls were unsuccessful; no Congressional majority could be gained to side with Cheves during his presidency.{{sfn|Huff|1977|p=118}}
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