Lords of Finance: 1929, the Great Depression, and the Bankers Who Broke the World (78 page)

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BOOK: Lords of Finance: 1929, the Great Depression, and the Bankers Who Broke the World
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491
Strong's successor: Matthew, Josephson. "Money Men are Different Now,"
Saturday Evening Post
, February 26, 1949.

492
"being young and new," "had inherited all antagonisms": Letter from Leffingwell to Edward Grenfell, May 29, 1919, quoted in Kunz,
The Battle for Britain's Gold Standard
, 19.

493
With Strong dead: Interview with Leslie Rounds,
Committee on the History of the Federal Reserve System
, Washington: Brookings Institution, 1954–55.

494
"raise the prestige": "Memorandum on conversation with Governor Young: March 6, 1929," Goldenweiser Papers, Library of Congress, quoted in Clarke,
Central Bank Cooperation
, 156.

495
"any longer intend to be": Bierman,
The Great Myths of 1929
, 78.

496
Harrison urged Norman: Hamlin Diary, February 11, 1929, quoted in Bierman,
The Great Myths of 1929
, 105, n. 11.

497
"to have the stock market fall": Josephson,
Infidel in the Temple
, 22.

498
Once the speculative fever: Harrison Memorandum, "Conversations with Federal Reserve Board: February 5, 1929," quoted in Clarke,
Central Bank Cooperation
, 152.

499
"lived and breathed": Hamlin Diary, March 5, 1929, Library of Congress; "Memorandum on conversation with Governor Young: March 6, 1929," Goldenweiser Papers, Library of Congress, quoted in Clarke,
Central Bank Cooperation
, 157.

500
"If buying and selling stocks": "The War Against Wall Street Speculation,"
The Literary Digest
, April 13, 1929.

501
"the hardest time in America": Letter from Peacock to Revelstoke, February 18, 1929, quoted in Kynaston,
The City of London: Illusions of Gold
, 157.

502
"an even deeper feeling": Letter from Norman to European Central Bankers, February 21, 1929, quoted in Clay,
Lord Norman
, 249.

503
Over the next three months: Friedman and Schwartz,
A Monetary History
, 259.

504
Even Adolph Miller: Hamlin Diary, January 3, 1929, quoted in Wueschner,
Charting Twentieth-Century Monetary Policy
, 153.

505
"The French have always had": McNeil,
American Money and the Weimar Republic
, 228.

506
Under the Dawes Plan schedule: Under the Dawes Plan, reparations were supposed to increase according to a "prosperity index," calculated based on trends in foreign trade, the budget, coal production, railway traffic, consumption of sugar, tobacco, and beer and spirit. While the increase in payments was potentially indefinite, most people worked on the calculation that the annual tribute would settle somewhere around $700 million.

507
"with a mixture of awkwardness": McNeil,
American Money and the Weimar Republic
, 228.

508
"nothing but work ": McNeil,
American Money and the Weimar Republic
, 228

509
Government officials: Bennett,
Germany and the Diplomacy of the Financial Crisis
, 5.

510
"the new German Kaiser": "69,"
Time
, February 6, 1929.

511
"without the normal incentive": Annual Report of Agent General for Reparations, 1927, quoted in Eyck,
A History of the Weimar Republic
, 2: 174.

512
"was dancing on a volcano": Stresemann Note on Meeting with Parker Gilbert, November 13, 1928, in Stresemann,
Diaries, Letters and Papers
, 2: 406.

513
It came as an ill omen: "Europe's Cold Snap Worst in Centuries,"
New York Times
, February 12, 1929; "100 Die in Europe as Cold Holds Grip,"
New York Times
, February 13, 1929; "Freezing Europe Faces Cold Famine,"
New York Times
, February 14, 1929.

514
Marthe Hanau was a forty-two-year-old: Janet Flanner, "Annals of Finance: The Swindling Presidente," the
New Yorker
, August 26 and September 2, 1939.

515
"lengthy, tiresome": Ziegler,
The Sixth Great Power
, 357.

516
"a vehement, intolerant man": Huddleston,
In My Time
, 256.

517
"tantrums and exhibitionism": Leith-Ross,
Money Talks
, 119.

518
"hatchet, Teuton face," "like a steel trap": Ziegler,
The Sixth Great Power
, 356–57.

519
"If Hell is anything like Paris": Klingaman,
1929: The Year of the Crash
, 163.

520
The German delegates: Kopper,
Hjalmar Schacht
, 146.

521
Schacht's proposal was initially received: Stuart Crocker Memoirs, quoted in Jacobson,
Locarno Diplomacy
, 257.

522
Pierre Quesnay: Stuart Crocker Memoirs, quoted in Jacobson,
Locarno Diplomacy
, 265.

523
"You ought never to have signed": Schacht,
My First Seventy-six Years
, 247.

524
"The crisis may have been": Kopper,
Hjalmar Schacht
, 154.

525
"My prophecy would be": Keynes, "Letter to Andrew Mcfadyean," January 5, 1930, in
Collected Writings
, 18: 346–47.

526
In addition, he continued to manage: Hession,
John Maynard Keynes
, 175.

527
Despite his reputation: Skousen, "Keynes as a Speculator," 161–69.

528
"triumph": Keynes,
Collected Writing: A Tract
, 4: 231.

529
"nothing which can be called inflation": Keynes, "Is There Inflation in the United States?" September 1, 1928, in
Collected Writing
, 13: 52–59

530
"on the side of business depression": Keynes, "Letter to Charles Bullock," October 4, 1928, in
Collected Writings
13: 70–73.

531
"I was forgetting that gold": Keynes, "Is There Enough Gold? The League of Nations Inquiry,"
The Nation and Athenaeum
, January 19, 1929, in
Collected Writing
, 19: 775–80.

532
"Picture to yourself ": Kynaston,
The City of London, Illusions of Gold
, 157.

533
"Almost all the great powers": Somary,
The Raven of Zurich
, 155.

534
"even in countries thousands of miles": Keynes, "A British View of the Wall Street Slump,"
New York Evening Post
, October 25, 1929, in
Collected Writings
, 20: 2–3.

535
The character of the market: White, "The Stock Market Boom and Crash of 1929 Revisited," 77.

536
Indeed, on September 3, 1929: Paul, Desmond. "An Exploration of the Nature of Bull Market Tops,"
Lowry Reports
, 2006.

537
In February, Owen Young: Klingaman,
1929: The Year of the Crash
, 159, 211.

538
Joe Kennedy: Goodwin,
The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys
, 488.

539
Bernard Baruch claims: Baruch,
The Public Years
, 224–25.

540
Even Thomas Lamont: Lamont,
The Ambassador from Wall Street
, 260.

541
In April 1929, he had some friends: Durant's secret visit to the White House from Sparling,
Mystery Men of Wall Street
, 3–6.

542
"panic which keeps people": Seldes,
The Years of the Locust
, 40.

543
"Scores of thousands: "Europe's 'Wall Street Panic,'"
The Literary Digest
, August 24, 1929.

544
"fat excitable man": Snowden,
Autobiography
, 2: 827.

545
"invisibly the battle of gold": "Palladin of Gold,"
Time
, August 19, 1929.

546
In late August, as Britain's reserves hit: Clay,
Lord Norman
, 252.

17: PURGING THE ROTTENNESS

547
"For five years at least":
BusinessWeek
, September 7, 1929

548
"I repeat what I said": "Babson Predicts 'Crash' in Stocks,"
New York Times
, September 6, 1929.

549
He was a strict Prohibitionist: Fridson,
It Was a Very Good Year
, 87–88.

550
"none of us are infallible": "Fisher Denies Crash Is Due,"
New York Times
, September 6, 1929.

551
Simple commonsense techniques: White, "The Stock Market Boom and Crash of 1929 Revisited," 72–73.

552
"not perhaps surprising": "Financial Markets: Last Week's Reaction in Stocks and the Talk of a Future 'Crash,'"
New York Times
, September 9, 1929.

553
"Mr. Hatry is very clever": Kynaston,
The City of London: Illusions of Gold
, 140.

554
"Stocks have reached what looks like": "Fisher Sees Stocks Permanently High,"
New York Times
, October 16, 1929.

555
"increased prosperity": "Says Stock Slump is Only Temporary,"
New York Times
, October 24, 1929.

556
"There is a great deal of exaggeration": "Letter from Lamont to Herbert Hoover," October 19, 1929, quoted in Lamont,
The Ambassador from Wall Street
, 266–68.

557
"This document is fairly amazing": Kunz,
The Battle for Britain's Gold Standard
, 55.

558
On Wednesday, October 23: Henry, Lee. "1929: The Crash That Shook the World,"
American Mercury
, November 1949.

559
"grave," "gesturing idly": Brooks,
Once in Golconda
, 124.

560
"susceptible of betterment": "Financiers Ease Tension,"
New York Times
, October 25, 1929.

561
"There is no man or group": Bell, "Crash: An Account of the Stock Market Crash of 1929."

562
"undue speculation": "Treasury Officials Blame Speculation,"
New York Times
, October 25, 1929.

563
"Bankers Halt Stock Debacle":
Wall Street Journal
, October 27, 1929.

564
"friends and former millionaires": Manchester,
The Last Lion
, 826.

565
"participating in the making of history": "Closing Rally Vigorous" and "Crowds See Market History Made,"
New York Times
, October 30, 1929.

566
"No one who has gazed": William Manchester,
The Last Lion
, 827.

567
"on fire," "done and can't be undone": Josephson,
The Money Lords
, 82.

568
That evening: Josephson,
The Money Lords
, 82.

569
Though the crash of October 1929: Soule,
Prosperity Decade
, 309.

570
"underlying conditions," "an excuse for going": "What Smashed the Bull Market?"
The Literary Digest
, November 9, 1929.

571
"No Iowa Farmer will tear up his mail order blank": "Wall Street's 'Prosperity Panic,'"
The Literary Digest
, November 9, 1929.

572
"For six years, American business":
BusinessWeek
, November 2, 1929.

573
Industrial production fell: Romer, "The Great Crash and the Onset of the Great Depression," and Galbraith,
The Great Crash
, 142.

574
"Rich people who have not sold": Hirst,
Wall Street and Lombard Street
, 59.

575
"constitutionally gloomy": White,
Autobiography
, 515.

576
"back to normal," "during the next sixty days," "We have passed the worst": Mangold, W. P. "The White House Magicians: Prosperity Invocations,"
The Nation
, October 21, 1931, and Allen,
Washington Merry-Go-Round
, 75–76. At several points along the way: Galbraith,
The Great Crash
, 76, 149–51.

577
"Gentlemen, you have come": Schlesinger,
The Crisis of the Old Order
, 231.

578
He frequently claimed in press conferences: Mangold, W. P. "The White House Magicians: Playing with Statistics,"
The Nation
, October 28, 1931; "Victory in Maine predicted by Fess,"
New York Times
, August 27, 1930; "Labor Commissioner Stewart Quits Post,"
New York Times
, July 3, 1932.

579
"liquidate labor, liquidate stocks": Hoover,
Memoirs
, 30.

580
For Mellon, it was a once-in-a-lifetime: Cannadine,
Mellon
, 414–27.

581
Between November 1929 and June 1930: Chandler,
American Monetary Policy
, 144.

582
"1927 experiment": Federal Reserve Board letter from John Calkins, Governor of San Francisco Fed, to George Harrison, January 7, 1930.

583
"We have been putting out credit": Federal Reserve Board, Minutes of the Open Market Policy Committee, September 25, 1930: quoted in Chandler,
American Monetary Policy
, 137.

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