Sponsored

Finance and Enterprise in Early America - (Anniversary Collection) by Jr (Hardcover)

Eligible for registries and wish lists

Sponsored

About this item

Highlights

  • Stephen Girard, the second richest American of his time after John Jacob Astor, was the last of the great merchant bankers and the first of the great investment bankers.
  • About the Author: Donald R. Adams, Jr. was Professor of History at West Virginia University.
  • 176 Pages
  • History, United States
  • Series Name: Anniversary Collection

Description



About the Book



Stephen Girard was the last of the great merchant bankers and the first of the great investment bankers. This is a study not only of an influential man and the bank he operated in Philadelphia but also of the growing interdependence between the institutions of government and finance in early nineteenth-century America.



Book Synopsis



Stephen Girard, the second richest American of his time after John Jacob Astor, was the last of the great merchant bankers and the first of the great investment bankers. This is a study not only of an influential man and the bank he operated in Philadelphia but also of the growing interdependence between the institutions of government and finance in early nineteenth-century America.

In a period when precedents were being set in a new nation and large corporations were beginning to predominate in the business of banking, Girard, a man of undisputed business acumen, established in Philadelphia what was to become the largest private bank of its time and as such a monument to free enterprise. At the same time, along with Astor and other influential financiers, Girard was instrumental in financing the War of 1812 and in establishing the second Bank of the United States. His close association with the Madison administration and the Treasury Department made him a key figure in the evolving relationship between the federal government and the financial community.

Applying modern statistical techniques to the comprehensive records of the old Girard Bank, Donald Adams has uncovered a great deal of information, hitherto largely unavailable to scholars, about banking practices in early America. In this book he analyzes day-to-day operations--the kinds of loans that were typical, the devices for maintaining liquidity, the organization of staff--as well as long-run investment decisions and their impact on the formation of American finance.

While other studies have been made of the anatomy and influence of early chartered and corporate banks, Adams' is the first history of America's largest private bank. It provides a rare glimpse of the inner structure and strategy of an important financial institution and of the entrepreneurial and political activities of its founder.



About the Author



Donald R. Adams, Jr. was Professor of History at West Virginia University.

Additional product information and recommendations

Sponsored

Discover more options

Loading, please wait...

Your views

Loading, please wait...

Guests also viewed

Loading, please wait...

Featured products

Loading, please wait...

Guest ratings & reviews

Disclaimer

Get top deals, latest trends, and more.

Privacy policy

Footer