The Scrip Notes of Greenfield Mills and Related Matters
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Martin Van Buren: the Greatest American President
SUBSCRIBE NOW AND RECEIVE CRISIS AND LEVIATHAN* FREE! “The Independent Review does not accept “The Independent Review is pronouncements of government officials nor the excellent.” conventional wisdom at face value.” —GARY BECKER, Noble Laureate —JOHN R. MACARTHUR, Publisher, Harper’s in Economic Sciences Subscribe to The Independent Review and receive a free book of your choice* such as the 25th Anniversary Edition of Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government, by Founding Editor Robert Higgs. This quarterly journal, guided by co-editors Christopher J. Coyne, and Michael C. Munger, and Robert M. Whaples offers leading-edge insights on today’s most critical issues in economics, healthcare, education, law, history, political science, philosophy, and sociology. Thought-provoking and educational, The Independent Review is blazing the way toward informed debate! Student? Educator? Journalist? Business or civic leader? Engaged citizen? This journal is for YOU! *Order today for more FREE book options Perfect for students or anyone on the go! The Independent Review is available on mobile devices or tablets: iOS devices, Amazon Kindle Fire, or Android through Magzter. INDEPENDENT INSTITUTE, 100 SWAN WAY, OAKLAND, CA 94621 • 800-927-8733 • [email protected] PROMO CODE IRA1703 Martin Van Buren The Greatest American President —————— ✦ —————— JEFFREY ROGERS HUMMEL resident Martin Van Buren does not usually receive high marks from histori- ans. Born of humble Dutch ancestry in December 1782 in the small, upstate PNew York village of Kinderhook, Van Buren gained admittance to the bar in 1803 without benefit of higher education. Building on a successful country legal practice, he became one of the Empire State’s most influential and prominent politi- cians while the state was surging ahead as the country’s wealthiest and most populous. -
The Unitary Executive During the Second Half-Century
THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE DURING THE SECOND HALF-CENTURY * STEVEN G. CALABRESI ** CHRISTOPHER S. YOO I. INTRODUCTION .....................................................668 II. THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE DURING THE JACKSONIAN PERIOD, 1837-1861 .........................669 A. Martin Van Buren .................................................670 B. William H. Harrison ..............................................678 C. John Tyler...............................................................682 D. James K. Polk..........................................................688 E. Zachary Taylor.......................................................694 F. Millard Fillmore.....................................................698 G. Franklin Pierce.......................................................704 H. James Buchanan .....................................................709 III. THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE DURING THE CIVIL WAR, 1861-1869 ..................................717 A. Abraham Lincoln....................................................718 B. Andrew Johnson.....................................................737 C. The Tenure of Office Act and the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson .................................................746 IV. THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE DURING THE GILDED AGE, 1869-1889................................759 A. Ulysses S. Grant ....................................................759 B. Rutherford B. Hayes...............................................769 C. James A. Garfield....................................................780 D. Chester -
Apush Review Packet
APUSH REVIEW PACKET The Exam: • The exam is 3 hours and 5 minutes in length and consists of two sections. In section I, students answer 80 multiple choice questions in 55 minutes. In section II, students are given 15 minutes to plan and 45 minutes to write an essay on the document-based question (DBQ), and 70 minutes to answer two essay questions. Suggested time to be spent on each of the essay questions is 5 minutes planning and 30 minutes writing. Scoring: • The DBQ & two FRE are scored on a scale of 1-9 – Basis of a thesis, argument, and supporting evidence (including documents for DBQ) • The M/C counts for 50%, the Essays 50% – DBQ counts for 22.5%, FRE 27.5% ea. • 180 possible points – [# correct] x 1.125 = _________ MC – # out of 9 x 4.50 = ________ DBQ – # out of 9 x 2.750 = _______ FRE 1 – # out of 9 x 2.750 = _______ FRE 2 DBQ: • Requires you to answer by using documentary evidence AND your outside knowledge • READ QUESTION • BRAINSTORM!! • READ DOCUMENTS – Not statements of FACTS; descriptions, interpretations or opinions; READ THE SOURCE! • WRITE YOUR ESSAY Writing an Essay: • Thesis Paragraph – Addresses the QUESTION!! – Contains Thesis (what is YOUR theme) – Organizational Categories (set up your following paragraphs) • Supporting Paragraphs – Topic sentence – Specific factual information – Interpretive commentary – Documentation (DBQ)* – Clincher sentence • Conclusion – Supports, sums up Level of Questions Level One: questions are the facts of history. They can be answered from the text or other resources Level Two: questions require students to make inferences as to how and why the factual information has an impact in the historical context in which it occurs. -
Chapter 11 Politics of the Market Revolution P186 P187 Politics in the Age of Jackson
Chapter 11 Politics of the Market Revolution p186 p187 Politics in the Age of Jackson . “era of the common man” . America of the early 1800s considered the “common man” to be white and a man A New Kind of Politics . The Panic of 1819 . Expansion of the Franchise . The Election of 1824 . A New Culture of Politics p188 Andrew Jackson and the Politics of the “Common Man” . The Election of 1828 . A New Style of Politics . White Male Democracy . Racism in the North p189 p190 p190 p191 Jackson as President . Four issues dominated his presidency: . patronage . the nullification crisis . the Bank War . Indian removal Patronage . Patronage is the direct exchange of a government job in return for political campaign work The Nullification Crisis . The Context of Nullification . Tariffs . What Was Nullification? . Jackson’s Response The Bank War . The Bank . Jackson’s Opposition . Crushing the Bank . Wildcat Banking p194 Westward Expansion and Indian Removal . Indian Resistance . Indian Removal Act of 1830 . The Cherokee Nation versus Georgia . Was Jackson Anti-Indian? . The Seminole Revolt p195 The Panic of 1837 . The Specie Circular . The Panic of 1837 p197 The Development of the Second Two-Party System . 1830s . Andrew Jackson’s Democrats . John Quincy Adams’s and Henry Clay’s Whigs p198 Jackson’s Democrats . Extremely nationalistic . Believed in a small federal government . Government was not supposed to control the way that people conducted themselves privately . Included Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, and James K. Polk The Whigs . Favored a more active federal government . Supported using federal funds to finance internal improvements . Believed that government power could be used to promote the moral health of the nation . -
A History of the Canadian Dollar Provinces
Appendix B Alternative Money This history has focused on legal tender money in Canada, that is to say money that has been approved by the authorities for paying debts or settling transactions. Canada also has a rich history of private money—coins and paper scrip produced by individuals and companies, which commanded sufficient confidence within a commu- nity that they circulated freely. “Bons” and tokens Montréal, George King note, 1772 Through much of the colonial period in This note and others issued by the local merchant George King were New France and later in British North America, denominated in “coppers,” a conventional designation for a halfpenny. merchants, and even individuals, issued paper scrip. The paper scrip was not backed by gold or silver but could be used to buy goods in the issuers’ stores—a sort of IOU, which quickly began to change hands as money. The value of notes and the extent of their circulation depended on the reputation of the issuer. In Upper and Lower Canada, such fractional notes (known as bons after “Bon pour,” the French for “Good for,” the first words on many such notes) circulated widely during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Fractional notes were also issued by merchants in the Atlantic Halifax, merchant note, 5 shillings, 1820 Until the practice was outlawed in 1820, Halifax merchants commonly issued personalized scrip in low denominations to meet the need for coinage. 92 A History of the Canadian Dollar provinces. The widespread acceptance of bons (also called “shinplasters”) helped to set the stage Bank of Montreal, halfpenny, 1839 for the issuance of paper currency by commercial The Bank of Montreal issued base- banks (Shortt 1986, 37). -
' A'history'of'alternative'currencies'
' A'History'of'Alternative'Currencies' ! ' Garrick'Hileman' ! ! ! ! Abstract:'Alternative'currencies,'which'are'defined'as'any'nonElegal'tender'medium'of' exchange,'have'been'a'regular'feature'of'the'economic'landscape'over'the'last'halfE millennia.'A'survey'of'this'history'finds'that'alternative'currencies'often'arise'out'of'similar' socioEeconomic'circumstances'and'then'cease'to'circulate'within'a'relatively'short'time' after'their'introduction.'This'pattern'of'decline'is'explained'largely'by'three' forces:'regulation,'technological'innovation,'and'–'most'commonly'–'insufficient'demand' due'to'factors'such'as'transaction'inefficiencies,'low'institutional'support,'and'diminished' social'motivation.'PresentEday'alternative'currencies,'such'as'bitcoin'and'the'Brixton' pound,'show'both'similarities'and'differences'with'past'alternative'currencies.'Bitcoin'in' particular'possesses'several'radical'new'characteristics,'including'a'relatively'decentralized' structure,'efficient'transactions'across'borders,'global'awareness,'and'support'from' powerful'institutions.' ' ' JEL:'E40,'E42,'E49,'E50,'E51,'E58,'E59' ' Keywords:'money,'currencies,'alternative'currencies,'community'currencies,'parallel'currencies,' bitcoin,'Brixton'pound,'black'market' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Garrick'Hileman'([email protected])' London'School'of'Economics' Economic'History'Department' Houghton'Street' London'WC2A'2AE' England' ' © Garrick'Hileman'2013' Last'updated:'29'October'2014' I. Introduction! ' In'an'influential'1974'paper'economist'Benjamin'Klein'stated'“few'areas'of'economic' -
John Tyler Before the Presidency: Principles and Politics of a Southern Planter
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 2001 John Tyler Before the Presidency: Principles and Politics of a Southern Planter. Christopher Joseph Leahy Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Leahy, Christopher Joseph, "John Tyler Before the Presidency: Principles and Politics of a Southern Planter." (2001). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 242. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/242 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. -
The United States Independent Reasury System
"'I: ,~~ THE STORAG! UNITED STATES INDEPENDENT REASURY SYSTEM FEDERAL HALL, N.Y. December 30, 1968 The United States Independent Treasury System Federal Hall, N.H.S. - New York by Dr. John D.R. Platt DIVISION OF HISTORY Office Of Archeology And Historic Preservation December 30, 1968 National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior THE UNITED STATES INDEPENDENT TREASURY SYSTEM: ITS SIGNIFICANCE AND APPLICATION TO FEDERAL HALL•• WITH A NOTE ON THE CUSTOMS HClJSE PERIOD by ·Historian John D. R. Platt December 30, 1968 Background and Evaluation Study · Preface This study, prepared under RSP FEHA•H-2, brings together in narrative form, from an extenaive range of secondary and printed source materials, data needed for the development of museum exhibits on the New York Sub-Treasury and Customs in the building at the corner of Wall and Broad Streets in New York City. It has been made as complete as time had permitted. A complex subject, the Independent Treasury System gauged America's economic development during its years of operation. The Customs is a subject on quite another level, lacking an extensive liter ature, although tariff policy has been the subject of much eco nomics and historical writing. The data offered here touches on the essential topics to be considered among those concerning the 1842-1862 period of occupancy. i CONTENTS Page Preface i 1. How the Independent Treasury System Came into Being and What It Was 1 2. How Effectually the Independent Treasury System Operated 18 3. The New York Sub-Treasury and Its Functions 35 4. The Sub-Treasury's Wall Street Locale 46 5. -
The Expansion of Democracy in the Jacksonian Era
“THE INTERESTS OF THE MANY”: THE EXPANSION OF DEMOCRACY IN THE JACKSONIAN ERA An Online Professional Development Seminar from the Florida Virtual School and the National Humanities Center Assigned Readings Notes by Reeve Huston Associate Professor of History Duke University The following assigned texts are incorporated in the notes below. • New York voting requirements, 1777 • Petition of citizens of Richmond (VA) to state constitutional convention, 1829-30 • Warren Dutton, standard argument against expanded suffrage, 1820 • New York convention on voting, 1821 • Letter from Edward Patchell to Andrew Jackson • Letter from Martin Van Buren to Thomas Ritchie, 1827 • Thomas Ford, History of Illinois, 1854 • New York Democratic State Committee, “Plan of Organization,” 1844 • Cartoon: Rich v. Poor, Satan v. Liberty NOTES AND ASSIGNED TEXTS Re-establishing and Extending Partisan Democracy Nobody had ever seen anything like it. For the entire previous day, people had poured into Washington, D.C., to see their new president, Andrew Jackson, sworn in. By ten in the morning of the inauguration, the streets were jammed. Up to this point, presidential inaugurations had been quiet affairs. Now, according to Margaret Bayard Smith, the wife of a Maryland senator and a leading member of the capital’s gentry, the streets were jammed with fancy carriages and farmer’s carts, “filled with women and children, some in finery and some in rags.” After the new president swore his oath and gave his speech, a long procession of “country men, farmers, gentlemen, . boys, women and children, black and white” followed him to the White House and descended upon the presidential reception. -
1829 *I861 Appropriations, Banking, and the Tariff
1829 *I861 Appropriations, Banking, and the Tariff The Committee of Ways and Means nence in the decades immediately preceding e period 1829-1861, the committee’s chairman came to be regarded as the d the tariff. The c ver the nation’s the creation of policy, probably to a larger extent than any other ee during the antebellum era. “The great body of ndrew Jackson’s election to the Presidency marked the culmination legislatzon was referred A of a period of social, economic, and political change that began to the committee of ways with the American Revolution and intensified after the War of 1812. One of the most significant of these changes was the introduction of and means, whzch then democratic reforms in order to broaden the political base, such as the had charge of all extension of the vote to all adult white males. The Virginia dynasty appropnatzons and of all ended with the presidential election of 1824. From the disaffection fax laws, and whose surrounding the election and Presidency of John Quincy Adams, a chazrman was recognzzed new and vigorous party system began to coalesce at the state level. as leader of the House, The second American party system developed incrementally be- practzcally controllang the tween 1824 and 1840. The principal stimulants to the development of the new parties were the presidential elections. By 1840, two parties order of zts buszness. ” of truly national scope competed for control of ofices on the munici- (John Sherman, 1895) pal, state, and federal level. The founders of these new parties were not all aristocratic gentlemen. -
Download Them As A
Scrip Dividend Scheme TERMS AND CONDITIONS RSA Insurance Group plc (Registered in England and Wales, Company Number: 2339826) THIS DOCUMENT IS IMPORTANT AND REQUIRES YOUR ATTENTION. This document can also be downloaded from our website at www.rsagroup.com/scripdividend The value of shares and the income derived from shares can go down as well as up. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. If you are in any doubt about the action you should take, you should consult your stockbroker, solicitor, accountant or other independent financial adviser regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority pursuant to the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. If you have sold or otherwise transferred all of your shares in RSA Insurance Group plc, please send this document to the purchaser, transferee or the person who arranged the sale or transfer, so they can pass this document to the person who now holds the shares. 2 & 3 SCRIP DIVIDEND SCHEME TERMS AND CONDITIONS Scrip Dividend Scheme A glossary of defined terms used in this document can be 4. HOW DO I JOIN THE SCHEME IF I HOLD MY found on page 6. SHARES ELECTRONICALLY THROUGH CREST? Shareholders holding Ordinary Shares through CREST 1. WHAT IS THE SCRIP DIVIDEND SCHEME? can elect to receive dividends in the form of New Shares by submitting a CREST Dividend Election Input Message The Company is permitted to offer eligible Shareholders no later than 16.30 (UK time) on the Election Date. By the opportunity to participate in the Company’s doing so, CREST members confirm their election to Scrip Dividend Scheme (the ‘Scheme’) which enables participate in the Scheme and their acceptance of these Shareholders to receive new Ordinary Shares of £1.00 Terms and Conditions, as amended from time to time. -
CHAPTER 9 Jacksonian Democracy
CHAPTER 9 Jacksonian Democracy ANTICIPATION/REACTION Directions: Before you begin reading this chapter, place a check mark beside any of the following seven statements with which you now agree. Use the column entitled “Anticipation.” When you have completed your study of this chapter, come back to this section and place a check mark beside any of the statements with which you then agree. Use the column entitled “Reaction.” Note any variation in the placement of check marks from anticipation to reaction and explain why you changed your mind. Anticipation Reaction _____ 1. Andrew Jackson was the first “common man” elected _____ 1. to the presidency. _____ 2. In the new two party system of the Jacksonian era, _____ 2. the Democrats perpetuated the principles of the Jeffersonian Republicans, while the Whigs perpetuated the principles of the Hamiltonian Federalists. _____ 3. Most early-nineteenth-century Americans assumed _____ 3. that Native Americans would eventually be assimilated into the mainstream of American life. _____ 4. Because he was a slave owner, President Jackson _____ 4. sympathized with South Carolina’s Ordinance of Nullification in 1832. _____ 5. As a westerner, President Jackson sympathized with _____ 5. those who disliked the restrictive credit policies of the national bank. _____ 6. President Jackson’s war on the national bank caused _____ 6. the Panic of 1837 and the ensuing economic depression. _____ 7. Presidential election campaigns in the period of _____ 7. 1824-1840 focused on differences over major political and economic issues. 140 LEARNING OBJECTIVES After reading Chapter 9 you should be able to: 1.