States' Rights and the Economy * * * * * * * * * * * * Focus Question: How Did Old Issues Take a New Shape in the Conflict Over a National Bank and Tariffs?

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

States' Rights and the Economy * * * * * * * * * * * * Focus Question: How Did Old Issues Take a New Shape in the Conflict Over a National Bank and Tariffs? States' Rights and the Economy * * * * * * * * * * * * Focus Question: How did old issues take a new shape in the conflict over a national bank and tariffs? *Jackson believed that common people needed support against powerful forces of wealth and this led him to take a strong stand against the Bank of the United States. Pros and cons? The Bank War *The second Bank of the United States earned strong support from business people between 1816 and the 1830s because it made loans to business and was a safe place for the federal gov't to keep its money. The paper money issued formed a stable currency and careful policies created confidence in banks across the country. *However, many Americans disliked the bank because they didn't like the way it restricted loans made by state banks, and often limited the amount of money the banks loaned. This made farmers and merchants wanting to borrow money to buy land angry. Many blamed the economic crisis of 1819 on the banks that caused many to lose their farms. *Andrew Jackson was an enemy of the bank because it allowed a small group of wealthy to better themselves at the expense of the ordinary man. The bank president Nicholas Biddle, who was from a wealthy Philadelphia family, was especially disliked by Jackson because he often did favors for powerful politicians. *Biddle got Congress to renew the bank's charter in 1832 before it had expired. Jackson vetoed the charter renewal and this became a major issue in the presidential election. Most voters supported Jackson’s veto and he was re­elected. *Jackson's re­election showed that a determined President could stir up the people and face down powerful opponents in Congress. The second bank ceased to exist after its charter ran out in 1836 after Jackson left office and made it harder for the next President to end the crisis. Write a news report about Biddle's life and his association with the 2nd National Bank 1 The Question of States' Rights *Since the founding of our country, the issue of balance between the powers of the federal and state governments had been debated. *On one hand, the Constitutional Convention of 1787 had set up a gov't based on federalism which is the division of power between the federal and state levels. The Constitution gave the federal gov't many powers but at the same time, the 10th Amendment put a limit on federal power by allowing any powers not specifically given to the federal gov't to be reserved to the states. *Over time this issue had been tested by events such as the Alien and Sedition Acts and the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, but during Jackson's presidency these arguments caused a serious crisis. 2 The Nullification Crisis *In 1823 Congress passed a law raising the tariff on iron, textiles and other products, which caused the crisis to erupt. *The tariff helped manufacturers in the North and some of the West, but caused Southerners to pay more for their products which seemed unfair to them. *Vice­President John Calhoun argued that states had the right of nullification (an action by a state that cancels a federal law to which the state objects). If this happened it would seriously weaken the federal gov't. Arguments for Nullification *Southerners wondered … if the gov't could enforce what they saw as an unjust law, would they also have the power to end slavery? *Calhoun based his idea of nullification on his view of how the Union was formed. The Union grew from an agreement between various states and each state kept certain powers. One of those powers was the power to nullify federal laws the people of that state felt were unfair. Arguments against Nullification *Daniel Webster gave the clearest argument against nullification. He argued the United States had not been formed by the states, but by the entire American people. *Both Webster and Jackson defended the Union over the states for this reason ­ that the power of the U.S. came from its people. *To Calhoun, states’ rights were more important than saving the Union. South Carolina Threatens to Secede *In 1832, Congress passed another tariff law on iron and textiles. *SC called a state convention at which they voted to nullify the tariffs and said these tariffs did not apply to South Carolina. It went further to say that if the federal gov't tried to use force to impose the tariffs, then SC would secede from the Union. *Jackson responded by putting federal troops in SC on alert and issuing a statement that "disunion by armed force is treason". *With tensions mounting Calhoun resigned as VP. *In 1833, Jackson asked Congress to allow the federal gov't to collect the tariff in SC by force if necessary and support a compromise bill to lower the tariffs. Congress passed both bills. *South Carolina was unable to win support for its position from other states and repealed its tariff nullification and the crisis was settled peacefully. *Federal power had won over states' rights for now, but the issue would continue to be debated until the Civil War began in 1861. 3 The End of the Jackson Era *After two terms Jackson retired from office. Martin Van Buren was Jackson’s choice to succeed him. He was Sec. of State during Jackson’s first term and Vice President during his second term. *In the election of 1836, the Whigs ran three candidates (each from a different region) in order to prevent any one candidate from receiving the majority of votes and putting the decision into the House of Representatives *The strategy didn't work since Van Buren received a majority of both electoral and popular votes. 4 The Panic of 1837 *Van Buren took office when Britain was experiencing an economic slowdown so their manufacturers bought less cotton. This caused cotton prices to fall sharply which caused banks to be unable to collect on loans to cotton growers and this caused hundreds of banks to go bankrupt. *The result was an economic collapse called the Panic of 1837 and the hard times that followed lasted six years and ruined Van Buren's presidency. The Whigs used it.... 5 The Election of 1840 *Van Buren ran for reelection against William Henry Harrison. The tune also took aim at the incumbent president, Martin Van Buren, or "Little Van," as the Whig lyrics christened him. A footnote to that textbook version is that the Democrats also tried to affix a catchy moniker to their candidate. "Old Kinderhook," they dubbed him, in honor of Van Buren's birthplace of Kinderhook, N.Y. When supporters chanted it at rallies, the nickname stuck, and the universal affirmation "O.K." has remained in the lexicon ever since You may remember what "Tippecanoe and Tyler, too" actually meant. It was, in fact, a song praising Whig candidate William Henry Harrison, or "Old Tip," as he was known, and his running mate, . Harrison was the hero of the battle of Tippecanoe, a clash in present­day Indiana between the Army and American Indian forces led by Tecumseh and a confederation of tribes. *The Whigs ran a campaign for Harrison using parades, barbecues and entertainment targeting ordinary voters and portrayed Harrison as a man of the people who would feel at home in a log cabin. This “log cabin” campaign worked and Harrison was elected ending the Age of Jackson. 6 Review Questions *What were the arguments for and against the second Bank of the United States? For: It helped business; it kept the federal money safe; it issued a stable currency; it created confidence in U.S. banks Against: It hurt farmers and small merchants; it restricted state banks; it helped the wealthy; it caused the economic crisis of 1819 *How does the Tenth Amendment limit federal powers? It states that any powers not specifically given to the federal government are reserved to the state government. *What was the position of Vice President John C.Calhoun on nullification? Calhoun believed that nullification was a right that individual states had. *What was the main cause of the Panic of 1837? The main cause was an economic crisis in Britain. 7 Study Guide What law was passed in 1823 that caused a crisis? Who did the tariff seem to help? hurt? why? What was Calhoun's argument for nullification? Why was Southern concern regarding national laws? Who argued against nullification? What was their argument? Which state voted for nullification of the tariff and threatened to secede? How did Jackson respond? What did Calhoun do? In 1833, what did Jackson ask Congress to do? How was the nullification crisis resolved peacefully? Who ran in the election of 1836? Who won? How? What was the Panic of 1837? What was the cause of it? What was the result of the panic? Who became president after Van Buren? What type of campaign did he run? 8.
Recommended publications
  • Tennessee State Library and Archives HUBBARD, DAVID (1792-1874)
    State of Tennessee Department of State Tennessee State Library and Archives 403 Seventh Avenue North Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312 HUBBARD, DAVID (1792-1874) PAPERS 1807-1871 Processed by: Marylin Bell Hughes Archival Technical Services Accession Number: 1971.022 Date Completed: February 26, 1971 Location: II- L - 2 Microfilm Accession Number: 1170 MICROFILMED INTRODUCTION This collection is centered around David Hubbard, who lived most of his life in Lawrence Country, Alabama. He was a veteran of the War of 1812 during which he attained the rank of major; Alabama state senator, 1827; speculator in Indian lands in Alabama and Mississippi, 1830s-1840s; Alabama state representative, 1831; Democratic presidential elector from Alabama, 1844 and 1860; delegate to Southern Commercial Conventions at Knoxville, Tennessee, 1857, and Savannah, Georgia, 1859; Alabama representative to the Confederate government, 1861; and Commissioner of Indian Affairs for the Confederate government, 1863. The David Hubbard Papers were taken from the Campbell Brown and Ewell Papers which were given to the Manuscript Unit in 1965 by Mrs. C. Hughes Lyon of Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The materials in this finding aid measure .42 linear feet. There are no restrictions on the materials. Single photocopies of unpublished writings in the David Hubbard Papers may be made for purposes of scholarly research. SCOPE AND CONTENT The David Hubbard Papers, containing approximately 240 items, cover the years 1807-1871. The collection is composed of correspondence; accounts; land records (contracts, deeds, titles, indentures, schedules, and a certificate); legal documents (lawyer certification, company record, and bills of sale for Negroes); list of bonds; newspaper clippings; and pictures.
    [Show full text]
  • Andrew Jackson
    THE JACKSONIAN ERA DEMOCRATS AND WHIGS: THE SECOND PARTY SYSTEM THE “ERA OF GOOD FEELINGS” • James Monroe (1817-1825) was the last Founder to serve as President • Federalist party had been discredited after War of 1812 • Monroe unopposed for reelection in 1820 • Foreign policy triumphs: • Adams-Onís Treaty (1819) settled boundary with Mexico & added Florida • Monroe Doctrine warned Europeans against further colonization in Americas James Monroe, By Gilbert Stuart THE ELECTION OF 1824 & THE SPLIT OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY • “Era of Good Feelings” collapsed under weight of sectional & economic differences • New generation of politicians • Election of 1824 saw Republican party split into factions • Andrew Jackson received plurality of popular & electoral vote • House of Representatives chose John Quincy Adams to be president • Henry Clay became Secretary of State – accused of “corrupt bargain” • John Quincy Adams’ Inaugural Address called in vain for return to unity THE NATIONAL REPUBLICANS (WHIGS) • The leaders: • Henry Clay • John Quincy Adams • Daniel Webster • The followers: • Middle class Henry Clay • Educated • Evangelical • Native-born • Market-oriented John Quincy Adams WHIG ISSUES • Conscience Whigs – abolition, temperance, women’s rights, etc. • Cotton Whigs – internal improvements & protective tariffs to foster economic growth (the “American System”) THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICANS (DEMOCRATS) • The leaders: • Martin Van Buren • Andrew Jackson • John C. Calhoun • The followers: Martin Van Buren • Northern working class & Southern planter aristocracy • Not well-educated • Confessional churches • Immigrants • Locally-oriented John C. Calhoun DEMOCRATIC ISSUES • Limited power for federal government & states’ rights • Opposition to “corrupt” alliance between government & business • Individual freedom from coercion “KING ANDREW” & THE “MONSTER BANK” • Marshall’s decision in McCulloch v.
    [Show full text]
  • Three Philadelphians in the Bank War: a Neglected Chapter in American Lobbying
    THREE PHILADELPHIANS IN THE BANK WAR: A NEGLECTED CHAPTER IN AMERICAN LOBBYING BY JAMES L. CROUTHAMIEL* ONE of the most elaborate lobbies in the ante bellum United 0} States was the one employed by the Second Bank of the United States in its efforts to secure a renewal of its charter in 1832. Yet although observers from the Founding Fathers' to the present have noticed the inevitable presence of pressure groups and lobbies in the United States, students of lobbying in Amnerica have dealt almost exclusively with post-Civil War developments. mentioning only briefly the ante bellum period, and confining this mention to pressures in tariff-making. 2 A closer look at the lobby of the Second Bank, a neglected chapter in the history of lobbyingi, should be valuable for what it reveals of the techniques of political pressure during the Jacksonian era. It should also be useful for what it reveals of political morality in this earlier age. The practice of lobbying was defined by Congress in 1927 as "any effort in influencing the action of Congress. or interviewing or seeking to interview members of the House of Representatives or the Senate." Congress also defined a lobbyist as "one who shall engage, for pay, to attempt to influence legislation, or to prevent legislation, by the National Congress."" Lobbying, of course, has always been considered as an exercise of the right to petition, guaranteed by the First Amendment. Private interests working for private profit are necessarily included in this guarantee, and perhaps for this reason lobbying and pressure groups in the United *Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Destabilizing Entanglements
    Dael Norwood University of Delaware [email protected] Destabilizing Entanglements: How the Flow of Opium, Cotton, and Capital Restructured Americans’ Relationships with China, Britain, and Their Own Government in the Jacksonian Era Missouri Regional Seminar on Early American History February 1, 2019 Draft – Please do not share or cite Norwood / 2 When the ship Congress sailed from Boston harbor bound for Batavia in 1824, it went using some of the old habits of trade, and some of the new. Jacaob [sic] Caswell and Benjamin Brintnall entrusted “one Hundred Spanish milled Dollars” to an agent aboard the ship who promised to “Carey & Invest” it “from port to port.” This was a classic cabotage strategy, designed to make the most out of small capital resources – and used upon by American traders since the Revolution. William Gray, the Congress’s owner, chose a more sophisticated approach. Rather than simply sending a supercargo with specie, Gray instructed his captain, Nathaniel Kinsman, to communicated with trusted commission merchants, resident in Asia, to plot sales and purchases “calculated to promote my interest.” Gray’s cargo choices were finely reckoned, too. He packed the Congress with $7,786 worth of Western commodities (candles, beef, flour, seltzer water) that were readily salable at any European colonial port, and invested $19,318 in opium, a smokable narcotic with a large and growing market across Southeast Asia, and especially in China’s southern ports.1 Finally, he gave Kinsman access to a $50,000 line of credit with his London bankers at Baring Brothers & Co.. This would enable him to take advantage of low prices for return cargoes: teas at Canton, sugar in Manila, or cottons in Calcutta.
    [Show full text]
  • Nicholas Biddle, Anacharsis, and the Grand Tour
    Nicholas Biddle, Anacharsis, and the Grand Tour HEN NICHOLAS BlDDLE (1786-1844) TRAVELED in Europe in the years 1804 to 1807, he kept a series of notebooks in which Whe recorded both his movements and his thoughts on the sights he saw and the people he met. The recovery of these notebooks in 1976 and the recent publication of two of them enable us to get a better picture of his early character and to place him within the context of the history of American travelers. Why did he go to the Aegean of all places?1 To answer this question, I begin by way of a fictional detour. In E. M. Forster's novel A Room with a View, the Reverend Mr. Beebe, speaking of the Miss Alans' proposed visit to Athens and Constantinople, says: I haven't been to Greece myself, and I don't mean to go, and I can't imagine any of my friends going. It is altogether too big for our little lot. Don't you think so? Italy is just about as much as we can manage. Italy is heroic, but Greece is godlike or devilish—I am not sure which, and in either case absolute- ly out of our suburban focus.... I was saying, if our poor little Cockney lives must have a background, let it be Italian. Big enough in all conscience. The ceiling of the Sistine Chapel for me. There the contrast is just as much as I can realize. But not the Parthenon, not the frieze of Phidias at any price..
    [Show full text]
  • BOOK REVIEWS History of the Expedition Under the Command of Lewis and Clark
    BOOK REVIEWS History of the Expedition Under the Command of Lewis and Clark. Edited by Elliott Coues. (New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1965. A reprinting in three volumes of four originally published by Francis P. Harper, New York, 1893. Plasticized paper permanent binding, Pp. cxxxii, 1213 numbered consecutively, Appendixes 1215-1298, plus five maps, Index 1299-1364, large plates and maps at the ends of vols. Iand II.$6.75.) A matter of grave concern to many of us, of late years, has been the plight of out-of-print, scarce and rare books in the libraries of America. Particularly do we lament the mortality rate of these treasured volumes through increased use brought on by the intellectual awakening we are presently experiencing. Furthermore, the number of libraries has grown at an unprecedented pace at every level of public and private schools, as wellas university and public municipal libraries. As the need for supplying these institutions with reference material becomes ever greater, Colonial Williamsburg has led the way to satisfy- ing the deficit by the reprinting of rare old works relating to Virginia's history. Now we have placed in our hands a timely reproduction of that "national epic of exploration, conceived by Thomas Jefferson, wrought out by Lewis and Clark, and given to the world by Nicholas Biddle." Dover Publications have performed a signal service to the American public by their making available this saga of the westward march of civilization,History of the Expedition Under the Command ofLewis and Clark (1804-1806). The original field notes, orders and journals were written with abbreviations that needed to be expanded and tedious descriptions that needed to be simplified for readability.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 6 Andrew Jackson's War with the Bank of the United States
    Page 29 Chapter 6 Andrew Jackson's War with the Bank of the United States The bank, Mr. Van Buren, is trying to kill me, but I will kill it! 27 -Andrew Jackson This worthy President [Andrew Jackson] thinks that because he has scalped Indians and imprisoned judges, he is to have his way with the Bank. He is mistaken. 28 Nicholas Biddle The Jackson-Biddle test of strength and will pitted the President of the United States against the head of the nation's largest corporation. Jackson, the ex-frontier brawler turned national hero, claimed to speak for Americans who hated monopoly and privilege. Biddle, the sophisticated man of letters turned banker, was said to be championing the vested interests of America's privileged few. More than the future of the government chartered Bank of the United States was at stake in this contest. At issue was the growth of the American economy, the future of money and credit, and the meaning of democratic principles. The Second Bank of the United States The Andrew Jackson-Nicholas Biddle clash was the last chapter in the turbulent history of the Bank originally proposed by Alexander Hamilton. It will be Contemporary recalled that the Second Bank was chartered five years after the First was allowed cartoon of greedy banker lusting to die. The first three years of the second B.U.S's existence were a near disaster. after gold coin Guided by the expansionist policies of William Jones, the Bank issued too many loans of flimsy credit. When these errors were discovered under a new leadership, the Bank hastily called in its loans.
    [Show full text]
  • Social ^Disorder and the Philadelphia Slite "Before Jackson
    Social ^Disorder and the Philadelphia Slite "Before Jackson UR understanding of the 1820s suffers from our intellectual domination by the events of the 1830s. One area in which O perspective on these years is blurred is the study of elites. Because Andrew Jackson triumphed over a symbol of patrician rule in the election of 1828 and because an aroused electorate aided his victory, historians have assumed his prestigious predecessors were under attack. The mercantile-Federalist elite, in this view, marked time until their heads were slipped into a Democratic noose. Some became reformers, seeking to regain their status and authority by advocating programs for social control. But their efforts were doomed. However successful temperance, antislavery, or public schools may have been, the urban gentry would never again com- mand the respect and deference enjoyed in the eighteenth century.1 Describing this decline, historians have argued in contradictory terms. Some have suggested that the elite became social reformers because their Federalism was no longer attractive to the American voter. Rebuffed by politicians and unwilling to make the compro- mises necessary to achieve shared power, the elite rejected public life altogether. Active members devoted themselves to private philanthropies and local leadership. They established institutions to care for the poor, the sick, and the deranged; they fostered societies to exalt the revolutionary past and to promote the economic future. Untidy political affairs they abandoned to the unprincipled prac- titioners of faction.2 1 Examples of this argument appear in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., The Age of Jackson (Boston, 1945), 269-270; Carl Bode, The American Lyceum: Town Meeting of the Mind (New York, 1956), 67; Clifford S.
    [Show full text]
  • President Jackson and the Veto of the Second National Bank
    U.S. HISTORY LESSON 3.5 President Jackson and the Veto of the Second National Bank reform human capital debt safety net trade-off GDP deficit priorities spending Medicare mandatory budget Social Security revenue health care governance discretionary baby boomers economic growth infrastructure ESSENTIAL DILEMMA Could the conflict over the Second National Bank have been resolved in a way that supported the values advocated by both President Jackson and Congress? INTRODUCTION Get money out of government. —Occupy Wall Street poster (Callari, 2012) It is to be regretted that the rich and powerful too often bend the acts of government to their selfish purposes. —President Andrew Jackson, 1832 message to Congress explaining his veto of a bill to recharter the Second Bank of the United States (Peters & Woolley, 2012) Although made 180 years apart, the statements above both reflect a sentiment that goes back to the earliest years of the Republic—allowing monied interests to influence government is a bad idea. But just as not everyone agrees with the Occupy Wall Street protestors, some Americans thought Andrew Jackson was wrong. Those on both sides of the Bank War—the battle between President Jackson and supporters of the Second Bank of the United States in and out of Congress—had strong views on what was right for the United States and its people; both also had political motivations. The following pages provide a review of key events in the run-up to the battle. UNDERSTANDING FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY | 1 U.S. History | Lesson 3.5 1791: The First Bank of the United States was chartered.
    [Show full text]
  • James K. Polk: Territorial Expansionist and the Evolution Of
    JAMES K. POLK: TERRITORIAL EXPANSIONIST AND THE EVOLUTION OF PRESIDENTIAL POWER Chris Blubaugh A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 2013 Committee: Dr. Scott C. Martin, Advisor Dr. Edmund J. Danziger © 2013 Chris Blubaugh All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Dr. Scott C. Martin, Advisor This thesis argues that through President James K. Polk’s leadership style (micro-managing domestic/foreign issues), his understanding of bureaucracy, and dominating his Cabinet, enabled Polk to achieve what his predecessors could not. Furthermore, Polk’s leadership and administrative style foreshadowed, and perhaps provided a precedent for the modern American presidency. To demonstrate Polk’s leadership style, two areas must be examined. First, explain Polk’s keys to success while in office, in particular his leadership style in relation to his policies. President Polk’s direct involvement in domestic and foreign issues enabled him to achieve his four administrative goals: tariff reduction, creation of an Independent Treasury, settlement of the Oregon Territory between the U.S. and England, and acquiring California. For example, he pushed economic legislation in Congress (Independent Treasury), and micro-managed the Mexican War to accomplish territorial objectives. Secondly, examine the departure that President Polk made from previous administrations in regards to administrative skill. Compared to preceding administrations, President Polk was an excellent leader who firmly managed his Cabinet. He consulted his Cabinet on policy questions, but the final decision was his to make. Furthermore, he knew precisely what he wanted to accomplish as president, and he understood the political channels he needed to consult to achieve his goals.
    [Show full text]
  • The Second Bank of the United States 1 the LIBRARY COMPANY of PHILADELPHIA Debt and Manage Its Revenues and Pay Its Bills, the Government Could the Bank, Mr
    THE SECOND BANK A CHAPTER IN THE HISTORY OF CENTRAL BANKING THE LIBRARY COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA COMPANY THE LIBRARY ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia thanks John Van Horne, director of The Library Company of Philadelphia, and his staff, particularly Sarah Weatherwax and Nicole Joniec, for their help in providing many of the images that appear in this publication. The Bank also thanks the staff at Independence National Historical Park, particularly Karen Stephens, for providing images and for their help in finding information. THE SECOND BANK A Chapter in the History of Central Banking ecember 24, 1814. On England states had threatened to secede from the that day, representatives Union and had offered little financial support to of the U.S. government, pay for the war. In addition, Congress had failed to meeting in Belgium, adequately address the question of financing the signed the Treaty of war and, consequently, had imposed no new taxes. It Ghent, which ended wasn’t until a year after the war started that Congress Dhostilities between the U.S. and Great Britain in raised $2 million by levying new taxes. Then the the War of 1812.1 However, given the lack of swift federal government assessed $3 million in taxes on communications in those days, it would be several the states, but this revenue wasn’t collected until 1814. weeks before news of the treaty reached U.S. shores. Ultimately, to pay for the war, the government sold In the meantime, unaware that England and short-term Treasury notes and long-term Treasury her former colonies were once again at peace, Major bonds.4 Nevertheless, the government’s credit had General Andrew Jackson led his troops against the declined because the war, overall, had produced no British army just outside of New Orleans in January decisive victories for the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • 1- U a Object a B°Th
    Form 10-300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTE RIOR STATE: (Rev. 6-72) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE Pennsylvania COUNTY: NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC P LACES Bucks INVENTORY - NOMINATION FOR *" FOR NPS USE ONLY ENTRY DATE (Type all entries - complete applicable se ctions) COMMON: Nicholas Biddle Estate AND/OR HISTORIC: Andalusia tii ;:|:;;;:;i;:j$j:j£|£j:|:^ •STREET ANQNUMBER: CITY OR TOWN: CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT: Bensalem Township STATE CO DE COUNTY: CODE Pennsylvania Bucks STATUS ACCESS.BLE CATEGORY OWNERSHIP (Check One) TO THE PUBLIC Z O District Q Building d Public Public Acq uisition: Q Occupied Yes: o D Site fj Structure D Private Q In Processrrocess |i — _|in Unoccupied • j CU— ' Restricted a object a B°th a Bemgf»!nn Consideredr*"rtMc lAeimA Qi —i p»« reservation wor k. LJ Unrestricted- 1- in progress ' — ' u PRESENT USE (Check One or More as Appropriate) \ 1 Agricultural Q Government PJ Park [~~| Transportation [~] Comments PI Commercial [~1 Industrial | | Private Residence 1 1 Other CSoecf/v) nj Educational 1 1 Mi itary | | Religious I | Entertainment PI Museum | | Scientific ....mm*,,. OWNER'S NAME: STATE- Mr. Charles J. Biddle LLJ STREET AND NUMBER: LJJ 1100 Philadelphia National Bank Bldg., Broad § Chestnut Sts. CO CITY OR TOWN: STATE: CODF Philadelphia Pennsylvania llliliil^illillllii^l^illKliiilil^li^^^^^^K COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC: COUNTY: STREET AND NUMBER: CITY OR TOWN: STATE CODE TITLE OFSURVEY: ENTR -n O DATE OF SURVEY: FJ Federal FJ State Q County FJ Local NUMBERY 73 DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS: Z TJ C C/l STREET AND NUMBER: rn O r-z CITY OR TOWN: STATE: CODE ]DATE (Check One) oa.~"«.
    [Show full text]