Central Banking in the United States II
217
system on the banks of New England, was the privately developed
Suffolk System.
In 1824, the Suffolk Bank of Boston, concerned for years
about an influx of depreciated notes
from various country banks
in New England, decided to purchase country bank notes and sys-
tematically call on the country banks for redemption. By 1825,
country banks began to give in to the pressure to deposit specie
with the Suffolk, so as to make redemption of their notes by that
bank far easier. By 1838, furthermore, almost every bank in New
England was keeping such deposits, and was redeeming its liabil-
ities in specie through the medium of the Suffolk Bank.
From the beginning to the
end of the Suffolk System
(1825–58), each country bank was obliged to maintain a perma-
nent specie deposit of at least $2,000 ranging upward for larger
sizes of bank. In addition to the permanent minimum deposit,
each bank had to keep enough specie at the Suffolk Bank to
redeem all the notes that Suffolk received. No interest was paid
by the Suffolk Bank on these deposits, but Suffolk performed the
invaluable service of accepting at par all the notes received from
other
New England banks, crediting the depositor banks’
accounts the following day.
As the result of Suffolk acting as a private clearing bank, every
New England bank could automatically accept the notes of any
other bank at par with specie. In contrast to the general state bank
approval of the Bank of the United States (and later of the Fed-
eral Reserve System), the banks greatly resented the existence of
the Suffolk Bank’s tight enforcement of specie payments. They
had to play by the Suffolk rules, however, else their notes would
depreciate rapidly and circulate only in a very narrow area. Suf-
folk, meanwhile, made handsome profits
by lending out the per-
manent, noninterest paying deposits, and by making overdrafts to
the member banks.
Suffolk System members fared very well during general bank
crises during this period. In the Panic of 1837, not one Connecti-
cut bank failed, or even suspended specie payments; all were mem-
bers of the Suffolk System. And in 1857, when specie payment was
Chapter Fourteen.qxp 8/4/2008 11:38 AM Page 217
suspended
in Maine, all but three banks (virtually all members of
the Suffolk System) continued to pay in specie.
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The Suffolk System ended in 1858 when a competing clearing
bank, the Bank of Mutual Redemption, was organized, and the
Suffolk System petulantly refused to honor the notes of any banks
keeping deposits with the new bank. The country banks then
shifted to the far laxer Bank of Mutual Redemption,
and the Suf-
folk Bank stopped its clearing function in October 1858, becom-
ing just another bank. Whatever the error of management in that
year, however, the Suffolk System would have been swept away in
any case by the universal suspension of specie payments at the
start of the Civil War, by the National Banking System installed
during the war, and by the prohibitive federal tax on state bank
notes put through during that fateful period.
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