This paper presents original primary research on mortgage lending in New Haven, Connecticut in the early nineteenth century. It observes a shift in the market at 1837: lending institutions abruptly began to make significant volumes of mortgage loans to non-elite individuals with less wealth and social standing. Before 1837, these institutions primarily made loans to the city’s social and economic elite. The paper uses this shift as a case study in local financial development, placing particular emphasis on the role of local political institutions in facilitating economic growth
This paper advances the first historically informed typology of housing finance systems. Using a nov...
The financial crises of 2008 have inflamed the interest in looking back at the Great Depression and ...
The American mortgage market experienced a burst of financial innovation between 1870 and 1890 when ...
This Note presents a case study in local financial development, placing particular emphasis on the r...
This paper presents original primary research on mortgage lending in New Haven, Connecticut in the e...
Between 1880 and 1929, urban residential mortgage loans became widely available in the United States...
In their relations with the external world, banks face two basic kinds of infor-mation problems: asc...
My dissertation examines how the financial sector, specifically banks, achieved open entry in early ...
The Connecticut River Valley (CRV) industrialized early, yet lacked nearly all of the factors that a...
This dissertation tests an important hypothesis about early nineteenth-century economic development:...
The birth of commercial banking in New England after the American Revolution provides an important c...
On the eve of the Civil War, the banking system of the United States was a heterogeneous collection ...
The paper examines the form and function of housing landlordism in late nineteenth-century Britain. ...
The nineteenth century was a time of astonishing change in technologies of transportation. When the ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Economics and Social Science, 1952....
This paper advances the first historically informed typology of housing finance systems. Using a nov...
The financial crises of 2008 have inflamed the interest in looking back at the Great Depression and ...
The American mortgage market experienced a burst of financial innovation between 1870 and 1890 when ...
This Note presents a case study in local financial development, placing particular emphasis on the r...
This paper presents original primary research on mortgage lending in New Haven, Connecticut in the e...
Between 1880 and 1929, urban residential mortgage loans became widely available in the United States...
In their relations with the external world, banks face two basic kinds of infor-mation problems: asc...
My dissertation examines how the financial sector, specifically banks, achieved open entry in early ...
The Connecticut River Valley (CRV) industrialized early, yet lacked nearly all of the factors that a...
This dissertation tests an important hypothesis about early nineteenth-century economic development:...
The birth of commercial banking in New England after the American Revolution provides an important c...
On the eve of the Civil War, the banking system of the United States was a heterogeneous collection ...
The paper examines the form and function of housing landlordism in late nineteenth-century Britain. ...
The nineteenth century was a time of astonishing change in technologies of transportation. When the ...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dept. of Economics and Social Science, 1952....
This paper advances the first historically informed typology of housing finance systems. Using a nov...
The financial crises of 2008 have inflamed the interest in looking back at the Great Depression and ...
The American mortgage market experienced a burst of financial innovation between 1870 and 1890 when ...