From 1865 to 1870, a crisis atmosphere hovered around the issue of the massive public debt created during the recently concluded Civil War, leading, in part, to the passage of a Constitutional Amendment ensuring the “validity of the public debt.” However, the Civil War debt crisis was not a financial one, but a political one. The Republican and Democratic Parties took concerns over the public debt and magnified them into panics so that they could serve political ends—there was never any real danger that the United States would default on its debt for financial reasons. There were, in fact, three interrelated crises generated during the period: a repudiation crisis (grounded upon fears of the cancellation of the war debt), a repayment cri...
The 1860s: A Decade of Crisis U.S. historians have long employed the phrase the Decade of Crisis t...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
The views expressed herein are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Bure...
a Constitutional Amendment ensuring the “validity of the public debt. ” However, the Civil War debt...
The cost of war: Paying for the army By the end of the Civil War, the Federal government had spe...
The political crisis of the Union—the means by which unity and comity disintegrated and the American...
$outhern $elf-protection Debtors invoked federal law to protect businesses Bankruptcy in the Unite...
This paper argues that changes in how the Treasury managed the public debt stemmed from changes in p...
Timothy Canova, Of the People, By the People, For the People: Lincoln\u27s Legacy of Financial and E...
This dissertation examines how the internal revenue legislation enacted during the American Civil Wa...
The War for Independence (1775-1783) left the federal government deeply in debt. The spoils from win...
Roger Lowenstein explores how the Lincoln administration employed economic innovations to fund the...
During the 1820s and 1830s, American state governments made large investments in canals, banks, and ...
A dive into the origins, management, and uses and misuses of sovereign debt through the ages. Public...
Starting in August 2011, America has undergone a series of fiscal and political crises surrounding t...
The 1860s: A Decade of Crisis U.S. historians have long employed the phrase the Decade of Crisis t...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
The views expressed herein are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Bure...
a Constitutional Amendment ensuring the “validity of the public debt. ” However, the Civil War debt...
The cost of war: Paying for the army By the end of the Civil War, the Federal government had spe...
The political crisis of the Union—the means by which unity and comity disintegrated and the American...
$outhern $elf-protection Debtors invoked federal law to protect businesses Bankruptcy in the Unite...
This paper argues that changes in how the Treasury managed the public debt stemmed from changes in p...
Timothy Canova, Of the People, By the People, For the People: Lincoln\u27s Legacy of Financial and E...
This dissertation examines how the internal revenue legislation enacted during the American Civil Wa...
The War for Independence (1775-1783) left the federal government deeply in debt. The spoils from win...
Roger Lowenstein explores how the Lincoln administration employed economic innovations to fund the...
During the 1820s and 1830s, American state governments made large investments in canals, banks, and ...
A dive into the origins, management, and uses and misuses of sovereign debt through the ages. Public...
Starting in August 2011, America has undergone a series of fiscal and political crises surrounding t...
The 1860s: A Decade of Crisis U.S. historians have long employed the phrase the Decade of Crisis t...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
The views expressed herein are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Bure...