"The matter of a uniform discount
rate was discussed and settled at Jekyll Island."--Paul M. Warburg1
On the night of November 22, 1910, a
group of newspaper reporters stood disconsolately in the railway station at
Hoboken, New Jersey. They had just watched a delegation of the nation's
leading financiers leave the station on a secret mission. It would be years
before they discovered what that mission was, and even then they would not
understand that the history of the United States underwent a drastic change
after that night in Hoboken.
The delegation had left in a sealed
railway car, with blinds drawn, for an undisclosed destination. They were
led by Senator Nelson Aldrich, head of the National Monetary Commission.
President Theodore Roosevelt had signed into law the bill creating the
National Monetary Commission in 1908, after the tragic Panic of 1907 had
resulted in a public outcry that the nation's monetary system be stabilized.
Aldrich had led the members of the Commission on a two-year tour of Europe,
spending some three hundred thousand dollars of public money. He had not yet
made a report on the results of this trip, nor had he offered any plan for
banking reform.
Accompanying Senator Aldrich at the
Hoboken station were his private secretary, Shelton; A. Piatt Andrew,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, and Special Assistant of the National
Monetary Commission; Frank Vanderlip, president of the National City Bank of
New York, Henry P. Davison, senior partner of J.P. Morgan Company, and
generally regarded as Morgan's personal emissary; and Charles D. Norton,
president of the Morgan-dominated First National Bank of New York. Joining
the group just before the train left the station were Benjamin Strong, also
known as a lieutenant of J.P. Morgan; and Paul Warburg, a recent immigrant
from Germany who had joined the banking house of Kuhn, Loeb and Company, New
York as a partner earning five hundred thousand dollars a year.
Six years later, a financial writer
named Bertie Charles Forbes (who later founded the Forbes Magazine; the
present editor, Malcom Forbes, is his son), wrote:
"Picture a party of the nation's
greatest bankers stealing out of New York on a private railroad car under
cover of darkness, stealthily hieing hundred of miles South, embarking on
a mysterious launch, sneaking onto an island deserted by all but a few
servants, living there a full week under such rigid secrecy that the names
of not one of them was once mentioned lest the servants learn the identity
and disclose to the world this strangest, most secret expedition in the
history of American finance. I am not romancing; I am giving to the world,
for the first time, the real story of how the famous Aldrich currency
report, the foundation of our new currency system, was written . . . . The
utmost secrecy was enjoined upon all. The public must not glean a hint of
what was to be done. Senator Aldrich notified each one to go quietly into
a private car of which the railroad had received orders to draw up on an
unfrequented platform. Off the party set. New York's ubiquitous reporters
had been foiled . . . Nelson (Aldrich) had confided to Henry, Frank, Paul
and Piatt that he was to keep them locked up at Jekyll Island, out of the
rest of the world, until they had evolved and compiled a scientific
currency system for the United States, the real birth of the present
Federal Reserve System, the plan done on Jekyll Island in the conference
with Paul, Frank and Henry . . . . Warburg is the link that binds the
Aldrich system and the present system together. He more than any one man
has made the system possible as a working reality."
The official biography of Senator
Nelson Aldrich states:
"In the autumn of 1910, six men went
out to shoot ducks, Aldrich, his secretary Shelton, Andrews, Davison,
Vanderlip and Warburg. Reporters were waiting at the Brunswick (Georgia)
station. Mr. Davison went out and talked to them. The reporters dispersed
and the secret of the strange journey was not divulged. Mr. Aldrich asked
him how he had managed it and he did not volunteer the information."3
Davison had an excellent reputation as
the person who could conciliate warring factions, a role he had performed
for J.P. Morgan during the settling of the Money Panic of 1907. Another
Morgan partner, T.W. Lamont, says:
"Henry P. Davison served as
arbitrator of the Jekyll Island expedition."4
From these references, it is possible
to piece together the story. Aldrich's private car, which had left Hoboken
station with its shades drawn, had taken the financiers to Jekyll Island,
Georgia. Some years earlier, a very exclusive group of millionaires, led by
J.P. Morgan, had purchased the island as a winter retreat. They called
themselves the Jekyll Island Hunt Club, and, at first, the island was used
only for hunting expeditions, until the millionaires realized that its
pleasant climate offered a warm retreat from the rigors of winters in New
York, and began to build splendid mansions, which they called "cottages",
for their families' winter vacations. The club building itself, being quite
isolated, was sometimes in demand for stag parties and other pursuits
unrelated to hunting. On such occasions, the club members who were not
invited to these specific outings were asked not to appear there for a
certain number of days. Before Nelson Aldrich's party had left New York, the
club's members had been notified that the club would be occupied for the
next two weeks.
The Jekyll Island Club was chosen as the place to draft the plan for control
of the money and credit of the people of the United States, not only because
of its isolation, but also because it was the private preserve of the people
who were drafting the plan. The New York Times later noted, on May 3, 1931,
in commenting on the death of George F. Baker, one of J.P. Morgan's closest
associates, that "Jekyll Island Club has lost one of its most distinguished
members. One-sixth of the total wealth of the world was represented by the
members of the Jekyll Island Club." Membership was by inheritance only.
The Aldrich group had no interest in
hunting. Jekyll Island was chosen for the site of the preparation of the
central bank because it offered complete privacy, and because there was not
a journalist within fifty miles. Such was the need for secrecy that the
members of the party agreed, before arriving at Jekyll Island, that no last
names would be used at any time during their two week stay. The group later
referred to themselves as the First Name Club, as the last names of Warburg,
Strong, Vanderlip and the others were prohibited during their stay. The
customary attendants had been given two week vacations from the club, and
new servants brought in from the mainland for this occasion who did not know
the names of any of those present. Even if they had been interrogated after
the Aldrich party went back to New York, they could not have given the
names. This arrangement proved to be so satisfactory that the members,
limited to those who had actually been present at Jekyll Island, later had a
number of informal get-togethers in New York.
Why all this secrecy? Why this
thousand mile trip in a closed railway car to a remote hunting club?
Ostensibly, it was to carry out a program of public service, to prepare
banking reform which would be a boon to the people of the United States,
which had been ordered by the National Monetary Commission. The participants
were no strangers to public benefactions. Usually, their names were
inscribed on brass plaques, or on the exteriors of buildings which they had
donated. This was not the procedure which they followed at Jekyll Island. No
brass plaque was ever erected to mark the selfless actions of those who met
at their private hunt club in 1910 to improve the lot of every citizen of
the United States.
In fact, no benefaction took place at
Jekyll Island. The Aldrich group journeyed there in private to write the
banking and currency legislation which the National Monetary Commission had
been ordered to prepare in public. At stake was the future control of the
money and credit of the United States. If any genuine monetary reform had
been prepared and presented to Congress, it would have ended the power of
the elitist one world money creators. Jekyll Island ensured that a central
bank would be established in the United States which would give these
bankers everything they had always wanted.
As the most technically proficient of
those present, Paul Warburg was charged with doing most of the drafting of
the plan. His work would then be discussed and gone over by the rest of the
group. Senator Nelson Aldrich was there to see that the completed plan would
come out in a form which he could get passed by Congress, and the other
bankers were there to include whatever details would be needed to be certain
that they got everything they wanted, in a finished draft composed during a
onetime stay. After they returned to New York, there could be no second get
together to rework their plan. They could not hope to obtain such secrecy
for their work on a second journey.
The Jekyll Island group remained at
the club for nine days, working furiously to complete their task. Despite
the common interests of those present, the work did not proceed without
friction. Senator Aldrich, always a domineering person, considered himself
the chosen leader of the group, and could not help ordering everyone else
about. Aldrich also felt somewhat out of place as the only member who was
not a professional banker. He had had substantial banking interests
throughout his career, but only as a person who profited from his ownership
of bank stock. He knew little about the technical aspects of financial
operations. His opposite number, Paul Warburg, believed that every question
raised by the group demanded, not merely an answer, but a lecture. He rarely
lost an opportunity to give the members a long discourse designed to impress
them with the extent of his knowledge of banking. This was resented by the
others, and often drew barbed remarks from Aldrich. The natural diplomacy of
Henry P. Davison proved to be the catalyst which kept them at their work.
Warburg's thick alien accent grated on them, and constantly reminded them
that they had to accept his presence if a central bank plan was to be
devised which would guarantee them their future profits. Warburg made little
effort to smooth over their prejudices, and contested them on every possible
occasion on technical banking questions, which he considered his private
preserve.
"In all conspiracies there must be
great secrecy."5
The "monetary reform" plan prepared at
Jekyll Island was to be presented to Congress as the completed work of the
National Monetary Commission. It was imperative that the real authors of the
bill remain hidden. So great was popular resentment against bankers since
the Panic of 1907 that no Congressman would dare to vote for a bill bearing
the Wall Street taint, no matter who had contributed to his campaign
expenses. The Jekyll Island plan was a central bank plan, and in this
country there was a long tradition of struggle against inflicting a central
bank on the American people. It had begun with Thomas Jefferson's fight
against Alexander Hamilton's scheme for the First Bank of the United States,
backed by James Rothschild. It had continued with President Andrew Jackson's
successful war against Alexander Hamilton's scheme for the Second Bank of
the United States, in which Nicholas Biddle was acting as the agent for
James Rothschild of Paris. The result of that struggle was the creation of
the Independent Sub-Treasury System, which supposedly had served to keep the
funds of the United States out of the hands of the financiers. A study of
the panics of 1873, 1893, and 1907 indicates that these panics were the
result of the international bankers' operations in London. The public was
demanding in 1908 that Congress enact legislation to prevent the recurrence
of artificially induced money panics. Such monetary reform now seemed
inevitable. It was to head off and control such reform that the National
Monetary Commission had been set up with Nelson Aldrich at its head, since
he was majority leader of the Senate.
The main problem, as Paul Warburg
informed his colleagues, was to avoid the name "Central Bank". For that
reason, he had decided upon the designation of "Federal Reserve System".
This would deceive the people into thinking it was not a central bank.
However, the Jekyll Island plan would be a central bank plan, fulfilling the
main functions of a central bank; it would be owned by private individuals
who would profit from ownership of shares. As a bank of issue, it would
control the nation's money and credit.
In the chapter on Jekyll Island in his
biography of Aldrich, Stephenson writes of the conference:
"How was the Reserve Bank to be
controlled? It must be controlled by Congress. The government was to be
represented in the board of directors, it was to have full knowledge of
all the Bank's, affairs, but a majority of the directors were to be
chosen, directly or indirectly, by the banks of the association."6
Thus the proposed Federal Reserve Bank
was to be "controlled by Congress" and answerable to the government, but the
majority of the directors were to be chosen, "directly or indirectly" by the
banks of the association. In the final refinement of Warburg's plan, the
Federal Reserve Board of Governors would be appointed by the President of
the United States, but the real work of the Board would be controlled by a
Federal Advisory Council, meeting with the Governors. The Council would be
chosen by the directors of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks, and would
remain unknown to the public.
The next consideration was to conceal
the fact that the proposed "Federal Reserve System" would be dominated by
the masters of the New York money market. The Congressmen from the South and
the West could not survive if they voted for a Wall Street plan. Farmers and
small businessmen in those areas had suffered most from the money panics.
There had been great popular resentment against the Eastern bankers, which
during the nineteenth century became a political movement known as
"populism". The private papers of Nicholas Biddle, not released until more
than a century after his death, show that quite early on the Eastern bankers
were fully aware of the widespread public opposition to them.
Paul Warburg advanced at Jekyll Island
the primary deception which would prevent the citizens from recognizing that
his plan set up a central bank. This was the regional reserve system. He
proposed a system of four (later twelve) branch reserve banks located in
different sections of the country. Few people outside the banking world
would realize that the existing concentration of the nation's money and
credit structure in New York made the proposal of a regional reserve system
a delusion.
Another proposal advanced by Paul Warburg at Jekyll Island was the manner of
selection of administrators for the proposed regional reserve system.
Senator Nelson Aldrich had insisted that the officials should be appointive,
not elected, and that Congress should have no role in their selection. His
Capitol Hill experience had taught him that congressional opinion would
often be inimical to the Wall Street interests, as Congressmen from the West
and South might wish to demonstrate to their constituents that they were
protecting them against the Eastern bankers.
Warburg responded that the administrators of the proposed central banks
should be subject to executive approval by the President. This patent
removal of the system from Congressional control meant that the Federal
Reserve proposal was unconstitutional from its inception, because the
Federal Reserve System was to be a bank of issue. Article 1, Sec. 8, Par. 5
of the Constitution expressly charges Congress with "the power to coin money
and regulate the value thereof.". Warburg's plan would deprive Congress of
its sovereignty, and the systems of checks and balances of power set up by
Thomas Jefferson in the Constitution would now be destroyed. Administrators
of the proposed system would control the nation's money and credit, and
would themselves be approved by the executive department of the government.
The judicial department (the Supreme Court, etc.) was already virtually
controlled by the executive department through presidential appointment to
the bench
Paul Warburg later wrote a massive
exposition of his plan, The Federal Reserve System, Its Origin and Growth7
of some 1750 pages, but the name "Jekyll Island" appears nowhere in this
text. He does state (Vol. 1, p. 58):
"But then the conference closed,
after a week of earnest deliberation, the rough draft of what later became
the Aldrich Bill had been agreed upon, and a plan had been outlined which
provided for a 'National Reserve Association,' meaning a central reserve
organization with an elastic note issue based on gold and commercial
paper."
On page 60, Warburg writes, "The
results of the conference were entirely confidential. Even the fact there
had been a meeting was not permitted to become public." He adds in a
footnote, "Though eighteen [sic] years have since gone by, I do not feel
free to give a description of this most interesting conference concerning
which Senator Aldrich pledged all participants to secrecy."
B.C. Forbes' revelation8 of the secret
expedition to Jekyll Island, had had surprisingly little impact. It did not
appear in print until two years after the Federal Reserve Act had been
passed by Congress, hence it was never read during the period when it could
have had an effect, that is, during the Congressional debate on the bill.
Forbes' story was also dismissed, by those "in the know," as preposterous,
and a mere invention. Stephenson mentions this on page 484 of his book about
Aldrich.9
"This curious episode of Jekyll
Island has been generally regarded as a myth. B.C. Forbes got some
information from one of the reporters. It told in vague outline the Jekyll
Island story, but made no impression and was generally regarded as a mere
yarn."
The coverup of the Jekyll Island
conference proceeded along two lines, both of which were successful. The
first, as Stephenson mentions, was to dismiss the entire story as a romantic
concoction which never actually took place. Although there were brief
references to Jekyll Island in later books concerning the Federal Reserve
System, these also attracted little public attention. As we have noted,
Warburg's massive and supposedly definite work on the Federal Reserve System
does not mention Jekyll Island at all, although he does admit that a
conference took place. In none of his voluminous speeches or writings do the
words "Jekyll Island" appear, with a single notable exception. He agreed to
Professor Stephenson's request that he prepare a brief statement for the
Aldrich biography. This appears on page 485 as part of "The Warburg
Memorandum". In this excerpt, Warburg writes, "The matter of a uniform
discount rate was discussed and settled at Jekyll Island."
Another member of the "First Name
Club" was less reticent. Frank Vanderlip later published a few brief
references to the conference. In the Saturday Evening Post, February 9,
1935, p. 25, Vanderlip wrote:
"Despite my views about the value to
society of greater publicity for the affairs of corporations, there was an
occasion near the close of 1910, when I was as secretive, indeed, as
furtive, as any conspirator. . . . Since it would have been fatal to
Senator Aldrich's plan to have it known that he was calling on anybody
from Wall Street to help him in preparing his bill, precautions were taken
that would have delighted the heart of James Stillman (a colorful and
secretive banker who was President of the National City Bank during the
Spanish-American War, and who was thought to have been involved in getting
us into that war) . . . I do not feel it is any exaggeration to speak of
our secret expedition to Jekyll Island as the occasion of the actual
conception of what eventually became the Federal Reserve System."
In a Travel feature in The Washington
Post, March 27, 1983, "Follow The Rich to Jekyll Island", Roy Hoopes writes:
"In 1910, when Aldrich and four
financial experts wanted a place to meet in secret to reform the country's
banking system, they faked a hunting trip to Jekyll and for 10 days holed
up in the Clubhouse, where they made plans for what eventually would
become the Federal Reserve Bank."
Vanderlip later wrote in his
autobiography, From Farmboy to Financier:10
"Our secret expedition to Jekyll
Island was the occasion of the actual conception of what eventually became
the Federal Reserve System. The essential points of the Aldrich Plan were
all contained in the Federal Reserve Act as it was passed."
Professor E.R.A. Seligman, a member of
the international banking family of J. & W. Seligman, and head of the
Department of Economics at Columbia University, wrote in an essay published
by the Academy of Political Science, Proceedings, v. 4, No. 4, p. 387-90:
"It is known to a very few how great
is the indebtedness of the United States to Mr. Warburg. For it may be
said without fear of contradiction that in its fundamental features the
Federal Reserve Act is the work of Mr. Warburg more than any other man in
the country. The existence of a Federal Reserve Board creates, in
everything but in name, a real central bank. In the two fundamentals of
command of reserves and of a discount policy, the Federal Reserve Act has
frankly accepted the principle of the Aldrich Bill, and these principles,
as has been stated, were the creation of Mr. Warburg and Mr. Warburg
alone. It must not be forgotten that Mr. Warburg had a practical object in
view. In formulating his plans and in advancing in them slightly varying
suggestions from time to time, it was incumbent on him to remember that
the education of the country must be gradual and that a large part of the
task was to break down prejudices and remove suspicion. His plans
therefore contained all sorts of elaborate suggestions designed to guard
the public against fancied dangers and to persuade the country that the
general scheme was at all practicable. It was the hope of Mr. Warburg that
with the lapse of time it might be possible to eliminate from the law a
few clauses which were inserted largely at his suggestion for educational
purposes."
Now that the public debt of the United
States has passed a trillion dollars, we may indeed admit "how great is the
indebtedness of the United States to Mr. Warburg." At the time he wrote the
Federal Reserve Act, the public debt was almost nonexistent.
Professor Seligman points out Warburg's remarkable prescience that the real
task of the members of the Jekyll Island conference was to prepare a banking
plan which would gradually "educate the country" and "break down prejudices
and remove suspicion". The campaign to enact the plan into law succeeded in
doing just that.