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December 2008
Friday December 19, 2008
The C.C.C. Today
Posted by: Art Pitz at 11:18AM CST on December 19, 2008

Suzanne, my wife, and I have just spent a week’s vacation at Starved Rock State Park near Utica, Illinois.  What a magnificent place and thankfully it survived our state Governor’s budget slashing ax.  This is a living legacy of the New Deal, and there's a lot that we can learn from it.

 

  

 

The C.C.C. was founded in F.D.R.’s first hundred days in office and went out of business in 1942 as the economy began to reach near full employment due to WWII.  Arguably, it was one of the most popular and successful of all of the New Deal’s agencies.  It also opened its doors to minorities albeit in mostly a segregated fashion.   As one can see from the facilities here at Starved Rock, the C.C.C. built to last.  It was F.D.R.’s pet project.

 

The C.C.C.’s record demonstrates that the federal government can indeed design and implement effectively run programs to benefit the public good.  There were no scandals while waste and mismanagement were virtually non-existent. 

 

Over 3 million served in the C.C.C. during its tenure.  The crime rate amongst young men aged 18 to 25 dramatically decreased as young men went off to camps throughout the country under military like discipline.  Virtually all states and territories benefited from their presence.  Besides that, they earned money that went to their families while they had government provided room, board, clothing and training.  Employers showed preference in hiring to former C.C.C. workers for it was obvious that these workers knew how to put in a hard day’s work.

 

As we enter into what appears to be a serious downturn in our economy, let us hope that President-elect Barack Obama and Congress can be as creative as F.D.R. and Congress were in the midst of the Great Depression.  Let’s put people to work rebuilding and repairing our decaying infrastructure.  We have massive needs nationwide in our bridges, roads, etc. that have been allowed to deteriorate.  Let our pragmatic, innovative spirit prevail.

 

If you have not availed yourself of the opportunity to visit a C.C.C. built facility, take the time to do that.  If you like the outdoors at all, you are in for a treat.  Go tromping through the snow on a crisp, sunshiny winter day like we have had.  And, enjoy.  I think I hear Starved Rock calling you.

 

Art Pitz

The Professor’s House

www.professorshouse.net

Thursday December 11, 2008
Is Nationalizing Banks Unprecedented?
Posted by: Art Pitz at 2:27PM CST on December 11, 2008

This is a continuation of my Quad City Times blog, “Historian on the Move.” I have related articles there including:

 

Takeover of the Mortgage Giants: Any Precedents?

The Financial Crisis: Historical Lessons on Government Mismanagement

Let’s Turn American Innovation Loose

 

Much of the commentary regarding having the U.S. Treasury take ownership of certain banks has focused on the unprecedented nature of these actions.  Actually, it is NOT unprecedented.

 

Alexander Hamilton, President George Washington’s Secretary of the Treasury, proposed a joint ownership bank in December of 1790 in his Report on a National Bank.  It was intended to be a marriage of public and private interests.  2/5’s of its $10 million in stock was to be owned by the Federal Treasury whereas 2/5’s were to be owned by private American interests and 1/5 of non-voting stock was slated to be owned by foreigners (hopefully British).

 

The proposed First Bank of the United States would have the authority to make loans to private borrowers and to the federal government.  It could also issue bank notes which could circulate as the nation’s currency.  This Bank would fill a gap in terms of providing investment capital and having dependable currency.  It could (& eventually did) create branches in different areas of the country.

 

Hamilton’s proposal ran into immediate opposition.  James Madison questioned whether the Bank was constitutional.  So, President Washington solicited constitutional opinions from his Cabinet.  He received two diametrically opposed views.  Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, aided by Madison, argued that the Bank wasn’t constitutional since the Constitution gave no explicit power to the federal government to create corporations on any kind.  Further, the federal government could only do what was absolutely necessary for the general welfare.  Since such a Bank didn’t meet this standard, it wasn’t constitutional.

 

Had this view prevailed, then the Constitution would have had to be amended—a difficult and lengthy process.  The general consensus of historians has been that it has been better long term that Hamilton’s views won out.  The First Bank of the United States did exactly what Hamilton hoped it would.

 

Hamilton’s view was that the Bank was within the “implied” powers of the Constitution.  The Constitution, he argued, was designed to be flexible so since a Bank was needed to aid in creating investment capital and providing for a national currency, then it was constitutional.  Hamilton’s view proved to be convincing and President Washington approved of the legislation.  The Bank opened its doors in April of 1791.

 

This Constitutional debate has not ended and one still hears that some want a strict interpretation of the Constitution whereas others point to the Constitution’s “implied” powers.  An example of that debate in more recent times can be found within the heated arguments over Roe v. Wade which is based on the allegedly implied right to privacy.

 

It is interesting to note that there has been virtually no constitutional debate regarding the federal government taking part ownership of certain troubled banks.  Even more, I have yet to see any comparison made with Hamilton’s Bank of the United States.  Let’s hope that the recent actions of the U.S. Treasury in taking ownership of selected banks will work out as well as Hamilton’s Bank did.

 

Art Pitz

The Professor’s House

http://www.professorshouse.net/

About This Blog
Dr. Art Pitz offers informed commentary on issues that are in the news, both locally and around the world, from a historian's point of view.

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