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Paperwork
fiction and mass mediacy in the Paper Age -
The cause of the present threatened famine
Traced to its real source, viz. An actual depreciation on our circulating medium, occasioned by the paper currency, with which the war, the shock given to public credit in 1794, the stoppage of the bank in 1797, and the bankruptcies of Hamburgh in 1799, inundated the country, to accommodate government, and enable the merchants to keep up the price of their merchandize. Shewing, by and arithmetical calculation, founded on facts, the extent, nay, the very mode of the progress, which the paper system has made in reducing the people to paupers. With its only aparent parcticable remedy. By Common Sense, author of the letter which appeared under that signuture in the morning chronicle of September 17, on this subject -
Plan of an improved system of the money-concerns of the Union
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An act to redeem the paper currency in circulation, and to establish a bank, by the name and title of the State Bank of North-Carolina, passed December, 1810
An act in addition to the preceding, passed December, 1811. ; Also, An act to amend the charter, passed in 1816. ; To which are subjoined the bye-laws of the corporation -
An act to redeem the paper currency now in circulation and to establish a bank, by the name and title of the State Bank of N. Carolina
passed December, 1810. ; Also, an act in addition to the preceding, passed Dec. 1811. ; To which are subjoined, the proceedings of the meeting of stockholders, held in the city of Raleigh, on Monday, December 2, 1811, with the additional rules, for the government of the institution, then adopted -
Proposals for restraining the abuse if paper-credit on Scotland
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An Act to regulate and restrain paper bills of credit in His Majesty's colonies or plantations of Rhode Island
and Providence plantations, Connecticut, the Massachusetts Bay, and New Hampshire in America; and to prevent the same being legal tenders in payments of money -
An enquiry into the causes of the present commercial embarrassments in the United States
with a plan of reform of the circulating medium ; in two letters, addressed to the secretary of the treasury -
An inquiry into the nature and uses of money
more especially of the bills of publick credit, old tenor. Together with a proposal of some proper relief in the present exigence. To which is added, a reply to the essay on silver and paper currences [sic] -
A Letter to the merchant in London, to whom is directed a printed letter relating to the manufactory undertaking, dated New England, Boston February 21st 1740,1
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A Letter from a country gentleman at Boston, to his friends in the country
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A letter relating to a medium of trade, in the province of the Massachusetts-Bay
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A letter to a member of the Honourable House of Representatives
on the present state of the bills of credit. [Two lines in Latin from Cicero] -
The freeholder's address to the Honourable House of Representatives
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A friendly check, from a kind relation, to the chief cannoneer, founded on a late information, dated N.E. Castle-William, Feb. 1720,21
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A Letter to -- -- merchant in London
concerning a late combination in the province of the Massachusetts-Bay in New-England, to impose or force a private-currency called land-bank-money -
Some observations on the scheme projected for emitting 60000 l. in bills of a new tenour, to be redeemed with silver and gold
Shewing the various operations of these bills, and their tendency to hurt the publick interest. In a letter from a merchant in Boston, to his friend in the country -
A discourse concerning the currencies of the British plantations in America
Especially with regard to their paper money: more particularly, in relation to the province of the Massachusetts-Bay, in New England -
To the inhabitants of the state of Massachusetts-Bay. Friends and fellow countrymen!
It is with concern and attention that the House of Representatives find that an act, intitled An act for drawing in the bills of credit of the several denominations, &c. passed the last session, has given uneasiness to any of the good people of this state -
The Case of the inhabitants in Pensilvania
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An inquiry into the nature and effects of the paper credit of Great Britain
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Reflections excited by the present state of banking operations in the United States
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Suggestions on the President's message
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An address to the President, Senate, and House of Representatives of the United States on the means of creating a national paper by loan offices
which shall replace that of the discredited banks, and supercede the use of gold and silver coin -
The bank torpedo; or, Bank notes proved to be a robbery on the public, and the real cause of the distresses of the poor