Read Lords of Finance: 1929, the Great Depression, and the Bankers Who Broke the World Online
Authors: Liaquat Ahamed
Tags: #Economic History, #Economics, #Banks & Banking, #Business & Investing, #Industries & Professions
297
"stool of repentance": Schacht,
My First Seventy-six Years
, 208.
298
"His pride is equaled": Dawes,
A Journal of Reparations
, 54.
299
"remarkable revelation": Dawes,
A Journal of Reparations
, 54.
300
"It looks to me": Bank of England, letter from Norman to Strong, January 30, 1924.
301
"six main powers": Ziegler,
The Sixth Great Power
, 1.
302
One story was that the family: Ferguson,
The House of Rothschild: Money's Prophets
, 95–98.
303
"undertaken by any European": Hobson,
Imperialism
, 64.
304
The son of an austere Methodist: "Lamont, Thomas William," in
Current Biography
, 1940, 476.
305
"until the French are out": Schuker,
End of French Predominance
, 215.
306
"swarming, gesticulating": Saint-Aulaire,
Confessions
, 718, quoted in Schuker,
End of French Predominance
, 299.
307
"Europe shall not," "America's only purpose,"
308
"In the lean years": Edwin L. James, "French Condemn Our Role in London,"
New York Times
, July 26, 1924, and "The 'Money Devil' Mixes in the Reparations Row,"
The Literary Digest
, August 9, 1924.
309
"We cannot accept": Klein,
Road to Disaster
, 248.
310
"The United States lends money:" Keynes, "The Progress of the Dawes Scheme," in
The Nation and the Athenaeum
, September 11, 1926, in
Collected Writings
, 18: 281.
311
"I never knew a man"
: Greene,
The Quiet American
, 72.
312
"in the full sunshine": Graves and Hodges,
The Long Weekend
, 102.
313
Regent Street had been made over: "England Not Merry Under Labor's Rule,"
New York Times
, June 8, 1924.
314
There was a new freedom: Graves and Hodges,
The Long Weekend
, 108–110.
315
"While England is financially sound": Sisley, Huddelston. "Personalities and Politics in France,"
Atlantic Monthly
, January 1925, 117.
316
"You know how controversial": Bank of England, letter from Norman to Strong, October 16, 1924.
317
"hand over to Germany": Notes on discussion with Walter Leaf, June 13, 1924. Bank of England quoted in Kynaston,
The City of London: Illusions of Gold
, 109.
318
"rather far behind": Bank of England, letter from Strong to Norman, July 9, 1924.
319
"There never was a Churchill": Quoted in Wilson,
The Victorians
, 485.
320
"how anybody can put their": Letter from William Bridgeman to his wife, quoted in Manchester,
The Last Lion
, 785.
321
F. E. Smith, Lord Birkenhead: Wilson,
After the Victorians
, 248–49
322
"his only mistress": Moreau,
The Golden Franc, 51.
323
He had a Rolls-Royce: Manchester,
The Last Lion
, 778–79.
324
Norman, despite his inherited wealth: Lyttelton,
Memoirs of Lord Chandos
, 137.
325
"undetected, like a shadow": "From the 'Old Lady.'"
Time
, January 12, 1925.
326
"unremarked": "Plan to Pay Gold Calls Norman Here"
New York Times
, January 1, 1925. Carved out of the solid bedrock: "Federal Bank Vault Carved in Solid Rock."
New York Times
, October 18, 1924.
327
Most noticeable was the number of cars: "One Auto in the City to Each 16 Persons,"
New York Times
, May 18, 1924, and "Automobile Census Shows World Has 21,360,779 Cars,"
New York Times
, March 8, 1925. For relative wages between the United States and Europe, see "Premium on Dollar Keeps Wages Up,"
New York Times
, December 31, 1924.
328
"The great problem is sterling": Strong memorandum to Carl Snyder, April 3, 1922, quoted in Chandler,
Benjamin Strong
, 291.
329
"a long period of unsettled conditions": Strong memorandum, January 11, 1925, quoted in Chandler,
Benjamin Strong
, 309.
330
"My dear Ben": Bank of England, letter from Norman to Strong, January 18, 1925.
331
"the Louis XVI of the monetary revolution": Keynes, "Letter to Sir Charles Addis," July 25, 1924, in
Collected Writings
, 19: 371–72.
332
"We should run the risk": Keynes, "The Problem of the Gold Standard," in
The Nation and Athenaeum
, May 2, 1925, in
Collected Writings
, 19: 337–44.
333
"faults in her economic structure": Keynes, "The Return Towards Gold," in
The Nation and Athenaeum
, February 21, 1925, in
Collected Writings: Essays in Persuasion
, 7: 192–200.
334
"pressing the return to the gold standard": Taylor,
Beaverbrook
, 227.
335
"It is an absurd and silly notion": Taylor,
Beaverbrook
, 319.
336
"he never could make out": Churchill,
Lord Randolph Churchill
, 2: 184.
337
"If they were soldiers": James,
Churchill: A Study in Failure
, 204.
338
"survival of a rudimentary": "Mr. Churchill Exercise," February 29, 1925, U.K. Treasury Papers, quoted in Moggridge,
British Monetary Policy
, 76.
339
"We, and especially Norman, feel": Letter from Edward Grenfell to Jack Morgan, March 23, 1925, quoted in Chernow,
The House of Morgan
, 275–76.
340
"The Gold Standard is the best 'Governor' ": Moggridge,
British Monetary Policy
, Appendix 5, 270–72.
341
"The Governor of the Bank": Winston Churchill to Otto Niemeyer, February 22, 1925, U.K. Treasury Papers in Moggridge,
British Monetary Policy
, Appendix 5.
342
"Norman elaborates his own schemes": Letter from Edward Grenfell to Jack Morgan, March 23, 1925, quoted in Chernow,
The House of Morgan
, 274.
343
"None of the witch doctors": Leith-Ross,
Money Talks
, 91.
344
Norman often stopped by: Templewood,
Nine Troubled Years
, 78.
345
"knave-proof," "living in a fool's paradise": Grigg,
Prejudice and Judgment
, 183.
346
"You have been a politician": Grigg,
Prejudice and Judgment
, 184.
347
"I will make you the golden Chancellor": Boyle,
Montagu Norman
, 189.
348
"It is imperative that": Text of Churchill's speech, including remark about fortifying himself, from
Hansard
, House of Commons Debates, 5 Series, vol. 183, cols 49–114.
349
"an amber-coloured liquid": Howe,
A World History
, 290.
350
"If the English pound is not": Churchill,
Complete Speeches
, 4: 3587.
351
"greatest achievement . . .": Winston, Churchill. "Montagu Norman,"
Sunday Pictorial
, September 20, 1931.
352
"a signal triumph":
Times
, April 29, 1925.
353
"the crowning achievement":
Economist
, May 2, 1925.
354
"The proper object of dear money": Keynes, "The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill," in
Collected Writing: Essays in Persuasion
, 9: 220.
355
"because he has no instinctive judgment": Keynes, "The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill," in
Collected Writing: Essays in Persuasion
, 9: 212.
356
In 1927, he invited Keynes: Skidelsky,
John Maynard Keynes: The Economist as Saviour
, 203.
357
"the victims," "in the flesh [of] the fundamental": Keynes, "The Economic Consequences of Mr. Churchill," in
Collected Writing: Essays in Persuasion
. 9: 223.
358
"the biggest blunder": Moran,
Winston Churchill
, 303–304, quoted in Kynaston,
The City of London: Illusions of Gold
, 129.
359
"misled by the Governor": Toye,
Lloyd George and Churchill
, 256.
360
"that man Skinner": Grigg,
Prejudice and Judgment
, 193.
361
"to everyone's surprise": Amery,
Diaries
, 552, quoted in Kynaston,
The City of London: Illusions of Gold
, 129.
362
"The gold standard party": Keynes, "The Gold Standard," in
The Nation and Athenaeum
, May 2, 1925, in
Collected Writings
, 19: 361.
363
"In a new country": Strong Memorandum, January 11, 1925, quoted in Chandler,
Benjamin Strong
, 309.
364
Only peril
: Charles de Gaulle quote from
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations
, 728.
365
Noblemen, who might otherwise: Plessis,
Histoires de la Banque
, 205–10.
366
Over the 120 years: Garratt,
What Has Happened to Europe
, 164–65.
367
"The hardest thing to understand": Quoted in Brogan,
France Under the Republic
, 66.
368
"a kind of Treasury magician": Binion,
Defeated Leaders
, 95.
369
As he strode into the Chamber: "Caillaux's Political Resurrection,"
The Literary Digest
, May 2, 1925, and "In Parliament,"
Time
, May 4, 1925.
370
"frivolity": Moreau,
The Golden Franc
, 37.
371
"in elegant social circles": Jeanneney,
François de Wendel
, 248.
372
"regretted not having thrown": Jeanneney,
François de Wendel
, 254.
373
"we are the soldiers": Bonnet,
Vingt Ans de Vie Politique
, 101–102, quoted in Jeanneney,
François de Wendel
, 271.
374
"battle of the franc": Sisley, Huddleston. "France Mobilizes to Save the Franc,"
New York Times
, May 30, 1926.
375
It managed to raise: "Save the Franc,"
Time
, May 3, 1926, and
New York Herald Tribune
, April 21, 1926.
376
"which must never be brought out": Sisley, Huddleston. "France Mobilizes to Save the Franc,"
New York Times
, May 30, 1926.
377
"[laid] down their squabbles": Letter from Strong to Peter Jay, May 9, 1926, quoted in Chandler,
Benjamin Strong
, 362.
378
"excoriated from one end": Letter from Strong to George Harrison, May 23, 1926, quoted in Chandler,
Benjamin Strong
, 363.
379
"Am I to become the liquidator": Moreau,
The Golden Franc
, 12.
380
"My doubt is only about": Bank of England, letter from Norman to Strong, June 8, 1926. The two bankers did manage: "Strong Refuses to Discuss Finance,"
New York Times
, June 30, 1926, and "Financiers Gather at Antibes,"
New York Times
, July 9, 1926.
381
Another intrepid journalist: "M. Strong et Sir [sic] Montagu Norman se reposent paisiblement a Antibes,"
La Volonté
, July 5, 1926.
382
Strong found his French banking: Leffler,
The Elusive Quest
, 146.
383
By 1926, an estimated forty-five thousand: "Il y a 500,000 Étrangers a Paris,"
Le Journal
, February 2, 1925.
384
The French press had: "L'Infiltration des Capitaux Américains dans l'Économie Francaise."
La Vie Financier
, April 26, 1926.
385
"destructive grasshoppers":
Le Midi
, April 17, 1926.
386
On July 11, in a dramatic protest: "Maimed and Blind Lead Paris Parade to Protest on Debt,"
New York Times
, July 12, 1926.
387
A couple of days later another party: "Reasonable Resentment,"
Washington Post
, July 26, 1926.
388
"Don't boast in cafes": "Our Tourist Troubles in France,"
The Literary Digest
, August 14, 1926.
389
"Xenophobic displays": Moreau,
The Golden Franc
, 53.
390
"friendly but reserved": Moreau,
The Golden Franc
, 43.
391
The governor's suite at the bank: "Leur Vacances,"
Le Petit Parisien
, September 4, 1927, and Banque de France,
Treasures.
392
"Mr. Norman arrived at eleven": Moreau,
The Golden Franc
, 51.