Paper money
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The concept Paper money represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bowdoin College Library.
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Paper money
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The concept Paper money represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bowdoin College Library.
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- Paper money
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- World's money. Theory of the coin, coinage, and monetary system of the world, by J. Meyer. Translated from the German by Mrs. C.P. Culver. December 18, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and ordered to be printed.
- Amending national banking laws. Mr. Aldrich reported the following conference report on the amendment of the Senate to the Bill (H.R. 21871) to amend the national banking laws. May 27, 1908. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Amendments to laws relating to denominations of circulating notes by national banks. September 28, 1917. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Amount of gold in actual circulation, etc. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to resolution of the Senate of April 5, 1898, relative to amount of gold in actual circulation, etc. April 20, 1898. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Amzi L. Burns. June 15, 1866. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Analysis of the functions of money. July 6, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Annual report of the Comptroller of the Currency to the first session of the Forty-eighth Congress of the United States, December 3, 1883.
- Annual report of the Comptroller of the Currency to the first session of the Forty-fourth Congress of the United States. December 6, 1875.
- Annual report of the Comptroller of the Currency to the first session of the Forty-seventh Congress of the United States. December 5, 1881.
- Annual report of the Comptroller of the Currency to the second session of the Fifty-second Congress of the United States. December 5, 1892. In two volumes. Volume I.
- Annual report of the Comptroller of the Currency to the second session of the Forty-Sixth Congress of the United States.
- Appropriation for Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting supplemental estimates of appropriation required by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for printing 12,750,000 sheets of United States currency in addition to the quantity already provided for... January 20, 1921. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Appropriation for purchase of distinctive paper. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, submitting an estimate of appropriation for purchase of distinctive paper for United States securities. January 6, 1911. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Bank of Kodiak, Kodiak, Alaska. March 1, 1949. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Bank of the United States. April 30, 1832. Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Bank of the United States. March 1, 1833. Read, and postponed until to-morrow.
- Banking companies. March 3, 1837. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Bureau of Engraving and Printing -- deficiency appropriation. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, submitting estimates of additional deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year 1917. January 8, 1917. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- C.H. Walker. January 15, 1878. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- C.H. Walker. June 22, 1876. -- Committed to a Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Chamber of Commerce of Geneva. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of Geneva, Switzerland, relative to American finances. April 14, 1868. -- Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- Circulating promissory notes. February 27, 1893. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Circulation of the smaller notes. February 18, 1880. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Claims for depreciation, property used, damaged, or destroyed by the Army, and for interest on advances for the use of American prisoners at Quebec. Communicated to the House of Representatives, November 22, 1792
- Coin contracts. Joint resolution of the Legislature of Indiana, relative to coin contracts. March 15, 1869. -- Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- Coinage laws of the United States, 1792 to 1894, with an appendix of statistics relating to coins and currency. Fourth edition -- revised and corrected to August 1, 1894. Prepared under the direction of the Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate. March 5, 1894. -- Submitted by Mr. Voorhees, from the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Corporation of Alexandria. Report of the Corporation of Alexandria, D.C., in pursuance of the act of Congress of the 30th June, 1834, in relation to "due-bills or small notes." March 6, 1838. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Currency, &c. February 14, 1842. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Currency. Letter from the Comptroller of the Currency, transmitting his fifth annual report. December 2, 1867. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Currency. Memorial of Thomas H. Baird, of Pennsylvania, upon the subject of the currency. October 13, 1837. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Currency. Resolutions of the Legislature of New York in regard to the currency. April 11, 1874. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Deficiency appropriation for Treasury Department. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, submitting urgent deficiency estimates of appropriations required by the Treasury Department for the current fiscal year. December 13, 1911. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Deficiency appropriation. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, asking for an appropriation of $150,000 deficiency for printing Treasury notes of a smaller denomination than five dollars during the current fiscal year. January 9, 1884. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Discrepancies in paper accounts between the Secretary of the Treasury and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Communication from the President of the United States, transmitting... on account of discrepancies existing on April 8, 1922, in the paper accounts between... February 28, 1923. -- Read; referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Distinctive paper for United States securities. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a copy of a statement from the Chief of Division of Loans and Currency submitting an estimate of appropriation for expenses of currency. April 3, 1900. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Distinctive paper for national-bank currency. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, submitting an estimate of appropriation for expenses of national currency. March 31, 1900. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Distinctive paper required for currency. Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, submitting an estimate of amount of distinctive paper required for currency. April 23, 1906. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Distinctive paper. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting copy of a communication from the Chief of Division of Loans and Currency submitting an estimate of appropriation for the purchase of distinctive paper for the remainder of the current fiscal year upon which to print national-bank currency. March 26, 1900. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- District of Columbia -- banks. Communicated to the House of Representatives, February 5, 1811
- Document in relation to the destruction of outstanding due bills by the Corporation of Alexandria, in pursuance of the act of Congress of June, 1834. March 7, 1838. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Documents from N. Biddle, President of the Bank U. States, to Hon. G.M. Dallas, Chairman of the Select Committee of the Senate on the Memorial of the Bank of the United States, in reply to the resolutions offered by Mr. Benton, and adopted by the Senate on the 31st January, 1832.
- Due-bills -- Alexandria. March 21, 1836. Submitted to the House of Representatives, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Engraving and printing bureau of the Treasury. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in answer to a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 12th instant, report relative to the condition of the engraving and printing bureau of the Treasury. January 15, 1869. -- Referred to the Committee on Retrenchment and ordered to be printed.
- Engraving and printing government issues. June 3, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Ephraim Bowen. February 12, 1841. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Ephraim Bowen. March 8, 1842. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Establishment of an agricultural bank in the Philippine Islands. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting petition of Emilio Aguinaldo Y Famy asking legislation for the establishment of an agricultural bank in the Philippine Islands. January 20, 1903. -- Referred to the Committee on Insular Affairs and ordered to be printed.
- Exchequer. January 9, 1843.
- Farmers and Mechanics' Bank, Steubenville, Ohio. Rsolutions [i.e., Resolutions] of the Farmers and Mechanics' Bank of Steubenville, on the subject of rechartering the Bank of the U. [i.e., U.S].States. March 12, 1832. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, on Bill H.R. No. 365.
- Federal reserve act amended. February 24, 1919. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Finance and currency. December 15, 1875. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Finance report. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting his annual report of the finances for the year 1864. December 6, 1864. -- Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- Fractional silver certificates. March 3, 1888. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Free coinage of gold and silver. February 10, 1892. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Free transportation of United States paper currency to Washington for redemption. Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, inviting the attention of Congress to a clipping from the Annual Report of the Treasurer, recommending free transportation of United States paper currency to Washington for redemption. January 11, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Gold and silver coins. (To accompany Bills H.R. 255, 312, 313.) February 19, 1834.
- Gold and silver coins. June 30, 1832.
- Gold and silver coins. March 17, 1832. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Gold coinage. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 510.) March 26, 1836.
- Hard money, by Francis H. Brownell, Chairman of Board of Directors, American Smelting and Refining Company. Presented by Mr. McCarran. May 8 (legislative day, April 12), 1944. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Hawaiian silver coinage, etc. March 28, 1900. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Henry Fried. January 12, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table.
- History and methods of the Paris Bourse, by E. Vidal.
- Improve facilities of Federal Reserve System. February 13, 1932. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Improve the facilities of the Federal reserve system. February 25, 1932. -- Ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States, March 29, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Maryland, made the following report: The Committee on Finance, to which was referred a Resolution of the 30th December, 1829, directing the committee to inquire into the expediency of establishing an uniform national currency for the United States...
- In Senate of the United States. February 15, 1836. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Leigh made the following report: The Committee on Revolutionary Claims, to which was referred the memorial of Ebenezer Banks...
- In Senate of the United States. September 18, 1837. The following bill, introduced by Mr. Benton, on leave, the 10th June, 1836, was ordered to be printed. A Bill To Re-establish the Currency of the Constitution for the Federal Government...
- In relation to coinage. March 1, 1882. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. 15th December, 1830. -- Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 1,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- In the Senate of the United States. August 2, 1876. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Cameron, of Wisconsin, submitted the following report. (To accompany Bill S. 1018.) The Committee on Claims, to whom was referred the petition of the Union Bank Of Louisiana, praying compensation for losses sustained by reason of the illegal seizure by General Banks, in 1863, of certain deposits in their hands, have examined the same, and beg leave to bring in the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 10, 1873. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Sherman, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following report: Resolved, that it is the duty of Congress during its present session to adopt definite measures to redeem the pledge made in the act approved March 18, 1869, entitled "An Act To Strengthen the Public Credit," as follows...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 19, 1888. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Hoard, from the Committee on Claims, submitted the following report. (To accompany Bill H.R. 10240.) The Committee on Claims, to whom was referred House Bill 10240, a bill for the relief of J.E. Pilcher, have considered the same and respectfully report...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 15, 1889. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Hiscock, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following report. (To accompany Bill H.R. 9623.) The Committee on Finance, to whom was referred the Bill (H.R. 9623) entitled "An Act To Provide for Printing Government Securities in the Highest Style of the Art," having considered the same...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 17, 1891. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Morrill, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following report: (To accompany S. 4528.) The Senate Bill (4528) entitled "A Bill To Provide the Government with Means Sufficient to Supply the National Want of a Sound Circulating Medium," appears to be intended to supply a paper legal-tender currency by permitting any owners of land...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 19, 1869. Mr. Howe made the following report. (To accompany H.R. No. 1326.) The Committee on Claims, to whom was referred H.R. No. 1326 for the relief of Anthony Bucher, submit this as their report...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 12, 1882. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Brown submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that it is inexpedient and unwise to contract the currency by the withdrawal from circulation of what are known as silver certificates, or to discontinue or further restrict the coinage of silver...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 14, 1873. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Sherman, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following report. The Committee on Finance, in obedience to the resolution of the Senate of the 6th instant, as follows: Resolved, that the Committee on Finance be directed to inquire whether the Secretary of the Treasury has power, under existing law, to issue United States notes in lieu of the forty-four million dollars of notes retired and canceled under the act of April 12, 1866...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 15, 1880. Mr. Bayard, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following as the views of the minority. (To accompany Joint Resolution S.R. 49.) The undersigned, believing the industrial, commercial and financial prosperity of a country, in order to be enduring and secure, must be based upon a money of actual and intrinsic value...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 26, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Allen submitted the following resolution: Whereas under section 2 of the Act of Congress of July 14, 1890, entitled "An Act Directing the Purchase of Silver Bullion and the Issue of Treasury Notes thereon, and for Other Purposes," the Secretary of the Treasury is invested with full power...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 14, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Morgan submitted the following resolution: Whereas, under the existing laws, gold coin of the United States is the only full legal tender money which can not be dispensed with by contract...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 15, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Gibson, of Louisiana, submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby requested to report to the Senate...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 19, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Stewart presented the following papers relating to the paper currency of East India.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury in response to the Senate resolution of February 2, 1894, giving a statement of the paper money redeemed and reissued or destroyed since January 14, 1875; also giving statements relative to the establishment and maintenance of the gold reserve. February 21, 1894. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to Senate resolution of September 5, 1893, requesting information concerning the redemption in silver of notes issued under the Sherman Act; and other information concerning the subject of silver coinage. September 12, 1893. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to a resolution of the Senate July 30, 1892, relative to the currency receipts and payments, the amounts of deposits and reserves in the depositories of various countries, and the possibility of maintaining bimetallism as it was established under the administration of President Washington. December 6, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to the Senate resolution of March 29, 1894, calling for a statement of the cash value of imports from countries having depreciated paper as a circulating medium, and the rate of exchange with the same countries. May 11, 1894. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, relative to the issues of paper currency during the years from 1861 to 1869 inclusive. June 22, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed, and also to be printed in the Congressional Record.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 2, 1895. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Gorman, from the Committee on Printing, submitted the following report: (To accompany Senate resolution to print in paper covers 2,000 copies of Senate Report No. 831, Fifty-third Congress, third session, on laws of the United States relating to paper money and loans...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 23, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. Mr. Hiscock presented the following memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, in behalf of the maintenance of the standard of value as now established by law.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 25, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Cockrell presented the following copies of correspondence between the Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. H. McCulloch, and the assistant treasurer at New York, Mr. Thomas C. Acton, January 1885...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 9, 1896. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. The Vice-President presented the following letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in response to resolution of the Senate, dated December 31, 1895...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 2, 1894. -- Laid on the table. May 25, 1894. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Palmer presented the following memorial showing the reasons why Senate Bill No. 1917 should become a law at the present session of Congress, by John Cowdon, of New Orleans, La.
- In the Senate of the United States. May 25, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. May 27, 1892. -- Ordered reprinted. Mr. Cockrell presented the following table prepared by the Director of the Mint, exhibiting approximately the stock of money in the aggregate and per capita in the principal countries of the world.
- In the Senate of the United States. May 26, 1880. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Pryor, from the Committee on Claims, submitted the following report: (To accompany Bill S. 1621.) The Committee on Claims to whom was referred the Bill (S. 1621) providing for the payment to O.B. and O.S. Latham the sum of $43,631.26, the alleged difference between coin and greenbacks, under certain contracts between the said Lathams and the United States, due them, the said Lathams, have had the same under consideration, and report as follows thereon...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 26, 1882 [i.e., 1892]. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Peffer submitted the following resolution: Resolved by the Senate, that the Secretary of the Treasury be directed to inform the Senate how much paper currency was issued during each of the years from eighteen hundred and sixty-one to eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, both inclusive...
- In the Senate of the United States. September 4, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Allen submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Secretary of the Treasury be directed to furnish to the Senate, without unnecessary delay, full information on the following subjects...
- Inflation of the currency. Memorial of banks, bankers, merchants, and others, of the City of New York, against any further inflation of the currency. January 28, 1874. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- International Monetary Conference held at Brussels in compliance with the invitation extended by the President of the United States, and in pursuance of the first section of the Act of Congress of August 5, 1892. Report of the Commissioners on behalf of the United States, and journal of the sessions of November 22, 1892, to December 17, 1892.
- Irredeemable currency. Memorial of J.W. Parker and others, bankers and merchants of the City of Columbia, S.C., praying Congress to prohibit by law the issuance of an irredeemable currency by certain corporations, &c. December 19, 1873. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Issue of Treasury notes on deposits of silver bullion. March 26, 1890. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed. April 10, 1890. -- Ordered to be reprinted.
- J. Edwin Pilcher. June 7, 1888. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- J.E. Pilcher. Message from the President of the United States, returning House Bill No. 339, with his objections thereto. May 29, 1888. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- John Golder. Memorial of John Golder, of New York. Presenting his views of finance. September 27, 1837. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- Laws of the United States relating to loans, paper money, banking, and coinage, 1790 to 1895. January 29, 1895. -- Reported by Mr. Voorhees from the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed. March 2, 1895. -- 2,000 copied ordered printed.
- Legal-tender silver dollars and subsidiary coinage. January 13, 1902. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in response to resolution of February 29, 1892, information relative to the amount of gold and silver certificates issued since January 1, 1878. March 10, 1892. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in response to resolution of January 22, 1891, statement of the amount of coin and paper money in the United States. February 21, 1891. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, communicating, in compliance with Senate resolution of February 10, 1874, information as to the length of time which will be required for the mints to manufacture the amount of subsidiary silver coin requisite to replace the fractional currency. February 11, 1874. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a communication from the Comptroller of the Currency, relating to a deficiency in the amount of distinctive paper provided for national bank currency during the current fiscal year. August 24, 1893. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Lieutenant Wallace Mott. Letter from the Secretary of War, in relation to the proceedings of a board of officers convened at Camp Douglas, Utah Territory, to investigate and report upon the loss by fire, for which Second Lieut. Wallace Mott, Eighth Infantry, and Assistant Commissary of Subsistence, is responsible. June 19, 1874. -- Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs and ordered to be printed.
- Massachusetts. Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts, in relation to the currency, and the removal of the public deposites. March 17, 1834. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Memorial of E. Littell, praying the incorporation of a national bank. March 10, 1838. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of Joseph Fawcett and others, praying Congress to call a national convention, for the purpose of restraining and adjusting abuses in the incorporation of banking companies. March 9, 1840. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of Thomas Law, Walter Jones, and Elias B. Caldwell, a committee appointed at a meeting of the inhabitants of the City of Washington to memorialise Congress on the subject of a national currency. April 16, 1824. Read, and referred to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- Memorial of Thomas Law, and others, citizens of the District of Columbia, suggesting a mode for regulating the currency. June 17, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of William Wheeler Hubbell upon the subject of the suspension of the further coinage of silver, legal-tender notes, bi-metallic coinage, and an increase of the volume of United States money. January 6, 1880. -- Referred to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures. February 12, 1880. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of Columbiana County, Ohio, against the incorporation of a national bank, and praying an increase of the circulation of gold and silver. October 2, 1837. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of Columbiana County, Ohio, for an increase of the circulation of gold and silver, and opposed to the creation of banks and paper money. September 11, 1837. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of Georgetown, in the District of Columbia, praying the adoption of measures to compel the banks in the District of Columbia to resume specie payments, or to wind up their affairs. May 11, 1840. Referred to the Committee on the District of Columbia, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of Washington City, praying the adoption of measures to compel the banks in the District of Columbia to resume specie payments, or to wind up their affairs. May 19, 1840. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of the City and County of Philadelphia, praying Congress to adopt the Sub-Treasury system, and to establish an exclusive metallic currency. December 18, 1837. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of citizens of the City of Washington, praying the adoption of measures to compel the banks in the District of Columbia to resume specie payments, or to wind up their concerns. March 11, 1840. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of hatters in the City and State of New York, praying the imposition of a duty on silk-hats. May 19, 1840. Referred to the Committee on Manufactures, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of a number of merchants and others of Baltimore, praying the incorporation of a national bank, or the substitution of the United States Bank of Pennsylvania. September 25, 1837. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Board of Trade of New York, remonstrating against the immediate resumption of specie payments. February 7, 1876. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Board of Trade of the City of New York, praying the establishment of a national bank. February 13, 1838. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, in regard to foreign commerce of the United States. January 18, 1872. -- Referred to the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-seventh Congress. December 7, 1841. Read, and laid upon the table, and 10,000 extra copies with the accompanying documents ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 5, 1843. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed, with the accompanying documents; and that 3,500 additional copies of the message, and 1,500 additional copies of the message and documents, be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-seventh Congress. December 7, 1841. Read, and ordered to be printed with the accompanying documents; and that 3,500 additional copies of the message, and 1,500 additional copies of the message and documents, be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the third session of the Twenty-fifth Congress. December 4, 1838. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-fifth Congress. December 8, 1857. -- Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 5, 1843. Read, and ordered that the usual number of copies of the message and documents be printed and that 10,000 copies extra of the same be also printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the third session of the Twenty-fifth Congress. December 4, 1838. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Message from the President of the United States, transmitting, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, a report from the Secretary of State in relation to the sale of government drafts for bank notes, by the officers of that Department. January 13, 1840. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Message of the President of the United States and accompanying documents, to the two House of Congress at the commencement of the second session of the Fortieth Congress. Part I.
- Message of the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the third session of the Thirty-seventh Congress. December 1, 1862. -- Read, and ordered that the usual number of the message and documents be printed.
- Message of the President of the United States, and accompanying documents, to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the third session of the Fortieth Congress. Part I.
- Message of the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-fifth Congress. January 4, 1858. -- Resolved, that the usual number of copies, and fifteen thousand additional copies, of the annual message of the President of the United States and accompanying documents be printed for the use of the Senate. Vol. I.
- Monetary changes in Japan. February 8, 1898. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Money-laundering machines. Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a draft of a paragraph for inclusion in the general deficiency bill, embodying an estimate of $60,000 for the installation, maintenance, and operation of money laundering machines during the fiscal year 1913. August 16, 1912. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriation and ordered to be printed.
- Monthly Bulletin of the International Bureau of the American Republics. International Union of American Republics. [Vol. XXIII.].
- National Monetary Commission. German bank inquiry of 1908. Stenographic reports. Proceedings of the entire Commission on points I to V of the question sheet.
- National Monetary Commission. Laws of the United States concerning money, banking, and loans, 1778-1909, compiled by A.T. Huntington, chief of Division of Loans and Currency, United States Treasury, and Robert J. Mawhinney, law clerk, Office of Solicitor of Treasury.
- National Monetary Commission. Special report from the banks of the United States, April 28, 1909. Presented by Mr. Aldrich. December 21, 1909. -- Ordered to be printed.
- National Monetary Commission. Supplement to The origin of the national banking system, by Andrew MacFarland [i.e., McFarland] Davis.
- National Monetary Commission. The English banking system, by Hartley Withers, Sir R.H. Inglis Palgrave, and other writers.
- National Monetary Commission. The Reichsbank, 1876-1900.
- National Monetary Commission. The origin of the national banking system, by Andrew McFarland Davis.
- National bank. Communicated to the House of Representatives, December 14, 1790
- National bank. September 28, 1837.
- National money system. March 3, 1893. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- National-bank notes. December 11, 1890. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- New Jersey. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey, on the subject of the embarrassed condition of public affairs. January 8, 1838. Ordered to lie on the table.
- New York. Memorial of working men, citizens of New York, against paper money, and in favor of restoring the constitutional currency. February 10, 1834. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- New vaults, United States subtreasury building, New York. Letter from the acting Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting an estimate of appropriation for placing new vaults in the United States subtreasury building at New York. December 15, 1899. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- No. 10. Series 1895-96. Monthly Summary of Finance and Commerce of the United States, April 1896. Corrected to June 1, 1896 (with 3 diagrams).
- No. 11. Series 1895-96. Monthly Summary of Finance and Commerce of the United States, May 1896. Corrected to July 2, 1896 (with 2 diagrams).
- No. 12. Series 1895-96. Monthly Summary of Finance and Commerce of the United States, June 1896. Corrected to August 3, 1896 (with 1 diagram).
- No. 6. Series 1895-96. Finance, commerce, and immigration of the United States, December 1895. Corrected to February 2, 1896 (with 3 diagrams).
- No. 7. Series 1896-97. Monthly Summary of Finance and Commerce of the United States, January 1897. Corrected to March 6, 1897.
- Obadiah B. Latham and Oliver S. Latham. April 8, 1880. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Ohio -- currency, &c. Resolutions of the General Assembly of Ohio, in relation to the currency, &c. June 3, 1840. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Ohio Legislature. A declaration and resolution passed by the Legislature of Ohio, in relation to the public domain, and the currency, &c. February 14, 1838. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, with the annual message of the President, transmitted to Congress December 2, 1895. Part I.
- Pennsylvania. Memorial of inhabitants of Adams County, against the Bank of the United States. May 19, 1834. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Petition of the President, directors, and officers of the First National Gold Bank of San Francisco, California, praying the passage of an act giving the right to use the issue of national gold banks for the payment of duties on imports and other coin payments to be made to the government. February 27, 1872. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Plan of a fiscal agent. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a plan of a fiscal agent, in compliance with a resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 21st instant. June 24, 1841. Read, and referred to the select committee appointed on the subject of the currency, and ordered to be printed.
- Plan of finance. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 206.) February 17, 1842.
- Post-check notes. February 7, 1903. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Printing Bureau of the Treasury Department. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in answer to a resolution of the House of January 24, in regard to the Printing Bureau of the Treasury Department. February 6, 1865. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Printing bureau of the Treasury Department. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting additional papers relative to the printing division of the Currency Bureau of the Treasury Department. February 13, 1865. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Proceedings of a meeting of democratic citizens of Philadelphia, approving the measures of the Executive in removing the deposites from the Bank of the United States. March 14, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Proceedings of a public meeting in the City of New York, adverse to the incorporation of a national bank, the contraction of a loan, and the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands. July 19, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Public money. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, on the present system of keeping and disbursing the public money. December 15, 1834. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- Purchase of press and separating machine for office of Treasurer United States. Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting an estimate of an appropriation for the purchase of a press and separating machine for the office of the Treasurer of the United States. January 6, 1896. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of United States paper currency. January 21, 1893. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of bank notes. May 1 (calendar day, May 12), 1933. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of defaced circulating notes unidentifiable as to banks of issue. January 6 (calendar day, January 9), 1933. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of mutilated national bank notes. June 9, 1933. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of national bank notes stolen from or lost by banks of issue. April 8, 1892. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Redemption of worn and mutilated United States paper currency. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, renewing the recommendation made by the Treasury Department last year for the redemption of worn and mutilated United States paper currency and the issue of new currency therefor at the cost of the government. January 11, 1893. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- Reimbursement of the State of Nevada. February 15 (calendar day, February 18), 1929. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Renew charter Bank United States. Memorial of merchants of the City of Albany, N.Y. praying that the charter of the Bank of the United States may be renewed. February 27, 1832. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Repealing certain legislation relating to the purchase of silver, and for other purposes. May 13, 1963. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 11th ult., requiring information on the subject of the refusal of the Bank of the United States to receive the notes of the branches, &c. January 3, 1834. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, concerning orders drawn by the Bank of the United States and its branches. February 29, 1832. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, relating to the affairs of the Bank of the United States. February 7, 1832. -- Read. February 8. -- Mr. Dallas moved to refer the report to the Select Committee on the Memorial of the Bank of the United States, and that it be printed. Mr. Benton moved to refer it to the Committee on the Judiciary; and then it was laid on the table. February 29. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of the 17th instant, in relation to the payment of pensions and fishing bounties in bills of the Commonwealth Bank of Boston. January 30, 1838. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 2000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in relation to the present system of keeping and disbursing the public money. December 15, 1834. Read, referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed, and that fifteen hundred extra copies be printed for the use of the Senate.
- Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, a plan of a bank and fiscal agent of the government. June 12, 1841. Read, referred to the select committee on that subject, and ordered to be printed; and that 1,500 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Report of the Director of the Mint upon the production of the precious metals in the United States during the calendar year 1893.
- Report of the Director of the Mint upon the production of the precious metals in the United States during the calendar year 1894.
- Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the state of the finances for the year 1868.
- Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, (in obedience to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of 1st March, 1819,) transmitting statements in relation to the condition of the Bank of the United States and its offices; also, statements in relation to the situation of the different chartered banks in the different states, and the District of Columbia, &c. February 24, 1820. -- Read, and ordered to lie on the table. January 14, 1834. -- Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives.
- Report on a national bank. Mr. Flint presented the following report on a national bank, dated Treasury Department, December 13, 1790, by Alexander Hamilton. March 12, 1908. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Resolution of the Legislature of New Hampshire, in favor of the resumption of specie payments. February 7, 1876. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance and ordered to be printed.
- Resolution of the Legislature of Vermont, asking for an early resumption of specie payments. January 20, 1877. -- Referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of a meeting of the citizens of New York, held at the park, to obtain a remedy for the distresses of the community, &c. February 19, 1834. -- Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Senate of Pennsylvania, in relation to the "Sub-Treasury Bill." February 20, 1838. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Revised estimate of distinctive paper required for printing currency. Letter from the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, submitting a revised estimate of distinctive paper required for printing currency. April 25, 1906. -- Referred to the Committee on Appropriations and ordered to be printed.
- S. Steele Finley. June 5, 1900. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Series 1895-'96. Monthly summary of the imports and exports of the United States for the fiscal year 1896. New series. Vol. III. Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department, Worthington C. Ford, chief.
- Silver certificates and coinage. June 6, 1882. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Silver coinage. April 17, 1918. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Silver coinage. April 22, 1918. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Silver legislation. April 3, 1963. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Simplification of Treasury accounts. July 25, 1939. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Simplifying the accounts of the Treasurer of the United States. September 13, 1940. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Small bills for circulation. April 6, 1886. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Specie payments. Joint resolution of the Legislature of New Hampshire, instructing the senators and requesting the representatives of that state to use all honorable means to procure the enactment of such laws at this session of Congress as shall bring about specie payments at the earliest day practicable. January 5, 1876. -- Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- Stable money, new freedom, and safe banking provided for in the democratic banking and currency bill with three exceptions. A memorial by George H. Shibley, director, American Bureau of Political Research. Presented by Mr. Chamberlain. July 19, 1913. -- Ordered to be printed. July 22, 1913. -- Illustrations ordered printed.
- State of labor in Europe: 1878. Reports from the United States consuls in the several countries of Europe on the rates of wages; cost of living to the laborers; past and present rates; present conditions of trade; business habits, and systems; amount of paper money in circulation, and its relative value to gold and silver; for the several consular districts, in response to a circular from the Department of State requesting information upon these subjects; together with a letter from the Secretary of State transmitting these reports to the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
- Taxation by the states of legal-tender notes. April 12, 1882. -- Reported adversely, referred to the House Calendar, and ordered to be printed.
- Taxation of greenbacks. April 16, 1888. -- Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means and ordered to be printed.
- To provide for printing government securities in the highest style of the art. August 8, 1888. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- United States notes. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 240.) February 18, 1862. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, made the special order for Wednesday the 19th at 1 o'clock p.m., and ordered to be printed.
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