Alexander del Mar

Alexander del Mar

Alexander del Mar, also Alex Delmar (1836–1926), was an American political economist, historian, numismatist and author.[Note 1] He was the first director of the Bureau of Statistics at the U.S. Treasury Department from 1866–69.[1][Note 2]

Del Mar was a rigorous historian who made important contributions to the history of money. During the mid-1890s, he was distinctly hostile to a central monetary role for gold as a commodity money, championing the cause of silver and its re-monetization as a prerogative of the state.

He believed strongly in the legal function of money. Del Mar dedicated much of his free time to original research in the great libraries and coin collections of Europe on the history of monetary systems and finance.

Biography

Alexander del Mar, of Jewish-Spanish descent,[2] was born in New York City, August 9, 1836 as oldest son of Jacob and Belvidere Alexander del Mar. He lived for a short period of time in the United Kingdom with his uncle Emanuel del Mar and there received an education in humanities from a private tutor, Arthur Helps (later knighted, becoming Sir Arthur Helps). He was instructed in history, literature, law, and political economy.

After graduating from New York University as a civil engineer, he was educated as a mining engineer in Spain at the Madrid School of Mines.[3]

Aged 18, he returned to the U.S. in 1854 to become the financial editor of the short-lived Daily American Times.[4] He moved to Hunt's Merchant's Magazine in 1860, and in 1863 co-founded and edited with Simon Stern the prestigious quarterly New York Social Science Review (first published in January 1865).[5] He was also involved with the Commercial and Financial Chronicle, founded in 1865 by William Dana.

In 1865, Del Mar, a notorious Free Trader, helped establish the first Free Trade organization in the United States, the American Free Trade League (AFTL), alongside Horace White, William Lloyd Garrison, and Ralph Waldo Emerson, among others.[6]

In 1866 del Mar was appointed as the first director of US Treasury Department's Bureau of Statistics (now part of the Bureau of Economic Analysis).[1] At the time the bureau was a board of trade, with executive functions, among others the supervision of the commissioners of mines, commerce, immigration, etc. Del Mar pioneered the use of a modern and scientific approach to statistics. He remained director until 1869, overseeing numerous reports.[3][7][8][9] He was forced to resign by his superior, David Ames Wells, and was replaced by Francis Amasa Walker. Both were ardent supporters of specie money and opposed to del Mar's convictions of fiat money.[10]

In 1866 he was appointed the American delegate to the International Monetary Congress which met in Turin, Italy.[3]

During the close-fought 1868 presidential election he was nominated for Secretary of the Treasury under Horatio Seymour's Democratic ticket.

In 1869 he purchased the Washington-based National Intelligencer, merged it with the Washington Express and moved its offices to New York in January 1870.[11] It later became the New York City and National Intelligencer which he edited and published until 1872.[12]

He ran under Horace Greeley's ticket for Secretary of the Treasury during the United States presidential election, 1872. The coalition between the Democrats and Greeley's Liberal Republican Party was soundly defeated, and the LRP ceased to exist shortly after. In the same year del Mar represented the United States at the international monetary congress in St. Petersburg, Russia.

In 1877 del Mar was appointed mining commissioner to the U.S. Monetary Commission.[3] This commission was created by Congress in 1876 when it discovered the subterfuge that led to the Panic of 1873. It was charged to investigate:

First. Into the change which has taken place in the relative value of gold and silver; the causes thereof, whether permanent or otherwise; the effects thereof upon trade, commerce, finance, and the productive interests of the country, and upon the standard of value in this and foreign countries; Second. Into the policy of the restoration of the double standard in this country; and, if restored, what the legal relation between the two coins, silver and gold, should be; Third. Into the policy of continuing legal-tender notes concurrently with the metallic standards, and the effects thereof upon the labor, industries, and wealth of the country; and Fourth. Into the best means for providing for facilitating the resumption of specie payments.[13]

Although the commission reported unfavourably on the switch to the de facto gold standard and recommended a return to silver, gold's status as a reserve currency was to remain unchallenged until the 1930s.

In 1878, Del Mar was appointed as clerk to the United States House Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department.

In 1878, Del Mar also wrote a series of letters under the Chinese pseudonym "Kwang Chang Ling" in the San Francisco Argonaut journal. The letters warned Californians, and the broader United States, that China had the potential to rise as an economic giant. Del Mar, as Kwang Chang Ling, argued that excluding cheap Chinese labor to protect American wages and lessen unemployment would do little to protect American laborers in the long term, for China's labor force would continue to pose a global economic threat despite national policies.[14] Del Mar's writings are the first known attempt to use Free Trade rhetoric as a solution to the "Chinese Question" and to counter anti-Chinese attitudes that led to the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act.

In 1879 he published his History of the Precious Metals, the labor of twenty-two years of research during his own free time. From 1880 onwards he mainly devoted his professional career to writing.

In 1881, he published A History of Money in Ancient States, in 1885 Money and Civilization, in 1889 The Science of Money, in 1895, A History of Monetary Systems in Modern States, in 1899 A History of Monetary Crimes, in 1900 A History of Money in America, in 1903 A History of Monetary Systems of France. Del Mar also published several archaeological treatises of great interest.

Del Mar was the New York state chairman of the Silver Party, and spoke at its 1896 Chicago meeting in support of William Jennings Bryan.[15]

He was editor-in-chief of the American Banker, 1905–1906. Upon his death, he donated his private library of 15,000 volumes to the American Bankers Association. Alexander del Mar died in 1926 at the age of ninety.

Del Mar received no scientific or academic recognition from contemporaries, and as a result of this his prescient views were totally excluded from the history of economics.[10]

Family life

With his wife,the former Emily Joseph (the daughter of Joseph L. Joseph), he had eleven children, seven that survived to adulthood, including five sons, Walter, Eugene, Harry, Algernon, and William ; and two daughter, Francesca Paloma del Mar, who trained as an artist.,[4] and Maud (Blackwelder) Del Mar. <family history>

Quotes

In the United States the same bag of coins often masquerades now as the reserve of one bank, and now of another. How far similar subterfuges are employed in the various private banking establishments of Germany is not known, and in the absence of such knowledge it is deemed safer to include the entire paper issues in the circulation. This at least is a known quantity; the " reserves," as experience has too often and too sadly proved, may only exist in the playful imagination of that fortunate class who have secured the prerogative to issue bank money.[17]
(Silver until I die!)[18]

Selected bibliography

Some works by del Mar were announced but apparently not printed, including The politics of money and The history of money in modern countries.

See also

Notes

  1. In business affairs he was frequently referred to in contemporary reports and newspapers as Delmar; however, many of his published works appeared under the name of del Mar. He sometimes appended the letters C.E. and/or M.E. (respectively "Civil Engineer" and "Mining Engineer") to his name.
  2. The US Treasury Department's Bureau of Statistics (1866–1903) should not be confused with the Bureau of Statistics of the US State Department (1874–1897). The two were eventually merged in 1903 under the Department of Commerce and Labor. See "Records of the Bureau of Economic Analysis". National Archive guide to Federal records.

References

  1. 1 2 Simon, Matthew (1960). "Chapter 22: The United States Balance of Payments, 1861-1900.". Trends in the American economy in the nineteenth century. Studies in Income and Wealth, Issue 24. Princeton University Press. p. 632. ISBN 0-87014-180-5.
  2. Tavlas, George S. (November–December 2011). "Retroview: The Money Man". The American Interest. Retrieved 2011-11-07.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Merrill, Walter McIntosh; Ruchames, Louis, eds. (1981). To rouse the slumbering land, 1868-1879. The Letters of William Lloyd Garrison,. 6. Harvard University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-674-52666-2.
  4. 1 2 Hamersly, Lewis Randolph (1929). Leonard, John W. et al., eds. Who's who in New York (city and state), Issue 9. New York: Who's Who publications.
  5. del Mar, Alexander; Stern, Simon, eds. (1866). "New York Social Science Review for 1865". London: Trübner & Co.
  6. Northrup, Cynthia; Elaine C. Prange Turney, eds. (2003). Encyclopedia of Tariffs and Trade in U.S. History, Vol. 1. Westport: Greenwood. p. 16. ISBN 0313327890.
  7. del Mar, Alexander. Report of the Director of the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department on the present progress of ship-building in the United States. (1867) Washington: Government Printing Office.
  8. Monthly statistical reports on commerce, navigation, trade, resources &c. of the various countries of the world. Washington: Government Press.
  9. Annual report on the commerce and navigation of the USA 1865, 1866, 1867, 1868. Washington: Government Press.
  10. 1 2 Aschheim, Joseph; Tavlas, George S. (March 2004). "Academic exclusion: the case of Alexander Del Mar". European Journal of Political Economy, special section: Mini-symposium on Professional Prejudice and Discrimination in the History of Economic Thought. Elsevier. 20 (1): 31–60. doi:10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2003.01.002.
  11. Husdon, Frederic (1873). Journalism in the United States from 1690 to 1872 (reprint, Kessinger Publishing, 2005 ed.). New York: Harper & Bros. pp. 258–9. ISBN 978-1-4179-5347-9.
  12. American Newspaper Directory, 1872. New York (NY): Geo. P. Rowell. 1872. p. 518.
  13. Russell, Henry Benajah (1898). International monetary conferences (Gold: historical and economic aspects) (repr. Ayer Publishing, 1974 ed.). New York: Harper. p. 161. ISBN 978-0-405-05920-9.
  14. Arnold, Kashia (Fall 2012). "Academic exclusion: the case of Alexander Del Mar". Southern California Quarterly. University of California Press for the Historical Society of Southern California. 94 (3): 304–345. doi:10.1525/scq.2012.94.3.304.
  15. "The Saint Paul Globe.". St. Paul, Minn. July 11, 1896: 3.
  16. John Stuart Mill, The Philadelphia Press, August 16, 1874
  17. del Mar, Alexander (1895). History of Monetary Systems. London: Effingham Wilson. p. 389.
  18. del Mar, Alexander (1895). Story of the Gold Conspiracy. Chicago: Charles H. Carr.

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.