George Smith (financier)

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George Smith (1806–1899) was an important banking figure in the mid-1800s in Chicago.

Born in Aberdeen, Scotland, Smith visited Illinois and Wisconsin in 1835 and felt there was money to be made.[1] He returned home and gathered subscribers and back in Chicago used those funds to found the Scottish Illinois Land Investment Company. He stepped into the vacuum left in the wake of the Panic of 1837 during which most banks in Chicago failed used his company as an unchartered bank. Through that company he was able to bring in notes from solvent banks in other parts of the country helping to revive Chicago's economy.[2]

By 1839, he had founded an insurance company based in Wisconsin whose notes he circulated in his new unchartered bank, George Smith and Company. These bills acted almost like currency which came to be called "George Smith's money" which by 1842 was actually redeemable in gold and silver. Two years later Smith's was the only bank left in Illinois and by 1854 75% of Chicago's currency was backed by Smith.[3]

His efforts were interpreted differently across the country, for example a bank founded by Lemuel Grant in Atlanta, Georgia in 1852 was forced to close down when Smith circulated their notes widely throughout the midwest. It was made insolvent by 1856.

Smith accumulated a fortune in Chicago but by 1857 he was living in London where he died in late 1899.[4]

[edit] References

  • Knox, John Jay, A History of Banking in the United States, 1900, Bradford Rhodes & Company, retrieved via Google Books [1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Knox, p.740
  2. ^ Banking, Commercial
  3. ^ Banking, Commercial
  4. ^ Knox, p.722