This book provides a comprehensive account of how the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 was financed. Where existing research has focused predominantly on the political and diplomatic significance of the Purchase, this book demonstrates the importance of the Purchase to global financial history.
The book provides context and background for the Louisiana Purchase and examines the role of key actors and companies, focusing particularly on the âforgotten financiersâ of the Purchase â individuals from the US, France and the UK including Alexander Baring, Albert Gallatin, Pierre Cesar Labouchere and Francois Barbe-Marbois. Based on extensive, original archival research, the chapters will illuminate the role played by these individuals in bringing about financial innovation and facilitating a major transaction that doubled the size of the original United States and helped set the country on a path to global power. The book will be a valuable resource for historians of Europe and America, particularly those with interests in economic and financial history, as well as banking and finance scholars who are interested in the emergence of large-scale international finance in the 19th century.
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Chapter 1: Behind the Scenes of the Louisiana Purchase.- Chapter 2:Â Setting Up the Finance for the Louisiana Purchase.- Chapter 3: âThe Present Order of Thingsâ in January 1803.- Chapter 4:Â Baring & Hope Anticipate Financing the Louisiana Purchase.- Chapter 5:Â All The Players Were Important.- Chapter 6:Â Daniel Parker, American Expatriate Extraordinaire.- Chapter 7:Â The deal is done, but problems arise: Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â America, London, Paris, and Amsterdam .- Chapter 8:Â Meanwhile, More Trouble Back in Paris.- Chapter 9: The Financial & Personal Crises of 1810-11.- Chapter 10: The War of 1812 and the Financiers of the Louisiana Purchase.- Chapter 11: Lessons Learned and Applied.- Chapter 12:Â Curtain Call: The Players Should Take a Bow.
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âThe Louisiana Purchase is mostly remembered for the political acumen of Thomas Jefferson and Napoleonâs pragmatism. This book shows that the grand bargain to double the size of the US depended on the financial engineering of two European merchant bankers. The bankers initiated a deal that avoided confrontation between the US and France and circumvented Britainâs opposition. Perhaps this is why Jefferson stated that banks âare more dangerous than standing armies.â
â Rui Esteves, Professor, Geneva Graduate Institute
âWhen Napoleon in 1803 offered to sell Franceâs territorial claims in North America, the young United States did not have the money to buy. But it had something equally important: credit in the world of international finance. Nealâs splendid contribution to financial history reveals how two enterprising European bankers used U.S. creditworthiness to structure the deal and arrange the financing that allowed the United States to double its territory and become a rising global power.â
â Richard Sylla, New York University
âA complete reversal of what we thought we knew about the Louisiana purchase. As Professor Neal shows in this tour de maĂŽtre, the financiers who masterminded the purchase did not âarrange itâ. They were really the puppeteers of the whole act."Â
â Marc Flandreau, Howard S. Marks Professor of Economic History at University of Pennsylvania
This book provides a comprehensive account of how the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 was financed. Where existing research has focused predominantly on the political and diplomatic significance of the Purchase, this book focuses on the âforgotten financiersâ of the Purchase â individuals from the US, France and the UK including Alexander Baring, Albert Gallatin, Pierre Cesar Labouchere and François Barbè-Marbois.
Larry Neal is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and Fellow of the Cliometrics Society.
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Les mer
âThe Louisiana Purchase is mostly remembered for the political acumen of Thomas Jefferson and Napoleonâs pragmatism. This book shows that the grand bargain to double the size of the US depended on the financial engineering of two European merchant bankers. The bankers initiated a deal that avoided confrontation between the US and France and circumvented Britainâs opposition. Perhaps this is why Jefferson stated that banks âare more dangerous than standing armies.â (Rui Esteves, Professor, Geneva Graduate Institute)
âWhen Napoleon in 1803 offered to sell Franceâs territorial claims in North America, the young United States did not have the money to buy. But it had something equally important: credit in the world of international finance. Nealâs splendid contribution to financial history reveals how two enterprising European bankers used U.S. creditworthiness to structure the deal and arrange the financing that allowed the United States to double its territory and become a rising global power.â (Richard Sylla, New York University)
âA complete reversal of what we thought we knew about the Louisiana purchase. As Professor Neal shows in this tour de maĂŽtre, the financiers who masterminded the purchase did not âarrange itâ. They were really the puppeteers of the whole act.â (Marc Flandreau, Howard S. Marks Professor of Economic History at University of Pennsylvania)
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Examines the inner workings of how the Louisiana Purchase of 1803 was financed Illuminates the role of early financiers and private finance in the creation of a global financial system Provides a comprehensive account of the various individuals, banks and countries involved in the Louisiana Purchase
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783031562761
Publisert
2024-05-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Palgrave Macmillan
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
Research, P, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Forfatter
Om bidragsyterne
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Larry Neal is Emeritus Professor of Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and Fellow of the Cliometrics Society.