The 100 Most Important American Financial Crises This page intentionally left blank The 100 Most Important American Financial Crises An Encyclopedia of the Lowest Points in American Economic History Quentin R. Skrabec Jr. Copyright © 2015 by abC-Clio, llC all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in a review, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Skrabec, Quentin R. The 100 most important american financial crises : an encyclopedia of the lowest points in american economic history / Quentin R. Skrabec Jr. pages cm includes bibliographical references and index. iSbN 978-1-4408-3011-2 (hardback : alk. paper) — iSbN 978-1-4408-3012-9 (ebook) 1. Financial crises—United States—History. 2. United States—Economic conditions. 3. banks and banking—United States—History. i. Title. ii. Title: The hundred most important american financial crises. Hb3722.S58 2015 338.5ʹ42—dc23 2014022053 iSbN: 978-1-4408-3011-2 EiSbN: 978-1-4408-3012-9 19 18 17 16 15 1 2 3 4 5 This book is also available on the World Wide Web as an ebook. Visit www.abc-clio.com for details. Greenwood an imprint of abC-Clio, llC abC-Clio, llC 130 Cremona Drive, P.o. box 1911 Santa barbara, California 93116-1911 This book is printed on acid-free paper Manufactured in the United States of america To the Patroness of american Crisis, our lady of Prompt Succor This page intentionally left blank Contents Preface xiii acknowledgments xv introduction xvii 1676—bacon’s Rebellion 1 1703—Tobacco Depression 4 1719—Mississippi bubble 6 1733—Molasses act 9 1749—Colonial Hyperinflation and Currency Deflation 12 1750—iron act 15 1762—Colonial Recession 17 1764–1765—Sugar act, Currency act, and Stamp act boycotts 19 1772—Credit Crisis 22 1776—War Financing Crisis 24 1781—Currency Deflation and inflation 28 1790—Debt assumption, Debt Retirement, and Expanding the Economy 31 1792—Panic 33 1794—Whiskey Tax Rebellion 37 1796–1797—Panic 40 1800—Trade interference by barbary Coast Pirates 43 1807—Economic Embargo and Depression 45 1812—War of 1812 48 vii viii | Contents 1816–1819—Economic Warfare and Dumping by Great britain 51 1819—Panic 53 1820s—Cotton Recession 56 1825—british Panic and its american impact 58 1828—Tariff of abominations 60 1833—andrew Jackson Closes the bank of the United States and lowers Tariffs 63 1837—Panic and Six-Year Depression 66 1847—Panic 69 1848—Gold Rush boom and bust 71 1850—Whale oil Shortage: The First Energy Crisis 73 1854—Panic 76 1854—Decline of american Canals 78 1857—Panic 81 1861—Civil War Economics, Shortages, and inflation 83 1862—Union blockade and inflation 85 1869—Grant’s Recession 88 1873—Panic and Global Depression 90 1877—Great National Railroad Strike 93 1880s—New England Energy Crisis 96 1882—bessemer Process and the labor Crisis 98 1882—Recession 101 1884—Panic 103 1890—british Panic 105 1893—Panic 107 1894—National labor Unrest 110 1896—Gold Crisis 113 1899—ohio Gas industry Collapse 115 1901—Rich Man’s Panic 117 Contents | ix 1902—National anthracite Coal Strike 119 1907—Panic 122 1910—Rubber Shortage and Price Explosion 125 1914–1918—War Shortages 127 1914—Crisis 129 1917—boll Weevil Cotton Crisis 132 1918—Flu Pandemic 134 1919—National Steel Strike 136 1921—automotive Recession 139 1921—british Rubber Embargo and Monopoly Control 142 1922—Peanut import Crisis 144 1929—Wall Street Crash and Great Depression 146 1930s—agricultural Depression and the Dust bowl 150 1936–1939—labor Uprisings 153 1937–1938—Recession 155 1940s—World War ii Rationing and Shortages 158 1941—Rubber Crisis and Shortage 161 1943—Steel, Metal, and alloy Shortage Crisis 164 1947—Economic Restructuring of america: Taft-Hartley act 166 1947—Mont Pelerin: a Crisis in Economic Thought and academia 169 1959—National Steel Strike 171 1965—auto import Challenge and the Fall of the american auto industry 173 1969—Technological Tire Crisis: Radial Tire Production Ends U.S. Rubber Dominance 175 1971—Wage and Price Controls 178 1973—arab oil Embargo Crisis 181 1974—Double-Digit inflation 184 1975—Rapid Deindustrialization 186
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