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            More Evidence on the Bank of England: Part 1

                        �1998 by Gerry Rough

 This essay is an add-on to the first essay I wrote on the history
 of the Bank of England.  With this essay, all of the arguments the
 conspiracy theorists have written on this issue in book form will
 have been dealt with exhaustively, at least to my knowledge.  The
 few arguments that are not dealt with were considered to be too
 trivial.  There are some other arguments on this issue as well that
 were skipped because I chose to stick with the history and the
 operations of the Bank itself, without getting too far off course.
 There are a few here that overlap my first essay, but all of the
 arguments presented are new material.  Let's take a closer look
 at the credibility of the conspiracy theorists on this issue.
 G. Edward Griffin, author of The Creature from Jekyll Island is
 our first writer examined:

      England was financially exhausted after half a century of
      war.... Unable to increase taxes and unable to borrow,
      Parliament became desperate for some other way to obtain the
      money.... There were two groups of men who saw a unique
      opportunity arise out of this necessity.  The first group
      consisted of the political scientists within the government.
      The second was comprised of the monetary scientists from the
      emerging business of banking.... The two groups came together
      and formed an alliance.  No, that is too soft a word.  The
      American heritage dictionary defines a cabal as "A
      conspiratorial group of plotters or intriguers."  There is no
      other word that could so accurately describe this group....
      The Cabal met in Mercer's chapel in London and hammered out a
      seven point plan which would serve their mutual purposes.[1]

 Now let's take a look at the accuracy of Griffin's paragraph.  His
 narrative from here almost immediately begins to show serious signs
 of fabrication.  The two groups mentioned, the "monetary
 scientists" and the "political scientists," never existed.  At this
 point, Griffin has fabricated two historical boogiemen for his
 reader.  There are no historical accounts anywhere that detail a
 meeting between any two groups that formulated the idea for what
 would later become the Bank of England.  Griffin had to have known
 this since his main historical source for this passage is R.D.
 Richards, one of the premiere writers on the Bank of England.  In
 no historical accounts of the era is any credit ever given to other
 than that of William Paterson alone for the founding of the Bank of
 England.  Of the three standard works on the early history of the
 Bank of England, Richards is the only one cited in Griffin's
 bibliography.[2]  Richards' text even directly contradicts
 Griffin's assertion of a private meeting between two groups that
 formed the Bank of England:

      The Bank was established, under the authority of sixteen
      sections of the Tunnage Act of 1694, for "the better raising
      and paying into the Receipt of the Exchequer the sum of Twelve
      hundred thousand pounds, Part of the sum of fifteen hundred
      thousand pounds."  Their Majesties were authorized to appoint
      Commissioners to receive subscriptions on, or before, 1st
      August 1694, by "any person or persons, natives or foreigners,
      bodies politic or corporate," who, provided the full loan or
      "a moiety thereof" was subscribed before 1st August 1694, were
      to be incorporated under the title of "The Governor and
      Company of the Bank of England."[3]

 As you can see, a public subscription for a new joint-stock
 enterprise has been deliberately twisted into a private meeting of
 "a conspiratorial group of plotters or intriguers."  Further,
 Richards states two pages later:

      The Bank's original capital of �1,200,000 was quickly
      subscribed.  Narcissus Luttrell, the diarist of the day,
      states that the subscription lists were opened in "the
      Mercer's Chappel" on 21st June 1694; that the Lords of the
      Treasury "came themselves and subscribed �10,000 for the
      Queen"; that Sir Robert Howard, the auditor of the Exchequer
      of Receipt, and his son were responsible for �18,000 and Sir
      John Houblon for �10,000; that the total of subscriptions for
      the first day amounted to �300,000, and for the first three
      days to �600,000, which meant that the subscribers became a
      corporation, and that by noon on 2nd July the total of
      �1,200,000 had been completed.[4]

 The above is on the very page that Griffin himself cited.  Griffin
 had full knowledge that the meeting at Mercer's Chapel was a public
 invitation to a subscription list, yet deliberately fabricated
 otherwise.  Further, even if we confine ourselves only to Richards'
 text which Griffin used, we find quickly that chapter 4 is entitled
 "Tudor and Stuart banking schemes."  Chapter four begins thus:

      The petitions, propositions, "humble proposals" and
      "seasonable observations" appertaining to banks and banking,
      the earliest of which appeared in England during the Tudor
      period, increased in number and in volume during the Stuart
      regime, particularly during the two decades preceding the
      foundation of the Bank of England.  They form an important
      field of economic literature from which it is evident that a
      large number of Tudor and Stuart writers fully realised the
      need of a well-organised credit system.  The great expansion
      of English domestic and overseas trade in the seventeenth
      century created big financial problems; the many banking
      schemes which accompanied this expansion give an excellent
      insight into the wide commercial activities of this important
      era.[5]

 From here Richards' chapter cites literally dozens of banking
 schemes dating as far back as the sixteenth century.  Even Paterson
 himself was rejected twice before finally submitting a workable
 concept for a bank.  Clapham mentions upwards of "several scores of
 financial schemes" for a Bank of England,[6] Glyn Davies' text even
 cites "100 or more schemes for a public bank."[7]  It is clear that
 the founding of the Bank of England was a development dating as far
 back as the sixteenth century, far from any conspiracy of the late
 seventeenth century.  It is clear as well that Griffin's statement
 has been fabricated.

 You will also note that Griffin mentions a "seven point plan which
 would serve their mutual purposes."  This as well has been
 fabricated.  The accounts of the era never hint of this, and his
 reference sources for this document are historical narratives of
 the era written 300 years after the fact, having no relation to a
 specific document written in the late seventeenth century.
 Griffin's text all but admits the obvious fabrication in his
 footnote to the seven point plan, citing an "overview" rather than
 a specific document or reference source for the document:

      For an overview of these agreements, see Murray Rothbard,
      The Mystery of Banking (New York: Richardson & Snyder, 1983),
      p. 180.  Also Martin Mayer, The Bankers (New York: Weybright &
      Talley, 1974),pp 24-25.[8]

 Bill Still, author of On the Horns of the Beast: The Federal
 Reserve and the New World Order describes the same set of events
 this way:

      Frantic government officials met with money changers to beg
      for the loans necessary to pursue their political interests.
      The price was high.  The money changers demanded nothing less
      than a government-sanctioned privately-owned monopoly over
      monetary power -- over who got to coin or print English money.
      Naturally, the monopoly would be owned by a combination of
      money changers, and the English monarchy, and would be
      designed for their exclusive profit.[9]

 Still's fabrication on this issue is simply breathtaking.  It is
 extremely unlikely that any government in history has ever given
 its authority to coin or print money to a private enterprise.  In
 order for this act to take place, parliament would have to pass a
 law allowing for the sale of the English mint.  It is certain that
 the English mint was never sold since this event is not mentioned
 in any known texts on the subject.  Both the law itself and the
 subsequent sale of the mint would be impossible to miss as a
 significant historical event.  The sale of the English mint is not
 mentioned in any of Still's reference sources either.  It is clear
 in this instance that Still's statement has been fabricated.

 Still's ignorance on the issue of the history of the Bank of
 England is perfectly understandable when viewed from his
 bibliographical reference sources.  Of the 37 reference sources in
 his bibliography, there are no serious historical accounts of the
 Bank of England.  Without exception, all of his reference sources
 on this issue are conspiracy theory writers.  It is interesting to
 note as well that most of these are heavily anti-Semitic in
 content.  On the issue of anti-Semitism, Still even admits his own
 blindness to the anti-Semitism of one of his main sources for the
 history of the Bank of England.  Still writes:

      Some authors make the mistake of saying that the Scotsman
      William Paterson led the English money changer group, but
      Commander William Guy Carr, writing in 1958 -- despite his
      silly, anti-Semitic contention that Calvinism was the
      invention of a Jewish conspiracy designed to cause a split in
      Christianity -- gives what is probably the most accurate
      account.[10]

 It is difficult to imagine that Still could be so blind after
 reading the obvious anti-Semitic writings of William Guy Carr and
 still cite him as a credible source of information.  For Still to
 miss Carr's obvious incompetence from his anti-Semitic bias is
 analogous to missing the forest from the trees.  It is clear from
 the above that Still's own admission of Carr's anti-Semitism calls
 into serious question his own credibility.

 Still continues the aforementioned paragraph:

      He claims that Paterson only conducted the negotiations with
      money changers on behalf of the English government and that
      the other party to the negotiations were:  "money lenders
      WHOSE IDENTITY REMAINED SECRET."[11]

 The statement is a classic example of multiple absurdities
 contained in the same statement.  There were no negotiations, no
 money changers, Paterson did not work on behalf of the English
 government, and the money lenders whose identity remained secret
 were actually London merchants.  The real money lenders of the era
 were actually the goldsmith bankers, not the London merchants whom
 Paterson represented.

 Still continues again on the next page:

      According to Carr, the system set into motion with the
      chartering of the Bank of England was a system of perpetual
      debt from which no nation is meant to escape:  "The
      international bankers never intended that England be allowed
      to pay off the national indebtedness.  The plan was to create
      international conditions which would plunge ALL nations
      concerned deeper and deeper into their debt."  Believe it or
      not, this is actually what transpired.  The Parliament was so
      desperate and/or so bribed, that they accepted these terms,
      which amounted to nothing less than legal counterfeiting of a
      national currency for private gain.  The initial stock
      offering sales pitch for the Bank read:  "Paterson hath
      benefit of interest on all moneys which it, the bank, creates
      out of nothing."[12]

 Again, Still's fabrication of fact here is simply breathtaking.
 There are no known historical records that remotely suggest that
 any members of Parliament were bribed in any way.  Further, his
 next idea of "legal counterfeiting," is grossly absurd.  The term
 counterfeit means to imitate or copy with the intent to defraud --
 strictly illegal.  The term "legal counterfeiting" is an oxymoron
 -- a self-contradictory statement.  Governments alone have the
 power to declare any currency legal tender, making it impossible to
 legally counterfeit a legal currency.

 Still's quote on the initial stock offering sales pitch for the
 bank has a story of its own.  The quote is one of the most widely
 used in all of conspiracy theory writings.  It takes its life from
 a book entitled Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our
 Time by professor Carroll Quigley of Georgetown University.  First
 published in 1966, the book is widely read and used by conspiracy
 theorists in their vain attempts to prove a global conspiracy.  It
 should be noted as well that Quigley himself repudiated conspiracy
 theories.  The quote comes from page 49 of Quigley's text.  The
 original quote is as follows, "the bank hath benefit of interest on
 all moneys which it creates out of nothing."  A quick re-read of
 the above quote from Still reveals not one but two falsifications
 contained in the same quote.  Here again, Still's source for the
 quote is another conspiracy theorist, Eustace Mullins, author of
 The Secrets of the Federal Reserve, who has falsified his data,
 unbeknownst to the hapless Still.[13]  Further, Griffin as well is
 incapable of correctly quoting the same passage:  "the Bank hath
 benefit of interest on all the moneys which it, the Bank, creates
 out of nothing."[14]  If either Still, Griffin or Mullins had
 bothered to check Quigley's accuracy, he would have found that
 Paterson never made any such statement in the circular mentioned.
 The circular that Quigley mentions was published in 1694, and took
 as its title, A Brief Account of the Intended Bank of England.[15]

 Here is another story to the same events.  The author of this
 version is Eustace Mullins, author of The Secrets of the Federal
 Reserve.  The Mullins version is as follows:

      In 1689, the same group of bankers [the bankers that financed
      Cromwell's seizure of power in 1649] regained power in England
      by putting King William of Orange on the throne.  He soon
      repaid his backers by ordering the British treasury to borrow
      1,250,000 pounds from these bankers.  He also issued them a
      Royal Charter for the Bank of England, which permitted them to
      consolidate the National debt (which had just been created by
      this loan) and to secure payments of interest and principal by
      direct taxation of the people.  The Charter forbade private
      Goldsmith's to store gold and to issue receipts, which gave
      the stockholders of the Bank of England a money monopoly.  The
      goldsmiths also were required to store their gold in the Bank
      of England vaults.  Not only had their privilege of issuing
      circulating medium been taken away by government decree, but
      their fortunes were now turned over to those who had
      supplanted them.[16]

 Here we have yet another version of the beginning of the Bank of
 England.  In this version is King William of Orange ordering the
 British Treasury to borrow 1,250,000 pounds to repay his backers.
 Mullins' next statement that the Bank of England was permitted to
 directly tax the people is absurd.  This is nowhere mentioned in
 the charter, nor anywhere in any historical accounts of the era.
 The Charter, by the way, never forbade private goldsmith's to store
 gold or issue receipts.  Neither were the goldsmith's required to
 store their gold in the Bank of England vaults.  Glyn Davies has a
 decidedly different story to tell:

      A few important goldsmith bankers, especially Charles Duncombe
      remained stubbornly hostile, but the value and convenience of
      having an account with the Bank soon began to be widely
      appreciated, so that in general the goldsmith's followed the
      example of Richard Hoare and of Freame and Gould (forerunners
      of Barclays) who both opened accounts in the Bank in March
      1695.  In the course of time the goldsmith's gave up their own
      note issues and used Bank of England notes instead, to their
      mutual advantage.[17]

 Des Griffin describes the 1694 events another way:

      As British strength and influence grew around the world toward
      the end of the 1600s the wealth, strength and influence of the
      elite merchants in the City also grew -- only at a faster
      pace.  In 1694 the privately owned Bank of England (a central
      bank) was established to finance the profligate ways of
      William III.  The bank was financed by a group of City
      merchants who used William Paterson as a `front.'  The names
      of the founders have never been made public.[18]

 In Des Griffin's text, it is mentioned that the Bank of England was
 somehow financed by the City merchants.  Here Des Griffin has
 fabricated his data for his audience.  It is nowhere stated that
 this was the case.  Quite the contrary, it is stated everywhere
 that it was the original stockholders who financed the Bank in the
 beginning.

 As you can see from the arguments presented so far, the conspiracy
 theorists are sorely lacking in serious research on the history of
 the Bank of England.  Part two will examine more of what the
 conspiracy theorists have said on this issue, then conclude with a
 summary.


                              Sources

 1) G. Edward Griffin, The Creature from Jekyll Island (Appleton:
 American Opinion Publishing, Inc., 1995) 175, 176

 2) Until the twentieth century, there were no major comprehensive
 historical narratives on the history of the Bank of England.  The
 are now three major works; Clapham, Richards, and Andreades,
 although Richards was not meant to be a comprehensive work.

 3) R.D. Richards, The Early History of Banking in England (London:
 Frank Cass and Company, Ltd., 1958) 146

 4) Richards, p. 148-149

 5) Richards, p. 92-93

 6) Sir John Clapham, The Bank of England: A History (New York: The
 Macmillan Company, 1945) Vol. 1, p. 1

 7) Glyn Davies, A History of Money: From Ancient Times to the
 Present Day (Cardiff: The University of Wales Press, 1994) 254

 8) Griffin, p. 176

 9) Bill Still, On the Horns of the Beast: The Federal Reserve and
 the New World Order (Winchester, VA: Reinhardt & Still Publishers,
 1996) 26

 10) Still, p. 27

 11) Still, p. 27

 12) Still, p. 28

 13) Eustace Mullins, Secrets of the Federal Reserve: The London
 Connection (Staunton: Bankers Research Institute, 1993) 58

 14) Griffin, p. 176

 15) Saxe Bannister, The Writings of William Paterson: Founder of
 the Bank of England (London: Judd & Glass, 1859) Reprinted New
 York: August M. Kelley Publishers, 1968. P. 79-91

 16) Mullins, p. 58

 17) Davies, p. 260

 18) Des Griffin, Descent into Slavery? (Clackamas, OR: Emissary
 Publications, 1980) 1996 Edition, p. 44


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