Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Origins of the Federal Reserve
Episode Date: November 3, 2025In 1913, the United States created its third national bank. Unlike the previous two, this bank was organized in a completely different manner. It was organized differently, in an effort to avoid th...e problems of the previous national banks. Also, unlike the previous national banks, the creation of the Federal Reserve was not done openly and subject to public debate. It was created using secrets and subterfuge. Learn more about the creation of the Federal Reserve and the very odd way it was created on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Newspaper.com Go to Newspapers.com to get a gift subscription for the family historian in your life! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1913, the United States created its third national bank.
Unlike the previous two, this bank was organized in a completely different manner.
Its structure was designed to avoid the problems of the previous national banks.
Also, unlike the other national banks, this one was not subject to an open and lengthy public debate.
There was actually a fair amount of secrecy involved.
Learn more about the creation of the Federal Reserve and the very odd way it was created
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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If you remember back to my previous episode on the subject, America had not one, but two different national banks in the 19th century.
The first National Bank of the United States was established in 1791 and lasted for 20 years until its charter expired and wasn't renewed.
The second National Bank of the United States was established in 1816 and fell victim to the same fate after 20 years when its charter wasn't renewed.
After the demise of the Second Bank of the United States, the country entered a period known as the Free Banking era.
During this period, banks were chartered by individual states, each issuing its own banknotes backed by different assets.
Notes circulated at discounts depending on the perceived soundness of the issuing bank, and bank failures were common, especially during panics.
The Civil War brought partial nationalization.
The National Banking Acts of 1863 and 1864,
created federally chartered national banks that issued uniform national currency backed by
U.S. government bonds.
However, there was still no lender of last resort, no coordinated money policy, and no central
authority to manage liquidity. Seasonal interest rate spikes, reoccurring bank runs,
and major bank panics exposed the system's instability.
Bank panics became a major problem after the Civil War. There were panics in 1873, 1884, 1890,
1893, 1896, and finally one in 1907.
The panic of 1907 was a major financial crisis triggered by a failed attempt to corner
the stock of the United Copper Company, which in turn led to runs on New York Trust
companies, causing widespread bank withdraws and a collapse of credit. With no central bank to supply
emergency liquidity, the crisis was halted only after J.P. Morgan personally organized
private rescue funds. The panic of 1907 was the
straw that broke the camel's back for the banking industry. The crisis convinced many political
and business leaders that the country needed a permanent lender of last resort and a more flexible
money supply. So once again, the idea of a central bank was seriously considered. However, there was a
problem. The reason the previous two banks never had their charters renewed was that a deep-seated
suspicion about banks and bankers had permeated American culture ever since its founding. Many Americans in the
late 18th and early 19th centuries, believe that concentrated financial power posed a threat
to individual liberty and Republican self-government. A national bank by definition centralizes credit
and currency in a single institution. To Jeffersonian and later Jacksonian thinkers,
this looked like a recreation of the British financial system, which they associated with
aristocracy, corruption, and undue influence by wealthy creditors. Another objection was simply
constitutional. The Constitution never explicitly granted Congress the power to charter a bank, so
strict constructionists argued that such an institution was unconstitutional.
Alexander Hamilton defended the First Bank of the United States by invoking the necessary and proper
clause. Still, opponents such as James Madison and Thomas Jefferson insisted that the federal
government was limited to enumerated powers and that banking should be a state-level function.
Farmers, small merchants, and debtors worried that a central bank
typically controlled by urban financiers would pursue tight money policies that favored creditors over borrowers.
The first and second banks of the United States could, by redeeming state banknotes for gold or silver,
force local banks to contract credit. Regional and sectional politics added yet another layer.
The early United States was economically diverse and many states jealously guarded their own banks and currencies.
A national bank headquartered in Philadelphia or New York appeared to give the Northeast
disproportionate power over, say, the South and the West.
It was in this environment that bankers and politicians who sought to establish a new central bank
had to work.
The National Monetary Commission was a bipartisan body established by Congress in 1908, following the
panic of 1907, to examine domestic and international banking and currency systems and recommend
reforms to prevent future financial crises.
It was led by Senator Nelson Aldrich of Rhode Island.
In November 1910, Aldrich and the National Monetary Commission secretly met with a small group of leading bankers and financial experts at the Jekyll Island Club off the coast of Georgia.
Among the attendees were the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, representatives from J.P. Morgan & Company, as well as National City Bank of New York and Bankers Trust Company of New York.
This meeting has become infamous because of the secrecy surrounding it.
The attendees traveled under assumed names and avoided the time.
the media, and even told the club staff that they were only there on a duck hunt.
The secrecy was intentional, because if it became public that top Wall Street bankers were
designing the country's monetary system, the plan would be politically doomed.
Over the course of roughly a week, they drafted what became known as the Aldrich Plan,
which envisioned a single privately controlled central banking institution called the National Reserve
Association with regional branches.
Although the Aldrich Plan never became law, it served as the intellectual foundation for the Federal Reserve Act.
When Democrats won the 1912 election, they rejected Aldrich's proposal as two dominated by Wall Street.
But still, they kept its key architecture, a central banking system with regional reserve banks coordinated by a national board.
The Democrats, led by Representative Carter Glass of Virginia and Senator Robert Owen of Oklahoma,
rewrote the plan to shift control from private bankers to a public board appointed by the federal government.
President Woodrow Wilson personally guided the compromise, insisting on what he called a decentralized central bank,
that being a bank with public oversight in Washington but with regional reserve banks reflecting local interests.
The final bill created a new institution that consisted of a board of governors in Washington appointed by the president,
a new elastic currency called Federal Reserve Notes,
and a lender of last resort discount window.
There were other unique elements of this new institution as well.
The 12 regional Federal Reserve banks were to be owned by member commercial banks in that region,
not by the federal government.
And this is something that most people don't realize.
The regional federal reserve banks that do most of the actual banking and work with individual banks
are not technically government institutions.
Also, the system would be funded outside the federal budget
to insulate it from political pressures.
Once the House and Senate reconciled their versions,
Wilson pressed Congress to pass the bill before the holiday recess.
After intense debate, the Senate approved the Federal Reserve Act
on December 19, 1913.
The House followed on December 22nd.
Wilson signed it into law on December 23, 1913,
just days before Christmas, noting that the country finally had a central banking system that
balanced public authority with regional representation. The timing was not accidental. Wilson and the
Democratic leadership wanted the bill passed before opponents could regroup in the new year.
Some members complained that the vote was being rushed in the final days before Christmas,
but the political momentum plus the lingering memory of the 1907 panic carried it through.
The Federal Reserve Board began operations in December 1914 just months after the outbreak of World War I in Europe.
The new institution immediately faced extraordinary challenges.
As European powers liquidated American securities to finance their war, gold flowed into the United States in unprecedented quantities.
The Fed had to manage this influx while maintaining domestic financial stability and helping to finance American participation in the war after it entered in 1917.
During these formative years, the Fed's role and authority was poorly defined.
The Regional Reserve Banks exercised considerable autonomy, sometimes pursuing conflicting policies.
The Fed also struggled to establish its relationship with the Treasury Department,
which had traditionally managed government finances and influenced monetary conditions
through its handling of federal deposits and bond sales.
Benjamin Strong, who served as the governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from 1914 until his death in 1928,
emerged as the system's most influential figure during this period.
Strong pioneered the use of open market operations,
that being the buying and selling of government securities,
as a tool for influencing credit conditions.
He also worked to establish the dollar as a key international currency
and collaborated with European central bankers
to stabilize the international monetary system during the 1920s.
However, the 1920s also revealed the Fed's limitations and misjudgments.
As stock prices soared in the late 1990,
1920s, Fed officials debated how to respond. Some worried about speculative excess and advocated
tighter monetary policy, while others argued that stable commodity prices should dictate the
appropriate policy. The Fed ultimately pursued a middle course that proved inadequate to either
prevent the stock market crash or the subsequent economic catastrophe. The Great Depression
represents the darkest chapter in the Federal Reserve's history. Between 1929 and 1933, the American
economy contracted by roughly a third, unemployment soared above 25%, and nearly half of all banks
failed. The Federal Reserve was created to prevent the panics that occurred in the late 19th century,
and now under its watch, the country experienced the greatest panic ever.
The actual mechanics of what happened during the Great Depression will be the topic of a future
episode, as it's a pretty involved subject. However, it became obvious to everyone that reforms
to the Federal Reserve were necessary.
The end result was the Banking Act of 1935.
One of the core changes was to the governance and internal organization of the Federal Reserve
system.
Prior to 1935, the Washington-based board was simply called the Federal Reserve Board.
The Act renamed it to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and reorganized
leadership titles such that the chief executive became the chairman of the board of governors
and the second in command became the vice chair, and other members were simply titled
governors. It removed from membership of the board of governors, the secretary of treasury,
and the comptroller of the currency, who had previously sat on the board. With their removal,
the board gained greater independence from the executive branch. The act also formally established
the terms and appointment of governors. They would be nominated by the president and confirmed by
the Senate for staggered long-term appointments, with the intent of insulating them from direct
political influence.
Another major reform was the reorganization of the Federal Open Market Committee, or FOMC,
the body responsible for coordinating open market operations, that being the buying and selling of
government securities, and thus influencing credit and money in the economy.
The Act established the FOMC in its modern form, comprising all seven members of the Board
of Governors, plus five Regional Reserve Bank presidents on a rotating basis as voting members.
The Act also gave the Board of Governors explicit power to set reserve requirements for member banks.
In the 1970s, Congress clarified the goals that monetary policy should be pursuing.
Amendments in 1977 articulated the now-famous mandate to promote maximum employment and stable prices.
There is a whole lot more to be said about the Federal Reserve.
They are unquestionably the most important economic organization on earth.
The adjustment of interest rates on the world's reserve currency,
the ability to establish bank reserve limits,
and conducting open market operations,
have profound implications for everything.
Stock markets, real estate, inflation, unemployment,
and many other factors, for better or worse,
are all dependent on decisions made by the Federal Reserve.
An institution created in the years preceding the First World War,
which was just the latest iteration of a national bank
first established in the 18th century.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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