Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Panic of 1893 (Encore)
Episode Date: November 24, 2024It was the worst economic depression that the United States had ever seen. The stock market crashed. Thousands of businesses went bankrupt. The unemployment rate hit 20% There were soup lines and ...an army of homeless scattered throughout the country. It was not the Great Depression. Learn more about the Panic of 1893, the forgotten depression that realigned American politics, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to get chicken breast, salmon or ground beef FREE in every order for a year plus $20 off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com 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/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The following is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
It was the worst economic depression that the United States had ever seen.
The stock market crashed.
Thousands of businesses went bankrupt.
The unemployment rate hit 20%.
There were suplines and an army of homeless scattered throughout the country.
And it was not the Great Depression.
Learn more about the panic of 1893,
the forgotten depression which realigned American politics.
On this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past,
We're wrong. Throughline is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the Throughline podcast from NPR.
History is sort of weird.
There are people in events which punctuate history that gather most of the attention.
This usually consists of wars and charismatic leaders or notable inventions.
These events usually are pretty important, but they're not the only events in history.
In particular, economic events are often overlooked because they aren't as dramatic and their causes can't be as easily understood.
For example, the Roman Emperor Diocletian was known for ending the crisis of the third century and for instituting the tetraarchy.
However, the thing which probably most impacted the empire was his economic reforms, which were simply horrible.
He devalued the currency and instituted a ridiculous series of wage and price controls.
Modern history isn't much different.
If you ask most people to name a depression before the Great Depression, they probably couldn't do it.
Yet in the 19th century alone, there were major economic downturns in 1819, 1837, 1857, and 1873, in just the United States.
19th century depressions or recessions were actually called panics because they almost always involved a bank panic.
This would be where depositors would rush to a bank to withdraw their money before the bank collapsed.
Of course, the irony was that the bank run would often be the cause of the bank collapse,
which made the rumors of a bank collapse usually a self-fulfilling prophecy.
The previous American depressions were bad, but they were nothing like what happened in the last decade of the 19th century.
Sometime around 1890, the United States became the world's largest economy.
Since the bank panic of 1873, the country had experienced a massive economic boom.
The nation was expanding west due to the Homestead Act.
There were enormous numbers of immigrants coming into the country, and perhaps most importantly,
railroads had crisscrossed the entire nation.
In 1860, there were 29,000 miles of railroad track in the country.
By 1890, there were 163,000.
Likewise, the stock market had grown along with the economy.
The Dow Jones Industrial average hit a record high of 78.38 in 1890.
The stocks, which overwhelmingly drove the market, were railroad companies.
These were the tech stocks of the period, and for good reason.
There were high-growth companies that facilitated commerce in all the communities that they reached.
While the economy was booming, there were problems.
There was a populist uprising against the railroads and other monopolies,
which were felt to be exploiting farmers and small businesses.
From 1870 to 1890, there was a global period called the Great Deflation,
where prices generally dropped at 2 to 3% per year globally.
Deflation meant that any loans taken out were progressively hard.
harder to pay off as money kept appreciating in value. This led to calls for increased silver
coinage and a move away from the gold standard. The immediate cause of the panic had to do with
events that took place on May 3, 1893. The National Courage Company of New Jersey was a major
rope-and-twin manufacturer. They overextended themselves and failed to get a $50,000 loan, resulting
in their bankruptcy. The next day, the bankruptcy was announced to the public, and on Friday,
May 5th, there was a massive sell-off of the stock market. Over the next several months,
dropping stock prices caused many banks to call on their loans, which companies could not repay.
The Northern Pacific Railway, the Union Pacific Railway, and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway,
all went bankrupt. As banks couldn't get their loans paid back, many banks went bankrupt,
causing bank runs where many people tried to get their money out, escalating the problem.
When railroads went out of business, the communities they served and the businesses in those
communities also went out of business. By the end of 1893, there were over 16,000 businesses
that had failed in the United States, including 642 banks, and 156 railroads. The bankruptcies
were especially severe in the Western states. All of these business failures caused massive
unemployment. The estimated peak for unemployment during the Depression are between 17 to 20%.
Economic data collection during this period was fairly rudimentary, but there is a
general consensus that the only other time in U.S. history with higher unemployment was during
the Great Depression in the 1930s. And I should note that all of this happened just two months
after President Grover Cleveland took office in March of 1893. In 1994, the effects of massive
unemployment began to appear. In March, a group of unemployed gathered in Ohio to march on
Washington to protest the high unemployment and to demand that the government instituted jobs
program. The group was officially known as the Army of the Commonwealth in Christ. However, it was
better known as Coxie's Army, named after its leader, Jacob Coxie. The group of 500 reached
Washington, D.C. on April 30th, and had the distinction of being the first protest march on
Washington. The media coverage the march received was much larger than the number of people who
actually marched. Other Coxie Army groups formed throughout the country, including one group in the
Pacific Northwest that commandeered a train to go to Washington. One interesting side of
note has to do with the author Frank L. Baum, who observed Coxie's armies March on Washington.
One theory that has been floated is that he used the march as the basis for his book,
The Wizard of Oz. The scarecrow represents the American farmer, the tin man represents the industrial
worker, and the lion represents William Jennings Bryant, and the wizard was the president.
In the book, Dorothy wore silver shoes instead of the ruby shoes that she wore in the movie.
The shoes represent the issue of free silver, and the yellow brick road represents the gold standard.
No one knows if this is true, but it makes for a great story.
Perhaps the biggest labor event was the Pullman Strike, which took place in 1894.
The Pullman Strike is one of the biggest events in labor history in the United States.
The Pullman Company was a manufacturer of railroad cars,
and they were so dominant that sleeper cars were literally known as Pullmans.
The Pullman Corporation had a company town located just south of Chicago called Pullman.
All of the employees lived in Pullman-owned housing,
for which they had to pay the Pullman Corporation.
With the economic downturn, the Pullman Company cut wages but refused to decrease the price of rent or prices at the company store.
The Pullman strike will be the subject of its own episode in the future, but suffices to say it was a really big strike.
The president sent in the army to break up the strike and as many as 40 people were killed.
When the strike was quashed, it resulted in a national boycott by the American Railroad Union of all trains which used Pullman cars.
The boycott began on June 26, and 125,000 workers walked off the job.
There were attempts to break the strike by bringing in replacements, which also resulted in sympathy strikes in Western states.
Thousands of U.S. marshals and soldiers ended the strike by being deployed to ensure that the trains ran.
All of this social upheaval resulted in huge political changes.
If you remember, I previously did an episode on political realignments in American history.
There had been three political alignment systems at this point. The first was after the Revolutionary War. The second was with the collapse of the Federalist Party and the rise of Jacksonianism, and the third was the realignment after the Civil War. The panic of 1893 ushered in the fourth political era in American history. The Democratic Party of President Grover Cleveland suffered a staggering loss in the 1894 off-year elections. Of the 356 seats in the House of Representatives, there was a 110-7
seat swing from the Democrats to the Republicans. The largest change in the House in a single
election in American history. Unemployment rates varied throughout the country. The state with the
highest unemployment rate was probably Michigan with an estimated 45%. There were huge increases
in migrant workers looking to do anything for work. Churches opened soup kitchens. The mayor of Detroit
started a community garden program to grow more food for everyone in the city. Many people who
couldn't make mortgage payments on their home simply abandoned them and move
West. The panic of 1893 was directly responsible for large increases in population for many
Western cities, such as Seattle, San Francisco, Denver, Portland, and Salt Lake City. Perhaps the
biggest policy issue became that of monetary policy. In fact, this was arguably the high
point of popular interest in monetary policy in American history. The Free Silver movement began
before the panic, but was now bigger than ever. Free Silver encouraged the move from the gold standard
to a bimetallic standard.
The movement was openly inflationary,
as a deflationary environment benefited creditors and hurt borrowers.
The free silver movement was mostly a rural democratic movement.
Despite being a Democrat, President Cleveland was not pro-silver and was known as a
Bourbon Democrat.
President Cleveland was confronted with a depleted gold supply in 1895, and to replenish
the U.S. gold stock, he issued government bonds to the New York banker J.P. Morgan
for $129 million.
Morgan turned around and sold the bonds for an $18 million profit, which outraged the public.
The Depression was still ongoing, although improving, during the presidential election of 1896.
The Democrats abandoned the Burma Democrats and nominated William Jennings Bryan for president.
At 36 years old, he remains the youngest person ever nominated for president by a major political party.
Brian was known as a great order and gained fame for his cross-of-gold speech at the Democratic National Convention,
which catapulted him to the nomination.
The Republicans nominated William McKinley, who stuck to a sound monetary platform,
and also advocated for protectionism and higher import tariffs.
McKinley won a comfortable electoral college and popular vote victory,
carrying the Midwest and New England states.
The panic is generally considered to have ended in 1897,
but the estimated unemployment rate was still over 10% until 18909.
The panic of 1893 is one of the most significant events in American history,
Yet most people have completely forgotten it.
It was, however, front of mind for the politicians during the Progressive Era in the Teddy Roosevelt
administration, as well as during the Great Depression and the Franklin Roosevelt administration.
Even if the general population is mostly forgotten it, it doesn't change the fact that the panic of
1893 radically changed the United States, socially, economically, and politically.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Keeve.
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