Page images
PDF
EPUB

Ships, adjusting compasses of iron.......... 694 Tobacco, trade, statistics of..

Ship, a mammoth merchant........

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

702

stocks of leaf in Europe..

[blocks in formation]

94

108

537

exports of, from New Orleans.....
passage over the bar of the river... 150

560 Trade with the West Indies.....

[ocr errors][merged small]

legislation in Prussia...

129

66 at Erbit, early and present..
Trader's method of selling off.

[blocks in formation]

246 Treasury circulars..

"trade, British efforts to stop the........ 700
South Carolina, product of cotton planta'n in 107
condition of banks of....... 227
cultivation of tea in

[ocr errors]

66

[blocks in formation]

428

701

701

474

663, 666

operation of Assistant in N. York. 535
66 notes outstanding in the U. States,

Treaty between U. States and Chili....
Treaties, commercial...

U.

227, 556

341

109

579 Union-the, br'f rev'w of the past and present 372
United States, condit'n of b'nks in the 725, 670, 674
457
charges at the Mint of...
statis'l view of com., 1848-9, 95, 209
commerce of each State of.... 325
exports of provisions from.... 207

66 built at Pittsburg in 1849 & 1850 407
Cincinnati....

Steamboat navigation of Cincinnati..

[blocks in formation]

66

229

[ocr errors]

138

[ocr errors]

66

Spain, commercial code of....

199, 312

66

Spirits, consumption of in Scotland..

[blocks in formation]

England's best customer...... 451
failures of banks in...

Steamboats, description of North & East River 239

66

66

66

66

469

[ocr errors]

66

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

66 receipts and exports at N. Orleans of 65 Zollverein tariff, proposed alterations in..... 557

United States laws relating to.....
act of United States relating to re-
cording conveyance of....

664

460

[ocr errors]

of United States, issue of papers to.. 339
468 Vermont, rights of married women in....
557 Virginia tobacco trade...

525

546

W.

Welland Canal, history of..
Western and Atlantic Railway.
Whitney's Railroad to the Pacific..

566

468

123

586

219

330

346

527

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

HUNT'S

MERCHANTS' MAGAZINE

AND

COMMERCIAL REVIEW.,

JULY, 1850.

Art. I.-THE GOLD MINES OF CALIFORNIA.

THE extraordinary fertility of the gold mines of California, no longer a matter of doubt, has naturally suggested the apprehension that the precious metals, or at least gold, will experience a depreciation similar to that which took place in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, in consequence of the discovery of America.

The subject is important from its bearing on all cases of perpetual ground rents; on all money contracts extending over a long term of years; on the value, and perhaps the regulation, of the specie currency everywhere; and on national debts. It behoves us, therefore, to make timely inquiries into the probable extent of this depreciation, that we may either guard against its mischiefs, or prepare for those we cannot prevent.

The depreciation of gold and silver caused by the American mines, would furnish us with the safe guide of experience on this subject, if our knowledge of its facts was at once authentic and precise-but they are rarely both, and are sometimes neither. To deduce the future depreciation from the past, we must know the amount of the precious metals in Europe at the time America was discovered; the accessions to that amount furnished by the American mines at different periods; the depreciation at those periods; the quantity of those metals now in existence; and lastly, the amount the California mines are likely to furnish. But all these facts are founded more or less on conjectures; some of which, resting on loose and imperfect data, have differed very widely from one another. While precise certainty is thus unattainable, enough is probably known to enable us to make, within certain limits, approaches to the truth on which we may, with some confidence, rely. According to approved authorities, the quantity of gold and silver in Europe, at the end of the fifteenth century, when America was discovered, was about $300,000,000. Mr. Jacob estimates the coin then in circulation at $170,000,000.

Of the amount drawn from the American mines Baron Humboldt's estimate is entitled to more respect than any other. He examined the several

previous estimates thoroughly; and he had means of information which probably no preceding inquirer had possessed. The result of his investigation was as follows:

From 1492 to 1500 the amount of gold and silver which flowed into Europe from America was $250,000 a year: in all $2,000,000.

From 1500 to 1545 it was $3,000,000 a year: in all $135,000,000. From 1545 to 1600 it was $11,000,000 a year: in all $605,000,000; making the whole amount then received from America $742,000,000. From 1600 to 1700 it was $16,000,000 a year: in all $1,600,000,000; making the whole amount received from America $2,342,000,000.

From 1700 to 1750 it was $22,500,000 a year: in all $1,125,000,000; making the whole amount received from America $3,467,000,000.

From 1750 to 1803 it was $35,300,000 a year: in all $1,870,000,000; and raising the total amount sent to Europe to $5,337,000,000.

From this estimate it would appear that in one century from 1500 the precious metals in Europe had received an accession of $740,000,000, or of 2463 per cent; in two centuries an accession of $2,340,000,000, or 780 per cent; and in little more than three centuries the accession had been $5,335,000,000, or nearly 1800 per cent.

To ascertain the present amount of the precious metals in Europe and America, we must add to the amount drawn from the American mines-1. The amount in Europe before the discovery of America. 2. The amount

in America at 1803. 3. The amount drawn since 1803 from the American, European, and Siberian mines, and imported from Africa. From their aggregate sum we must then deduct-1. What has been consumed by wear, or in the arts, and by losses at sea. 2. What has been transported to India and China. Thus:

The whole amount received from America, including $25,000,000 of booty obtained by the conquerors of Mexico and Peru, as estimated by Humboldt.

The amount in Europe in 1492.

[ocr errors]

$5,445,000,000

300,000,000

The amount in North and South America in 1803, according to
Humboldt

153,000,000

Drawn from the American mines from 1803 to 1820, according to
Mr. Gallatin..

750,000,000

Drawn from the same, from 1830 to 1850, at the same rate..

555,000,000

The product of the mines of Europe, and the gold dust from Africa, according to Mr. Gallatin

450,000,000

The same since 1830-at $7,000,000 a year-20 years.

140,000,000

From the Russian mines..

270,000,000

Consumed by wear of utensils, &c., and lost.

Total......

From this sum let us deduct

Consumed by the wear of the coin-about a five hundredth part annually.

Transported to India and China, according to Jacob.

Total...

Now remaining in Europe and America...

$3,400,000,000

$4,663,000,000

which is less than Mr. Gallatin's estimate, and more than Mr. Jacob's.

This is indeed less than Mr. Jacob's estimate, but more than Mr. Gallatin's founded on the experience of the United States. He stated that the annual loss from the wear of coin in this country was $70,000 on $40,000,000, which is as 1 to 571.

$8,063,000,000

$600,000,000

700,000,000

2,100,000,000

« PreviousContinue »