Grover Cleveland: Against a Free Silver Policy

Grover Cleveland: Against a Free Silver Policy

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      Congress attempted to end bimetallism in 1853 by abolishing silver coins, but neglected to mention silver dollars in its bill, so the country remained on a two-metal standard until a revision of the law in 1873. Advocates of a "free silver" policy — coinage of silver to gold at a ratio of 16 to 1 — opposed both measures and defended their position with four arguments: that the single-standard law of 1873 had been railroaded through Congress; that silver "hard money" was the coin of the common people; that the Panic of 1873 was brought on by the "demonetization" of silver; and that the institution of a free silver policy would increase the supply of money and end the depression. These theories had special appeal for the poorer classes and the economically unsophisticated, and the Democratic Party gave enough support to pass a free silver bill in the Senate in January 1891. Most observers expected Democrat Grover Cleveland to join the silver cause, but he stated his refusal to do so in the following letter of February 10, 1891, addressed to E. Ellery Anderson of the Reform Club of New York.

      Dear Sir:

      I have this afternoon received your note inviting me to attend tomorrow evening the meeting called for the purpose of voicing the opposition of the businessmen of our city to "the free coinage of silver in the United States."

      I shall not be able to attend and address the meeting as you request, but I am glad that the business interests of New York are at last to be heard on this subject. It surely cannot be necessary for me to make a formal expression of my agreement with those who believe that the greatest peril would be invited by the adoption of the scheme, embraced in the measure now pending in Congress, for the unlimited coinage of silver at our mints.

      If we have developed an unexpected capacity for the assimilation of a largely increased volume of this currency, and even if we have demonstrated the usefulness of such an increase, these conditions fall far short of insuring us against disaster if, in the present situation, we enter upon the dangerous and reckless experiment of free, unlimited, and independent silver coinage.

Source: The Writings and Speeches of Grover Cleveland, George F. Parker, ed., 1892, p. 374.

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