The Articles of Confederation - Finding Finances - Extra History - Part 3
Summary
TLDRThe script details the financial struggles of the Confederation Congress during the American Revolutionary War, highlighting the appointment of Robert Morris as Superintendent of Finance. Despite his efforts to stabilize the economy with a national bank and proposed tax on imports, Morris faced opposition, particularly from Rhode Island and Virginia, leading to his resignation. The narrative also touches on the discontent within the Continental Army over unpaid wages and the potential for a coup, emphasizing the challenges of a weak central government in the early United States.
Takeaways
- 🏛️ The Confederation Congress struggled financially during the American Revolutionary War, lacking the power to levy taxes and facing a destitute situation.
- 🎵 The Articles of Confederation established a weak central government with a figurehead President of Congress who had limited powers.
- 💼 Robert Morris, known as 'The Financier,' was appointed as the Superintendent of Finance to address the financial crisis, despite his initial reluctance.
- 🏦 Morris established the First National Bank to stabilize the currency and attempted to collect state debts, emphasizing their obligations under the Articles of Confederation.
- 🛃 He proposed a national tax on imported goods to fund the Congress, which was a controversial move considering the war's origins.
- 🗳️ Achieving unanimous consent for the tax from all 13 states was challenging, and ultimately failed due to Rhode Island's refusal and Virginia's withdrawal.
- 💡 Despite setbacks, Morris's National Bank thrived, but accusations arose that he used it for personal and investor enrichment.
- 💔 The Continental Army faced financial hardships, leading to a halt in payments and a promise of future compensation, which strained relations with the troops.
- 🗣️ Some officers, including Alexander Hamilton, sought political office, advocating for a stronger central government to unite the newly formed nation.
- 🛡️ The threat of an army insurrection due to unpaid wages highlighted the urgent need for financial stability and a functional government.
- 🕊️ George Washington's emotional appeal to the troops during a potential coup quelled the unrest and reaffirmed his leadership and loyalty to the Republic.
Q & A
Why did the Confederation Congress struggle to fund the national army during the American Revolutionary War?
-The Confederation Congress struggled due to the lack of real leadership and power under the Articles of Confederation, which made it difficult to impose taxes and generate sufficient revenue for the war effort.
What was the role of the President of Congress under the Articles of Confederation?
-The President of Congress could only supervise meetings, had no voting power, and could not suggest new laws, which was seen as a demotion by many.
Why was Robert Morris nominated as the Superintendent of Finance?
-Robert Morris was nominated due to his success in business, his wealth, and his reputation as 'The Financier.' His experience in converting his merchant fleet into privateer ships and his connections made him an obvious choice to address the financial crisis.
What was Robert Morris's initial reaction to being nominated as the Superintendent of Finance?
-Robert Morris was reluctant to accept the position because he knew it would involve implementing unpopular measures such as raising taxes, which was a sensitive issue for Americans.
How did Benjamin Franklin persuade Robert Morris to accept the position of Superintendent of Finance?
-Benjamin Franklin appealed to Morris's sense of honor and duty, writing to him and emphasizing the importance of the role in the context of the ongoing war and their shared history of working together.
What significant financial institution did Robert Morris establish after becoming the Superintendent of Finance?
-Robert Morris established the First National Bank, which helped create a new stable currency backed by gold and silver.
What was the purpose of the national tax on imported goods proposed by Robert Morris?
-The national tax on imported goods was intended to generate revenue to fund the Confederation Congress and help alleviate the financial crisis.
Why did Rhode Island reject the proposed national tax on imported goods?
-Rhode Island, being a small state reliant on foreign trade, feared that the tax would disproportionately affect them and harm their economy.
How did the failure of the tax proposal impact Robert Morris's influence and the financial situation of the Continental Army?
-The failure of the tax proposal weakened Morris's influence and led to a worsening financial situation for the Continental Army, as they were left without a reliable source of income.
What was the Newburgh Conspiracy, and how did George Washington respond to it?
-The Newburgh Conspiracy was a rumored insurrection within the Continental Army, with soldiers demanding immediate payment for their service. George Washington intervened by condemning the conspiracy and reminding the soldiers of their duty and loyalty to the Republic.
What was the outcome of the efforts to pass the tax amendment again, and how did it affect Robert Morris?
-The tax amendment failed again, leading to Robert Morris's resignation as he could no longer effectively manage the financial crisis without the necessary support from the states.
Outlines
🏛️ Struggles of the Confederation Congress and the Appointment of Robert Morris
The Confederation Congress faced immense challenges in funding the American Revolutionary War due to their lack of power to levy taxes or enforce laws. The Congress was essentially a powerless body, electing a President who could only supervise meetings without any legislative power. After the ratification of the Articles of Confederation, the first president of Congress sought to create new leadership roles, most notably appointing a Superintendent of Finance. Robert Morris, known as 'The Financier' and the richest man in America, was nominated for this role despite his initial reluctance. Morris was a successful businessman who had covertly supported the war effort through various means. Once appointed, he took bold steps to stabilize the nation's finances by establishing the First National Bank, demanding state debts be paid, and attempting to implement a national tax on imported goods. However, his efforts were thwarted when Rhode Island and later Virginia rejected the tax proposal, highlighting the limitations of the Articles of Confederation.
💼 The Financial Crisis and the Threat of a Military Coup
Following the victory at Yorktown, the financial situation of the new United States worsened. The Confederation Congress was unable to pay the troops, leading Robert Morris to stop payments and offer only promises of future compensation. This caused unrest among the soldiers of the Continental Army, who were already underpaid and now faced destitution. Officers began to enter politics, advocating for a stronger central government. Morris, along with Alexander Hamilton, pushed for a tax amendment to raise funds for the army. However, states proposed disbanding the army to avoid further debt. The soldiers, fearing insurrection and potential imprisonment for their debts, threatened rebellion if the army was disbanded. Washington, who had always served at the pleasure of Congress, faced the prospect of being replaced and a potential coup. Hamilton warned of the consequences of a weak Congress, and Washington addressed the brewing conspiracy, reminding the soldiers of their duty and loyalty, thus averting the immediate crisis. Yet, the underlying issues remained, with the tax amendment failing again and Morris resigning, foreshadowing the disintegration of the confederation.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Confederation Congress
💡Articles of Confederation
💡Superintendent of Finance
💡Robert Morris
💡First National Bank
💡National Tax on Imported Goods
💡Rhode Island
💡Continental Army
💡Insurrection
💡Alexander Hamilton
💡George Washington
Highlights
The Confederation Congress struggled for five years to fund the American Revolutionary War, ending up financially broke.
Under the Articles of Confederation, the Congress lacked strong leadership and the ability to enact new laws effectively.
Robert Morris, known as 'The Financier,' was appointed as the Superintendent of Finance to address the financial crisis.
Morris had a background in business and had secretly supported the war effort through various means.
Benjamin Franklin persuaded Morris to accept the role of Superintendent of Finance despite his reluctance.
Morris established the First National Bank and created a stable currency backed by precious metals.
He attempted to collect state debts and enforce the Articles of Confederation's stipulation for payments.
Morris proposed a national tax on imported goods to fund the Confederation Congress, which was a highly unpopular idea.
The national tax proposal required unanimous agreement from all 13 states, which proved to be a difficult task.
Rhode Island and Virginia rejected the tax proposal, leading to its failure and a decline in Morris's influence.
Morris faced accusations of using the National Bank for personal gain, which strained relations with the states.
The Continental Army found itself without funds during a critical moment, leading Morris to pay for the campaign personally.
The victory at Yorktown forced the British to begin peace negotiations, but the financial situation remained dire.
Morris stopped paying the Continental Army, offering only promises of future payment after the war.
Discontent grew among the soldiers, leading to threats of an insurrection and a potential coup d'etat.
Washington quelled the unrest by reminding soldiers of their shared sacrifices and loyalty to the cause.
The failure of the tax amendment and the subsequent resignation of Robert Morris highlighted the weaknesses of the Confederation.
Transcripts
For five years, the Confederation Congress
had struggled to fund a national army
to fight the American Revolutionary War,
but the war kept going
and Congress had become dead broke
♫Intro Music ♫
Under the Articles of Confederation,
Congress had no real leadership.
they elected one of their own members
to be President of Congress,
but once elected he could only supervise meetings.
He couldn't vote or even suggest new laws.
Many saw it as a demotion
and a few who did get elected wound up trying to resign
only to find out that they were stuck there
because nobody wanted to replace them .
But now that the Articles of Confederation
had been ratified by all thirteen states
the first official president of Congress
leveraged the optimism of the moment
to convince Congress that they needed to create
new leadership roles; most importantly,
they needed to appoint a Superintendent of Finance
to fix their desperate money troubles.
They immediately nominated Robert Morris,
the richest man in America.
His knack for business had helped him build his
merchant shipping company into a global powerhouse,
and earned him the nickname "The Financier."
Ever since the war began,
he had worked behind the scenes:
converting his merchant fleet into privateer ships
that attacked the British Navy;
making secret deals with the French
to supply weapons to American soldiers;
and turning his extensive trade connections
into a spy network.
He was the obvious choice,
but boy, did he NOT want to do it.
Americans hated taxes so much
that they had literally gone to war
with the greatest military power in the world
to pay less of them,
and now Congress had nominated him
to be the guy who got to step in and say 'hey,
you know that war we started with Britain over the taxes?
Uh, well, we're going to need you to pay more taxes
so we can keep doing that.'
This would require one heck of a pitch.
When rumors of this nomination reached Paris,
Benjamin Franklin took a break from his hobby
of negotiating crucial foreign alliances to write
his old friend Morris and persuade him to take the job.
The two of them had worked together to establish
connections with the French at the start of the war,
and Franklin knew just how to appeal
to Morris's sense of honor and duty.
After four months, Morris yielded to the pressure
and became America's new financier.
Once he did he threw himself into it.
He established the First National Bank
and used it to create a new stable currency
backed by actual gold and silver.
He tallied up the debts owed by each of the states
and reminded them that, no, paying those debts
to Congress was not optional.
They had all signed the Articles of Confederation
and the Articles of Confederation said 'pay up.'
But his most ambitious project
was to create a national tax on imported goods.
If it passed, any shipment from a foreign country
would have to pay a small fee that would
help fund the Confederation Congress.
This same idea, when suggested
by British Parliament nearly a decade ago,
had helped to set off the chain of protests
that led to the Revolutionary War.
And since the Articles of Confederation
didn't give Congress any power to issue taxes
Morris would actually need to amend the Constitution to do it.
Under the Articles, that meant that he needed
all 13 states to agree, unanimously,
on this very unpopular tax;
and he came so very, very close.
Morris convinced 12 of the 13 states to accept the tax,
but, in the final hour, little old Rhode Island decided to vote 'no.'
As a small state that relied heavily
on foreign trade through it's crucial harbors,
Rhode Island feared that the tax would
hit them harder than anybody else.
Before Morris could even put together
an argument to convince them,
Virginia decided to back out of their agreement
and the tax proposal fell apart
bringing Morris's influence down with it.
His National Bank continued to thrive,
but accusations mounted that he had used it
to enrich himself and his wealthy investor buddies
The states began to ignore his letters,
insisting that they paid their debts to Congress,
and with no income from the states,
plus no income from the new tax that Morris had relied upon,
the Continental Army found itself, once again, out of money;
right when George Washington saw a golden
opportunity to strike down the British at Yorktown.
Morris wound up writing personal checks
to pay for the campaign out of his own deep pockets.
With his help, plus the support of their French allies,
the Continental Army trapped the
main British fighting force inside a siege,
and forced them to surrender over 8,000 soldiers
as prisoners of war.
Yorktown was a monumental victory
The loss of so many soldiers
forced the British to begin the peace negotiations
that would one day into the war.
But George Washington continued
to train his soldiers rigorously,
expecting at least one more final decisive battle
with the British forces
They made camp outside British-occupied New York City
expecting a fight,
and wound up just kind of sitting there
waiting awkwardly for the next two years
as peace negotiations stretched out.
The threat of another looming battle
didn't seem to worry the states.
As bad as they always had been
about giving money to Congress,
they got even worse now that there was no huge
British Army marching around to remind them
why paying for a National Army might be a good idea.
Not their problem anymore.
But it WAS Robert Morris's problem.
Congress had no money to pay the troops,
and he couldn't afford to keep paying them himself.
Soon after the victory of Yorktown,
he stopped paying the Continental Army entirely
All he could offer was a promise that,
after the war, they would receive their money.
He hoped.
The soldiers were not happy, but they stuck together.
For now.
With nothing better to do,
some officers of the Continental Army left
and began to run for political office in their home states.
Many of them had been through the starving winter at Valley Forge
and shared Washington's complaints that Congress had no power
and the states had become too self-involved to get anything done.
Unlike the older revolutionaries,
who hated anything that reminded them of British Parliament,
this new generation wanted a strong central Congress
to hold together the country that they had literally fought to create.
Robert Morris found new allies in this crop of young politicians.
Chief among them was Alexander Hamilton,
the famous hero of Yorktown
and George Washington's right-hand man,
who joined the Confederation Congress in 1782.
Morris and Hamilton bonded
over their shared love of national banking systems
(because everybody's got to have a hobby),
and they soon united to bring back
the tax amendment once again.
They believed it was the only way for Congress
to raise enough money to pay the Continental Army.
But now that peace looked more and more likely
the states had a different idea:
how about, NOT paying the Continental Army?
several states proposed the army should be disbanded entirely,
letting the local state militias
take care of any remaining British resistance.
If Congress wanted to complain that it
couldn't maintain a national army
then it only made sense to disband that army
rather than let it continue to rack up debt
while everybody waited for word on the peace talks.
The soldiers did not see it that way.
They had been underpaid from the beginning,
and they spent the last few months with no pay at all.
Many of them literally couldn't afford to go home;
they had fallen deeply in debt fighting without pay
and they knew that, the second they left the army,
they would be thrown into prison for those debts.
Their trust, that Congress would take care of them, evaporated.
Murmurs began to circulate through the army camp;
threats of an insurrection.
They demanded their pay from Congress immediately,
and warned that, if anybody tried to disband the army,
they would rebel.
Since George Washington had always made it clear
that he served at the pleasure of Congress,
they were even prepared to replace him with a new General.
The United States had barely been born
and already it faced a coup d'etat
and a potential civil war.
Receiving word of this brewing conspiracy
from his old friends in the Army,
Hamilton can't help but be frustrated.
This is exactly why he's been warning
everybody about the consequences
of a powerless Confederation Congress.
He writes a letter to Washington, his old commander,
to warn him about the conspiracy,
then he doubles down on his efforts
to pass the amendment tax,
hoping that the threat of an army uprising
will finally convince these states
to work with him on raising money.
Back in camp Washington receives
Hamilton's warning with grim composure.
He is aware of the Army's unrest,
and he sympathizes with his soldiers,
but he wanted to believe that their patriotism
would prevent them from committing
treason against the Republic.
Now he has to get involved.
He schedules a meeting with his army on March 15th,
the famous Ides of March,
the day Julius Caesar was assassinated
by his former friends in Rome.
He wants to make it very clear
that he considers these threats a betrayal.
Stepping up to speak to his army on that fateful day,
Washington launches into a prepared speech
condemning the conspiracy.
Then he pulls out a letter from Congress.
He says he'll read it to them,
but instead he pauses.
He squints at the small letters on the page.
At last, he pulls out a pair of reading glasses
and begs the soldiers to forgive him,
for "I have grown not only gray
but almost blind in the service of my country"
The soldiers do more than forgive him.
They remember the days spent on campaign:
the brutal winters and the deadly battles
that Washington had led them through.
They can see how much it has cost him,
and they're reminded why they loved him in the first place.
Nobody even cares about the letter anymore.
By the time he's finished reading it,
they rise to pledge their faith in Him
and their loyalty to Congress.
The conspiracy has shattered.
With this major disaster averted,
everybody realizes the importance of banding together
as a unified country to support the army
and give Congress the resources it needed
I am of course kidding:
the tax amendment failed again
and Robert Morris resign.
Join us next time as the confederation
falls apart.
♫ Music ♫
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