[109]. See below, p. 242.
[110]. Ibid., p. 167.
[111]. Some of the states selected delegates before Congress issued the call. Bancroft, op. cit., Vol. I, pp. 269 ff.
[112]. Herring, National Portrait Gallery, Vol. IV.
[113]. Ms. Treasury Department: Connecticut Loan Office, Ledger B, Assumed Debt, folio 135; ibid., Ledger C, folio 135; ibid., Ledger A, folio 136.
[114]. Ibid., Ledger E, Treasury, Vol. 44, folio 46; Ledger C, Treasury, 6 per cents, Vol. 42, folio 55; and Treasury Ledgers, passim. Consult Index.
[115]. It is here assumed that when a member of the Convention appears upon the funding books of the new government he was a public creditor at the time of the Convention. Of course, it is possible that some of the members who are recorded as security holders possessed no paper when they went to Philadelphia, but purchased it afterward for speculation. But it is hardly to be supposed that many of them would sink to the level of mere speculators. There is plenty of evidence for the statement that many of the members did possess public paper before the meeting of the Convention, but the incompleteness of the old records prevents the fixing of the exact number. Those members who purchased after the Convention for speculation must have had idle capital seeking investment.
[116]. Papers of the Delaware Historical Society, No. XXIX (1900).
[117]. National Encyclopædia of Biography, Vol. XI, p. 530.
[118]. History of the Bank of North America, p. 68.