[159]. McMaster and Stone, Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution, p. 705.
[160]. Ms. Treasury Department: Ledger C, 3% Stock, Pa., folio 231; see also Ledger E, Treasury, 3%, Vol. 44, folio 170; and Ledger C, Treasury, 6%, Vol. 42, folio 114. The existence of this latter small account in sixes in 1797 is the basis for the surmise above that Clymer held also his quota of sixes. With his business acumen he might very well have disposed of most of this stock after “taking the rise” in 1787–1792, for he could have made more money in business than from the interest which the government paid.
[161]. Peele, Lives of Distinguished North Carolinians, p. 59.
[162]. Ibid., p. 69.
[163]. Ibid., p. 69.
[164]. Ibid., p. 80.
[165]. Ibid., p. 78.
[166]. State Papers: Public Lands, Vol. I, pp. 104–106.
[167]. Ibid., p. 129.
[168]. Ibid., p. 118.