“William Paterson, of
Dumfriesshire,” says one of his biographers, “was by profession a
merchant, who in early life attained the highest success, in the
midst of which he became the victim of a great reverse. But the
difficulties to which he was long exposed, after being deservedly
the object of almost national homage, have been even magnified
through the strange indifference of posterity to his eminent
qualities. Of his two chief works, the Bank of England and the plan
of the Darien Colony, the former has proved a model of usefulness,
whilst the latter was the grandest of conceptions, the failure of
which is in no wise attributable to him. Other noble designs of his,
developed with remarkable ability and most industrious zeal for the
good of the three kingdoms, in their financial and commercial
relations abroad as well as at home, even surpass these two objects
in importance.”
This is the man whom Lord Macaulay describes as having been gifted
by nature with fertile invention, an ardent temperament, and great
powers of persuasion, and to have acquired somewhere in the course
of his vagrant life a perfect knowledge of accounts.
This is the great financier of whom Hill Burton says—“ His memory
has been revived and cherished in the present day as the prophet of
the blessings of free trade, and the announcer of a currency system
identical in its fundamental principles with that adopted in recent
times after experience and inquiry. He was a man of quiet, retired
life. He had travelled and seen much of the world, but it was as an
observant tradesman, not as a courtier or ruffler. His pride was to
call himself ‘ merchant in London,’ to circulate among his
fellow-traders his views on commerce and finance, and to work
practically in some of their adventures. He was a man of serious
walk and conversation after the Presbyterian fashion.”
Of a man of genius of this kind, a brief memoir will probably be
acceptable. Both England and Scotland are interested in him. both
England and Scotland benefited by his schemes; but it cannot be said
that either England or Scotland showed him gratitude.
William Paterson was born in April 1658, in the house of Skipmyre,
in the parish of Tinivald, Dumfriesshire. His father’s family came
of a respectable stock, which in his own time was represented among
the leading Scotch Episcopalians and partisans of the House of
Stuart; as, for example, his paternal kinsman, the last Archbishop
of Glasgow, and another, Sir Hugh Paterson, who was attainted for
his share in the Jacobite insurrection of 1715.
Of his early years we know but little, and that little is dubious;
but it is evident from his writings that he must have received a
solid, if not a very extensive, education, and made excellent use of
it. Either an adventurous temper, or the res angustce domi, drove
him from the “parental roof5’ when he was only in his seventeenth
year; and we find him at Bristol in 1675, sheltered by one of his
mother’s relatives. At her decease he came in for a legacy, which
enabled him to gratify his longing to see the world. After a visit
to Holland, he crossed the seas to America; where he remained for
several years, busy with plans and projects of every kind, and
already dreaming of the colonization of Darien. His adventures at
this period are, however, mere matter of conjecture; and the
obscurity that rested upon them emboldened his enemies in after
years to accuse him of having been a buccaneer. From a letter
written in 1699, it would appear that he at one time held business
relations with the colony of New England; but where or how it is
impossible to ascertain. His first wife, however, was the widow of
Mr. Bridge, the Covenanting minister of that colony. In Paterson’s
native county long lingered a tradition that he took part in the
prohibited services of the Covenanters, but failed as a preacher;
and it is certain that in the satires of the versifiers hired by the
English Government to traduce him, he is ridiculed as “predicant
Paterson.” In various names we may conclude that he was at one time
settled at New Providence (in the Bahamas). At another, he was
making himself acquainted with nautical affairs—I suppose on board
ship; while he seems also to have taken part in Sir William Phipps’s
successful venture, when he removed treasure to the amount of
£300,000 from a Spanish galleon wrecked near New Providence.
But whatever may have
been the true nature of his various avocations before 1685, we then
come upon solid ground ; for in that year he conceived his great
idea of a grand colony in Central America, independent of Spain, and
based on the principles of religious freedom, and the abolition of
commercial monopolies. This became the main object of his life,
though many years passed before he could attempt its realization.
For when, on his return to England, he submitted it to James II.,
who was not wanting in political sagacity, and regarded it with
favour, the troubles in which that monarch became involved compelled
him to dismiss it; and afterwards, when the Elector of Brandenburg
was inclined to introduce it, he was prevented by the national
jealousy of a foreign adventurer.
For a time, therefore, Paterson laid it aside, and turned his
attention to financial affairs. He settled in London as a merchant,
was made a member of the Merchant Taylors’ Company, and appears to
have gained the confidence of his fellow-traders by his energy and
intelligence. Much of his business lay with the Dutch merchants, and
he was well known on the quays and in the coffee-houses of
Amsterdam. Enterprising as ever, he took up a scheme for the better
supply of North London with water from reservoirs to be constructed
south of the Highgate and Hampstead Hills, in which he was assisted
by Sir John Trenchard (1690). By this time he had made himself such
a position that he was summoned as an important witness before the
Parliamentary Committee appointed to inquire into the economic
condition of the country, and in his evidence advocated certain
measures for its improvement, in which may be traced the adumbration
of his scheme for a Bank of England.
At that time two public Banks were established in Europe; one, the
Genoese Bank of St. George, which was completing its third century ;
the other, the Bank of Amsterdam, which had an eighty years’ record.
Why, it had been asked, should there not be a Bank of London as
prosperous and as permanent? Even in Charles II's reign the question
had been answered by several pamphleteers, but never in a practical
form. A speculative Land Bank was proposed by Briscoe and
Chamberlayne. But now came our Dumfriesshire adventurer with what
was really a well-considered plan for a Bank of England —a plan
which stood the test of the sharpest criticism. In Friday Street, at
the Wednesday Clubs which then met there, it was discussed by
merchants and financiers with growing favour; and at length was
approved and adopted by Charles Montague (afterwards Chancellor of
the Exchequer), an influential politician, and Richard Godfrey, one
of the ablest, wealthiest, and most respected of
London’s merchant princes. The former undertook to manage the House
of Commons, and the latter the City. Both were successful. “An
approving vote,” says the historian, “was obtained from the
Committee of Ways and Means; and a bill, the title of which gave
rise to many sarcasms, was laid on the table. It was indeed not easy
to guess that a bill, which purported only to impose a new duty on
tonnage for the benefit of such persons as should advance money
towards carrying on the war, was really a bill creating the greatest
commercial institution the world had ever seen.”
Paterson’s proposition was that the Government should borrow
£1,200,000 at what was then considered the moderate interest of
eight per cent. In order to induce capitalists to come forward with
their moneys, the subscribers were to be incorporated by the name
and title of “The Governor and Company of the Bank of England.” But
no exclusive privileges were to be granted; and they were prohibited
from trading in anything but “bills of exchange, bullion, and
projected pledges.” And in order that “the power of the purse” might
not be transferred from the House of Commons to the new corporation,
they were forbidden to advance money to the Crown without authority
from Parliament, under penalty of forfeiting three times the amount
of money so advanced, while provision was made that the Crown should
have no power to remit any portion of the penalty.
There was much vehement discussion in Parliament and the
coffee-houses; but eventually the bill passed through both Houses,
and received the royal assent.
Such were the beginnings of the Bank of England. It sprang from the
fertile and ingenious brain of the financier whom Lord Macaulay
sourly and erroneously stigmatizes as an obscure Scotch adventurer.
Paterson was one of the first directors of the New Bank, upon a
qualification of £2000 stock, which, however, he sold out before the
end of 1695, at the same time retiring from the Board. I have met
with the assertion that wealthier men than Paterson took
dishonourable advantage of his financial capacity in establishing
the institution, and then defrauded him of his just reward. But I
fail to discover any justification for it. Montague and Godfrey
undertook those services which it was impossible for Paterson to
have undertaken, because he did not possess sufficient commercial or
political influence. Nor can I discover any justification for the
statement that he was expelled from the directorate. What really
happened was this. With characteristic activity he proposed to form
what was practically another joint-stock company for the purpose of
consolidating the perpetual fund of interest payable to “the orphans
and other creditors of the city of London.” Such an operation his
co-directors considered to lie outside the proper work of the Bank
of England, and when Paterson found himself out-voted, he
immediately resigned. The “perfervidum ingenium” of the restless
Scot could not tolerate opposition. Perhaps he might have been more
successful if he had had the support of his friend Godfrey; but the
latter had been killed in the trenches at Marlborough’s siege of
Namur. It is needless to say more on this subject than that Paterson
contrived to float his new scheme by his own credit, and that it
proved moderately successful.
About this time our persevering projector—this hard - headed,
warm-tempered, sanguine - spirited Scotchman—seems to have thought
that the opportunity had come for realizing his life-long dream of a
Central American Colony, and initiating the world into the
advantages of Free Trade. The capitalists shut out from the rich
field of operations monopolized by the East India Company—the
free-traders or “interlopers” of those days—would eagerly welcome
the opening of a new channel of commercial adventure. The good-will
of the King might be relied upon. The success of the Bank of England
would facilitate the raising of the necessary funds. And a novel
character would be given to the latest project because it would be
centralized in Scotland, the commercial interests of which had, it
was generally admitted, been too much and too long neglected. It was
in those circumstances that Paterson brought forward the scheme for
establishing “The Company of Scotland trading to Africa and the
Indies”—the African Company, as it was afterwards called—which
received the sanction of the Scottish Parliament on June 26, 1695.
This Act conferred on the Company the fullest trading powers, and
other powers of a more extraordinary character. As, for instance,
they were authorized to equip vessels of war, either in Scotland or
in any other country not at war with the British Crown; to make
settlements, and build cities, harbours, and fortifications, in any
uninhabited place in Asia, Africa, or America, or wherever they
obtained the consent of the natives, or were not met by the claims
of any European Power; to resist when attacked, and make reprisals;
and to form alliances with parties holding sovereign rights in the
three quarters of the globe already specified. Further, this Company
established as a protest against monopolies, became a monopoly
itself, for all other Scotsmen were prohibited from trading within
its jurisdiction without licence from it, and the Company were
empowered to seize on all such trespassers, “by force of arms and at
their own hand," a favour which they afterwards used in a manner
dangerous to the vital interests of the empire.
It was arranged that half the capital should be raised in England,
and half in Scotland. It was speedily subscribed, and then the
English Companies awoke to the fact that a new and formidable
competitor had sprung into existence, and began a vigorous campaign
against it, appealing for support to the national jealousy. The
House of Commons was quickly roused to take measures to crush the
audacious project. The Lords were not slow to co-operate, and both
Houses having met in conference, they united in an address to the
Crown against the Scots Company. The agitation led to the withdrawal
of the English capitalists; but the national spirit of Scotland then
came to the front, and poor as was the northern kingdom in the last
years of the seventeenth century, it contrived to furnish the
necessary funds, though when the Company got into difficulties, the
latter instalments of the subscriptions were not forthcoming, and
the whole sum actually paid in reached only £219,094 8s. 11d.
Impelled by Paterson’s enthusiasm, the new Company set to work with
patriotic energy. They engaged in plans for extending the Scots
fishery to Greenland and Archangel; for the development of home
manufactures; for opening up commercial relations with the Gold
Coast and Negro Coast of Africa; and the establishment of colonies
and factories. In the last category it took up Paterson’s project
for a Scots colony on the Isthmus of Panama, on the narrow neck of
land which separated the two great oceans, the Atlantic and the
Pacific, and seemed designed by nature to command the commerce of
the world. “There would naturally be concentrated the mutual trade
of the two coasts of America. Much more, it would be a stage in the
shortest means of communication from Europe to China and Japan, and
the unknown regions of the Eastern seas. In later times it has been
prophesied that the Panama railway shall open a new track to New
Zealand and the Australian colonies [and the present generation has
seen a noble attempt to cut the isthmus by a navigable canal.] The
availabilities of Darien, which inspired the ardour of the Scots
London merchant a hundred and eighty years ago, are still a deeply
interesting problem—unsolved.
Paterson’s idea was that of a free port—as open to ships of all
nations as London is to-day; so that the merchandise of the whole
world was to be drawn to that favoured centre, and accumulated there
without restriction or distinction. It was a grand, a noble idea;
but everything was against its successful realization. The spot
chosen for carrying it out was apparently most favourable; but in
reality it was surrounded by difficulties and dangers. It was in the
midst of the Spanish settlements—Panama, Portobello, Carthagena—and
thus drew down upon the Company the vindictive jealousy of Spain. It
was deficient in natural resources, and offered no means of
sustenance to a young colony; and it was cursed with a climate which
apparently concentrates all the pestilential elements of Tropical
America. Then, Paterson’s vivid imagination was unaccompanied by the
faculty of organization; so that the expedition was sent forth
without any proper provision having been made for the government of
the new colony and the preservation of order. And as he had no
personal knowledge of the isthmus, no precautions were taken against
pestilence or famine. The truth is, the disastrous failure of the
expedition was due, not to external causes—not to the jealousy of
England and Spain—but to the incapacity of its leaders and the want
of suitable equipment.
The Company purchased three Dutch ships, which were fitted up as
vessels of war, and with six thousand two hundred picked men on
board, sailed from Leith, amid the cheers of an excited multitude,
whose bosoms throbbed with patriotic pride, on July 26, 1698. On
November 4 they landed on a rocky peninsula in the Gulf of Darien,
which seemed to offer great capabilities of defence. Their first
business was to build a strong fort, so as to command the Gulf. Then
they marked out on the mainland, where the commercial colony of New
Caledonia was to spread indefinitely, two sites for towns, to be
called respectively New Edinburgh and New St. Andrews. So far all
was well, but troubles soon arose. Some gentlemen had been appointed
to act as the council and governors of the new State; but they were
not backed by any substantial power, and possessed no means of
enforcing their authority. The colony, therefore, was practically
without any head, and the wilder and more daring spirits acted with
absolute independence. A quarrel with the Spaniards added to the
pervading embarrassments. Then the expected supplies from Scotland
did not arrive ; and no provisions could be obtained in exchange for
their merchandise, because much of it was damaged, and for the rest
there was no market. Disease and privation began their fell work
among them. In the spring of ’99 the survivors, perceiving no hope
of relief, came to a resolution to abandon the settlement, and
embarking on board their three vessels, set sail for the first port
Providence should send them to. Two of the ships reached New York in
August, having each lost above a hundred men on the voyage ; the
third, not less unfortunate, arrived at Jamaica. Whether many of the
miserable adventurers ever found their way back to Scotland may well
be doubted.
Meanwhile, the directors at home, filled with a blissful
sanguineness, had fitted out a second expedition, though in much too
dilatory a fashion. Two ships sailed in May, and four others early
in August, and all were well found with provisions and stores. A
third expedition, consisting of one thousand three hundred men, was
dispatched in September, just before the earliest rumours reached
the directors of the disaster that had befallen the first. These
rumours attributed the abandonment of the settlement to fear of the
Spaniards; and in a mood of patriotic indignation the Company
equipped a fourth or auxiliary expedition, which they placed under a
veteran soldier, Campbell of Finab, and dispatched with belligerent
instructions. Neither of these expeditions retrieved the situation,
and the melancholy issue was the capitulation of Campbell and his
companions to the Spanish governor of Cartha-gena, who had blockaded
the colony with five men-of-war (March 18, 1700). And thus
Paterson’s great conception of a free port and an independent
Scottish colony in the isthmus between the two oceans, faded away
into the oblivion of failure.
Paterson accompanied the first expedition—not, however, in his
proper position as leader, owing to some pecuniary difficulties
which had arisen between him and the Company, but as a voluntary and
uncommissioned settler. He was one of the survivors who reached New
York; and after suffering so severely from distempers and troubles
of mind, that for some time his life was despaired of, he sailed for
Scotland on October 12, and arrived at Edinburgh on December 5,
1699. He had gone out to his Land of Promise accompanied by his wife
and only child, a son; he returned, wifeless and childless. He had
gone out with his hopes in full blossom; he returned with his hands
full of dead leaves.
No private affliction, however, and not even the failure of his
life’s great aim and purpose, could break down the spirit of this
indomitable man. He did his best to allay the national enmities that
had been excited by the untoward fortunes of the Darien Company; nor
were his services in this direction unacknowledged or unrewarded by
the Government. The Duke of Queensberry, the royal commissioner in
Scotland, writing on August 31, 1700, says—“The poor man acts with
great diligence and affection to the King and country. He has no
bye-end, and loves this Government both in Church and State. He
knows nothing yet of my having obtained anything for him; and I am a
little embarrassed how to give him what I am allowed for him, lest
his party in that [the Darien] Company should conceive any unjust
jealousy of him, or he himself think that I intend as a bribe that
which is really an act of charity.”
His active intellect soon found new fields of exercise. He published
Proposals of a Council of Trade with the view of promoting the
development of the national resources. He conceived the idea of a
Sinking Fund ; and warmly advocated the legislative union of England
and Scotland. Removing to London, he was admitted to the confidence
of William III., and held more than one conference with the King—of
which he has left an interesting record, illustrative both of our
Scottish adventurer’s intellectual alertness, and William’s
readiness to listen to suggestions even from an uncourtly adviser.
“In the last months of the life of this great, but then uneasy
prince,” he says, "I had access to him, when, finding him in much
perplexity and concern about the state of his affairs, I took
opportunity to represent that his misfortunes did not so much
proceed from the variable tempers or humours of his people, as some
pretended, but rather from the men of his house, or those he had
trusted with his business, who, either for want of capacity or
experience, or that they preferred themselves to him, had brought
the affairs of the kingdom into such confusion as made his subjects
uneasy; and now, at last, instead of removing the causes of
complaint, they had presumed to employ his treasure and authority to
silence the com-plainers; that as matters stood there were no reins
of government, no inspection, no inquiry into men’s conduct—every
man did as he pleased, for nobody was punished nor indeed rewarded
according to merit; and thus his revenue was sunk, and his affairs
in the utmost confusion.”
[I find it difficult to believe that Paterson addressed the King in
such exceedingly frank language as he here reports. He wrote his
narrative in 1709, and probably by that time had forgotten the exact
terms he used, putting down what he thought he had said not less
than what he actually did say.]
“He owned this,” continues Paterson, “but asked for remedies ; upon
which I proposed that, in the first place, he should put the
management of the revenues on the right footing, without which all
other remedies would prove ineffectual. The first step towards
reforming the revenue was that of restoring the public credit, by
making provision of interest for all the national debts, and taking
care for the time to come such should be granted as to prevent
further deficiency.
“The next thing I proposed was an attempt upon the principal parts
of the West Indies, by which he might be enabled not only to carry
on the war at the expense of the enemy, but open a secure and direct
trade for ever between those rich and vast continents of Mexico and
Peru, and this kingdom. I added that to secure the Spanish monarchy
from France, the true way was to begin with the West Indies, since
it was more practicable to make Spain and other dominions in Europe
follow the fate of the West Indies, than to make the West Indies, if
once in the power of France, follow the fate of Spain. Besides,
France would thereby be enabled to carry on the war by the bullion
and other wealth of the West Indies.
“The third thing I proposed was our union with Scotland, than which,
I convinced him, nothing would tend more to his glory, and to render
this island great.
“The fourth thing was a present commission of inquiry, by which he
would see by whom his affairs had been mismanaged, and who they were
who, under pretence of mending matters, perplexed and made them
still worse: in particular he would be at a point how far the
present debts had arisen from mismanagement, or from deficiency of
funds.”
The good sense of these proposals was readily recognized by
William’s sagacious mind. But Paterson’s ill luck followed him on
this as on every other occasion. King William died; and though Queen
Anne’s ministers took up the chief points of his policy, they
neglected to reward the man who had helped to shape it. Paterson,
however, was employed by them to conduct the financial arrangements
involved in the Act of Union.
From 1703 until his death in 1719, Paterson resided in Queen Square,
Westminster. For some years he lived in comparative poverty, for
though Parliament admitted his claim to be indemnified for the
losses he had sustained in the public service, estimating them at
£18,241, he received never a penny until after the accession of
George I. As late as 17n, one reads in Dryasdust Boyce’s Political
States, a complaint “that this great politician, the chief projector
of the Bank of England, the main support of the Government, should
be so disregarded that even the sums due to him are not paid. He was
very instrumental" it is added, “in bringing about the Union, when
he was the person chiefly employed in settling the national
accounts.” However, this period of adversity came to an end in or
about July 1715; so that Paterson’s last years were spent in
comfort. He died on January 22, 1719. |