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Raymond B. Vickers - Panic in Paradise: Floridas Banking Crash of 1926

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Panic in Paradise: Floridas Banking Crash of 1926: summary, description and annotation

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Panic in Paradise is a comprehensive study of bank loan failures during the Florida land boom of the mid-1920s, during the years preceding the stock market crash of 1929. Florida and Georgia experienced a banking panic in 1926 when, in a ten-day period in July, after uncontrollable depositor runs, 117 banks closed in the two states. Uninsured depositors lost millions, and several suicides followed the financial havoc. This volume makes use of banking records that were legally sealed for almost 70 years and provides a shocking story of professional corruption and conspiracy.An extraordinary and unusual book that makes an important contribution to our understanding of banking history and the general economic history oof the 1920s. The banking collapse in the Southeast is virtually unknown, even to specialists in banking and financial history. No one who is interested in the banking history of the United States will want to miss this book. -- Eugene N. White, Rutgers UniversityAn exhaustively researched pioneering study; brilliant investigative reporting. -- Jack Blicksilver, Georgia State University

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title Panic in Paradise Floridas Banking Crash of 1926 author - photo 1

title:Panic in Paradise : Florida's Banking Crash of 1926
author:Vickers, Raymond B.
publisher:University of Alabama Press
isbn10 | asin:0817307230
print isbn13:9780817307233
ebook isbn13:9780585210131
language:English
subjectBank failures--Florida--History, Banks and banking--Corrupt practices--Florida--History.
publication date:1994
lcc:HG2611.F6V53 1994eb
ddc:332.1/09759/09042
subject:Bank failures--Florida--History, Banks and banking--Corrupt practices--Florida--History.
Page iii
Panic in Paradise
Florida's Banking Crash of 1926
Raymond B. Vickers
THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS
TUSCALOOSA AND LONDON
Page iv
Copyright 1994 Raymond B. Vickers
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
designed by Paula C. Dennis
Picture 2
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Science-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Vickers, Raymond B., 1949
Panic in paradise : Florida's banking crash of 1926 / Raymond B.
Vickers.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-8173-0723-0 (alk. paper)
1. Bank failuresFlorida and GeorgiaHistory. 2. Banks and
bankingFlorida and GeorgiaCorrupt practicesHistory. I. Title.
HG2611.F6V53 1994
332.1'09759'09042dc20 93-35974
Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data available
Page v
For
Mary Taylor Vickers
Page ix
CONTENTS
Preface
xi
Acknowledgments
xv
Introduction
1
Part I Promoter-Bankers
1. Promoters in Paradise
17
2. Capturing the Regulators
32
3. The Mizner Bank
59
Part II Regulatory Complicity
4. Official Deceit
77
5. The Indictment of Florida's Comptroller
95
6. The Resignation of Georgia's Superintendent of Banks
114
Part III The Aftermath: Indictments, Bankruptcies, and Lawyers
7. The Mad Banker
129
8. A System of Protection
149
9. Friends of Vice-President Dawes
167
10. Senatorial Privilege
176
11. The Defeat of Ernest Amos
191

Page x
Epilogue
215
Notes
221
Bibliography
283
Index
305

Page xi
PREFACE
Writing a history of banking is difficult because regulators and bankers have barricaded themselves behind a wall of secrecy. As long as a bank or a savings and loan survives, the regulatory records of the institutionwhich have been prepared by government employees at taxpayers' expenseremain confidential. Since the Great Depression and despite federal deposit insurance, regulators and bankers have argued that secrecy was necessary to prevent bank runs. They have persuaded Congress that the public would panic if the government disclosed the true condition of the nation's financial institutions.
This policy of official secrecy continues after the failure of a financial institution. The public is prohibited from seeing the federal government's regulatory and liquidation records of a defunct bank or savings and loan for another fifty years. The federal records of an institution that failed in 1990 will be sealed until the year 2040.1
Bank secrecy at the state level is even more restrictive. In forty-four states, the banking departments have either destroyed their regulatory and liquidation records or permanently prohibited pub-
Page xii
lic access. After his 1926 indictment for gross negligence, Comptroller Ernest Amos sealed his regulatory records and established Florida's secret regulatory system.
In 1974, while under federal grand jury investigation "for peddling bank charters," Comptroller Fred O. Dickinson preserved the tradition of bank secrecy in Florida. In an effort to plug newspaper leaks, he defeated a bill that would have opened some of his regulatory records. Dickinson, who was later indicted for extortion but convicted for income tax evasion, lobbied through that same legislature a law making it a third-degree felony to release any regulatory records of existing banks.2
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