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“That Mysterious People”: Jewish Merchants, Transparency, and Community in Mid-Nineteenth Century America
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2011
Abstract
In the mid-nineteenth century, American wholesalers began increasingly to rely on credit-reporting agencies to provide information about customers in distant localities. The demand for dependable information, coupled with the dynamism and competitiveness of the American market, helped usher into place a business culture that favored transparency and open networks. This article examines one group of merchants—immigrant Jews—whose traditions stood in contrast to the business elite's growing demand for disclosure.
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References
1 Assumptions about what constitutes creditworthiness can vary widely among cultures. See, for example, Fafchamps, Marcel, “The Enforcement of Commercial Contracts in Ghana,” World Development 24 (1996): 427–448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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27 Excerpted in Hunt's Merchants' Magazine 24 (May 1851): 648–649.
28 The statistic appears in numerous articles and books from the 1840s to the end of the century and is almost certainly exaggerated. Samuel Terry, a former retailer and one of the period's most astute business writers, estimated in 1869 that the proportion of retailers who failed outright or were forced to make arrangements with their creditors was closer to 60 percent. Terry, Samuel H., The Retailer's Manual (Newark, N.J., 1869), 17.Google Scholar
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33 Gerber, “Cutting Out Shylock,” 624; Higham, John, Send These to Me: Immigrants in Urban America, rev. ed. (Baltimore, 1984), 158Google Scholar; Diner, 144–145, 149. See also Mayo, Louise A., The Ambivalent Image: Nineteenth-Century America's Perception of the Jew (Rutherford, N.J., 1988), 112–113.Google Scholar
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37 Niles' Weekly Register 7 (21 Oct. 1820): 114; Decker, 397; Diner, 151.
38 R.G. Dun & Co. Collection, Illinois vol. 198:97, 100; Hertzberg, 20. Hertzberg points out that the Southern Mutual Insurance Company's Atlanta agent, Adoph J. Brady; was Jewish.
39 Ashkenazi, 62, 165.
40 Gerber, “Cutting Out Shylock,” 627–629.
41 Hertzberg, 141. See also Ashkenazi, 150–151.
42 Diner, 47; Sachar, 39–40; Hertzberg, 37–41.
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46 Jaffee, 531–532, 533. Fears surrounding Jewish peddlers resulted in an 1851 California licensing law. See Loftis, Ann, California: Where the Twain Did Meet (New York, 1973), 116.Google Scholar After the Civil War many states enacted laws regulating commercial travelers (traveling salesmen). See Spear, Timothy, 100 Years on the Road: The Traveling Salesman in American Culture (New Haven, Conn., 1995), 70–77.Google Scholar
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48 Rumors circulated that Jews committed arson in order to collect insurance money. See Cohen, 25–26; and Dinnerstein, 36–37, 57.
49 Terry, 159–160.
50 Griffen and Griffen, 104; Mostov, “Dun and Bradstreet Reports,” 336–337.
51 Ashkenazi, 117–118; Tulchinsky, 206–207.
52 A 1938 study of Poughkeepsie, New York, established that 60 percent of businesses between 1843 and 1873 lasted less than four years. (However, the researchers counted all changes in partnerships as new firms.) In their more recent study of that city, Griffen and Griffen found that 32 percent of firms between 1845 and 1880 lasted three years or less. Wendy Gamber's study of Boston milliners reports that 60 percent were in business for five years or less. The birth and death rates of firms continued to be high during the later twentieth century. David L. Birch determined that in the period 1972–76, the United States lost about 34 percent of its firms and gained 37 percent, for a net gain of 3 percent. Hutchinson, R. G. R. G., Hutchinson, A. R., and Newcomer, Mabel, “A Study in Business Mortality: Length of Life of Business Enterprises in Poughkeepsie, New York, 1843–1936,” American Economic Review 28 (Sept. 1938)Google Scholar; Griffen and Griffen, 104; Gamber, Wendy, The Female Economy: The Millinery and Dressmaking Trades, 1860–1930 (Urbana, Ill., 1997), 37Google Scholar; Birch, David L., “Who Creates Jobs?” The Public Interest 65 (Fall 1981): 6–7.Google Scholar It should be pointed out that determining the longevity of small private businesses during the nineteenth century presents a number of problems. Directories and credit-reporting firms sometimes did not report on a business until several years after it began operating. And, as demonstrated by the Hutchinson-Newsomer study of Poughkeepsie, frequent changes in partnership structures complicate the definition of what constitutes a “new” firm. Birch also ran into a number of methodological difficulties when using the Dun & Bradstreet records for the late 1970s. His experiences with the data are outlined in Case, John, From the Ground Up: The Resurgence of American Entrepreneurship (New York, 1992), 26–35.Google Scholar
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55 Daily State Journal (Springfield, Ill.), 16 Aug. 1866.
56 Isaac Markens, “Lincoln and the Jews,” in Karp, 239, 240; R.G. Dun & Co. Collection, Illinois vol. 198:166, 229. (The reports on the Hammersloughs contained several variations on the spelling of their names). Samuel Rosenwald eventually moved to Chicago. His son, Julius, later became a co-owner of Sears, Roebuck & Co. and among the nation s most influential retailers and philanthropists.
57 The treatment of Jews in the German states during the first half of the nineteenth century, when they were culturally and legally regarded as a separate people, was far different. Cohen, 6; Raphael, 13–14; Diner, 15–16.
58 May, 91, 112–113, 120.
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63 For the reasons behind the intensified antisemitism that occurred beginning in the last decades of the nineteenth century, see Dinnerstein.
64 The insistence on conformity was probably economically beneficial. As economic historians have argued, shared and internalized rules of conduct encourage spontaneous cooperation and may lower the costs of transacting. This was especially important in a country where bankruptcy and other commercial laws lagged the market's development. Shared cultural values also contributed to the development of a unified American consumer market, which eventually became the world's largest. See North, Douglass C., Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance (New York, 1990)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Casson, Mark, Entrepreneurship and Business Culture: Studies in the Economics of Trust, vol. 1 (Aldershot, U.K., 1995).Google Scholar
65 The propensity of Americans to impose their business culture on others became even more apparent at the end of the twentieth century, when the American-dominated International Monetary Fund insisted that other countries implement much more rigorous standards of disclosure based on the Anglo-American model.
66 Ettinger and Golieb, 166–167.
67 Gerber, “Cutting Out Shylock.”
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