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Mercantile Credit and Trading Rings in the Eighteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
Merchant credit was the main source of profit for economic agents in the eighteenth-century. Managing cash, commercial instruments, and account books, Atlantic traders such as Gradis of Bordeaux—who dealt in colonial products (including indigo, sugar, and coffee) and exported staples (flour and wine) to Quebec—or Hollingsworth of Philadelphia (an important dealer in flour and colonial produce) achieved market domination through specialized credit networks integrating market exchange and both moral and social interactions. Since a Weberian or a Homo Oeconomicus view of these complex credit activities leads to anachronisms, this article eschews standard economic approaches in favor of more historicized views of early modern economic activity, credit networks, and profit-making techniques.
- Type
- History of Credit in the Modern Era
- Information
- Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales - English Edition , Volume 67 , Issue 4 , December 2012 , pp. 693 - 730
- Copyright
- Copyright © Les Éditions de l’EHESS 2012
References
1. Fonds Gradis, Archives Nationales (hereafter referred to as “AN”), Paris. I would like to thank the Gradis family, who granted me access to their archives. On the Gradis family, see: Menkis, Richard, “ The Gradis Family of Eighteenth-Century Bordeaux: A Social and Economic Study” (PhD diss., Brandeis University, 1988)Google Scholar; Martin, Marguerite, “ Correspondance et réseaux marchands : la maison Gradis au dix-huitième siècle” (Masters thesis, Université Paris I, 2008)Google Scholar; Silvia Marzagalli, “ Opportunités et contraintes du commerce colonial dans l’Atlantique français au XVIIIe siècle : le cas de la maison Gradis de Bordeaux,” Outre-mers 362-363 (2009): 87-111; and Jean de Maupassant, “ Un grand armateur de Bordeaux. Abraham Gradis (1699 ?-1780),” Revue historique de Bordeaux et du département de la Gironde 6 (1913): 175-96, 276-97, 344-67, and 423-48 (on Gradis’s career until 1760).
2. “ Journal, 1 June 1755-26 October 1759” [Journal 1755-1759], 22 September 1755, 181 AQ 7 [Fonds Gradis], Fonds Gradis, AN, Paris. Gradis accounts for 1755 are available online, courtesy of the ANR Marprof project: http://marprof-base.univ-paris1.fr . I would like to express my sincere appreciation to Cécile Robin and Dominique Margairaz, who entered and verified the data with me.
3. A company name ending in “& Cie” denoted a contractual partnership. See Lévy-Bruhl, Henri, Histoire juridique des sociétés de commerce en France aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles (Paris: Domat-Montchrestien, 1938)Google Scholar, 78. No further information is available on this Parisian discounting operation.
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15. As suggested by Guy Bois, “ Marxisme et histoire nouvelle,” in La nouvelle histoire, ed. Jacques Le Goff (Bruxelles: Éd. Complexe, 1978; repr. 2006), 255-74.
16. Dictionnaire de l’Académie française (Paris: Vve de B. Brunet, 1762), 363. “ Confidence” here is therefore not understood in the same way as in the field of sociology, which is relatively vague and ahistorical: see, for example, Aghion, Philippe et al., “ Regulation and Distrust,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 125-3 (2010): 1015–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar The authors apply the same term to each instance in which the good intentions of an interlocutor are asserted, regardless of his or her nature and intentions.
17. One’s word of honor can therefore not be reduced to a combination of the components of standard economic analysis such as information and sanction, contrary to Timothy W. Guinnane’s assertions: see Timothy W. Guinnane, “ Trust: A Concept Too Many” (Economic Growth Center Discussion Paper no 907, Yale University, 2005), http://www.econ.yale.edu/growth_pdf/cdp907.pdf .
18. Jeannin, Marchands d’Europe, 309-20. See also Gérard Béaur, Hubert Bonin, and Claire Lemercier, eds., Fraude, contrefaçon et contrebande de l’Antiquité à nos jours (Genève: Droz, 2006).
19. Stanziani, Alessandro, ed., La qualité des produits en France, XVIIIe-XXe siècles (Paris: Belin, 2003)Google Scholar; Grenier, L’économie d’Ancien Régime.
20. Examples can be found in Matson, Merchants and Empire, 237-40.
21. “ Journal L (20 February 1786-31 January 1788),” 86, pp. 514-15, Coll. 0289, Hollingsworth Collection, Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
22. Nathan Appleton to Samuel Appleton, 17 September 1813, Box 2: “ General Correspondence, etc. 1791-1814,” Folder 25: “ 1813,” Ms. N-1778, Appleton Family Papers (hereafter referred to as “ Appleton Papers”), Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston. I already cited this example in Pierre Gervais, “ Neither Imperial, Nor Atlantic: A Merchant Perspective on International Trade in the Eighteenth Century,” History of European Ideas 34-4 (2008): 465-73.
23. Nathan Appleton to Samuel Appleton, 6 February 1813, ibid., Appleton Papers.
24. Hancock, Oceans of Wine.
25. Pierre Jeannin, “ La clientèle étrangère de la maison Schröder et Schyler de la guerre de Sept Ans à la guerre d’indépendance américaine,” in Marchands d’Europe. Pratiques et savoirs à l’époque moderne, eds. Jacques Bottin and Marie-Louise Pelus-Kaplan (Paris: Presses de l’ENS, 2002), 125-78. For an effective analysis of how information circulated at the time, see Silvia Marzagalli, “ La circulation de l’information, révélateur des modalités de fonctionnement propres aux réseaux commerciaux d’Ancien Régime,” Rives méditerranéennes 27 (2007): 123-39.
26. I exclude account closings and the transfer of value between two accounts referring to physical assets belonging to Gradis himself, for example “ Marchandises pour la Cargaison no 7 dt. à Marchandises générales.” When there is a doubt (which is the case with Cargo no 7, which could have belonged to a partnership of which Gradis was a member), the entry has not been used. Gradis’s account with Chabbert & Banquet, who served as a discounting bank for Gradis, is considered a treasury account.
27. Journal 1755-1759, 10 November 1755, Fonds Gradis, AN, Paris. On Leris’s involvement with Canada, see the entries for March 4, 20, and 31, in addition to April 23 and 24, 1755, which note his participation in the embarcation of the ships La Renommée and Le David as well as “ Cargo no 7.”
28. Martin, “ Correspondance et réseaux marchands,” 136; Jean Cavignac, Dictionnaire du judaïsme bordelais aux XVIIIe et XIXe siècles : biographies, généalogies, professions, institutions (Bordeaux: Archives départementales de la Gironde, 1987), 41 and 152.
29. Journal 1755-1759, 21 March 1755, Fonds Gradis, AN, Paris.
30. Gervais, Pierre, Les origines de la révolution industrielle aux États-Unis. Entre économie marchande et capitalisme industriel, 1800-1850 (Paris: Éd. de l’EHESS, 2004).Google Scholar
31. And not to his investment in Le Sagittaire, as I erroneously asserted in Pierre Gervais, “ A Merchant or a French Atlantic? Eighteenth-Century Account Books as Narratives of a Transnational Merchant Political Economy,” French History 25-1 (2011): 28-47. This investment had been credited to Marchand Fils on October 29, 1754, and reimbursed by letters of exchange from Gradis on February 19 and March 19, 1755.
32. The “ Canada Affair” erupted in the Fall of 1761 with the arrest of Bigot, Péan, and their associates on the order of the new Secretary of State of the Navy, Nicolas René Berryer. In 1763, Bigot was banished for life, and his property was confiscated. He spent his final years in Switzerland, living relatively comfortably thanks to funds he was able to preserve through Gradis’s efforts, among others. See Denis Vaugeois, “ François Bigot, son exil et sa mort,” Revue d’histoire de l’Amérique française 21-4 (1968): 731-78. Due to the possible impact on the ability of the French colony to resist the British enemy, the monopolizing behavior and influence-peddling of Bigot and his merchant allies, including Gradis, have been the ongoing focus of often violent condemnations in Quebec. John-Francis Bosher and Jean-Claude Dubé express the belief, however, that it is difficult to determine whether Bigot “ was an especially corrupt intendant or simply a type of intendant that emerged within a corrupt system,” a conclusion previously reached by Guy Frégault in François Bigot. Administrateur français (Montréal: Guérin, 1948; repr. 1996). See Bosher, John-Francis and Dubé, Jean-Claude, “ François Bigot,” in Dictionnaire biographique du Canada en ligne Google Scholar, http://www.biographi.ca/index-f.html (original ed.: vol. IV, 1771-1800, 1980).
33. Hancock, Citizens of the World, 247.
34. Raymond De Roover, L’évolution de la lettre de change, XIVe-XVIIIe siècle (Paris: Armand Colin, 1953); James Steven Rogers, The Early History of the Law of Bills and Notes: A Study of the Origins of Anglo-American Commercial Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
35. On each of these points, see: Mann, Bruce H., Republic of Debtors: Bankruptcy in the Age of American Independance (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2002)Google Scholar; Fontaine, L’économie morale; and Muldrew, The Economy of Obligation.
36. Journal 1751-1755, 22 January 1755, Fonds Gradis, AN, Paris.
37. This is true of 753 entries observed at least one day apart and at most ninety-nine days after the previous entry in the same personal account. Entries separated by a more than a one hundred-day delay are relatively rare: only seventy-one were noted.
38. Menkis, “ The Gradis Family,” 111 and 124.
39. Such a return rate is comparable to the rates found in long-distance trade, including the slave trade: see Daudin, Guillaume, “ Profitability of Slave and Long-Distance Trading in Context: The Case of Eighteenth-Century France,” The Journal of Economic History 64-1 (2004): 144-71, especially table 4, p. 167.Google Scholar
40. On the absence of cash transactions in the United States, see: Baxter, William T., The House of Hancock: Business in Boston, 1724-1775 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1945 CrossRefGoogle Scholar); Grubb, Farley, “ The Circulating Medium of Exchange in Colonial Pennsylvania, 1729-1775 Google Scholar: New Estimates of Monetary Composition, Performance, and Economic Growth,” Explorations in Economic History 41-4 (2004): 329-60.
41. On the difficulties faced by creditors when debtors defaulted, see Mann, Republic of Debtors.
42. Sombart, Werner, The Quintessence of Capitalism: A Study of the History and Psychology of the Modern Business Man, trans. Mortimer Epstein (London: T. Fischer Unwin, 1915 Google Scholar); Weber, Max, General Economic History, trans. Knight, Frank H. (New York: Greenberg, 1927 Google Scholar). Current perspectives on this issue are summarized in Edwards, John R., Dean, Graeme, and Clarke, Franck, “ Merchants’ Accounts, Performance Assessment and Decision Making in Mercantilist Britain,” Accounting, Organizations and Society 34-5 (2009): 551-70 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Derks, Hans, “ Religion, Capitalism and the Rise of Double-Entry Bookkeeping,” Accounting, Business and Financial History 18-2 (2008): 187-213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
43. Edwards, , Dean, , and Clarke, , “ Merchants’ Accounts.Google Scholar”
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47. According to Pierre Jeannin, the only significant French author who was comparable in the eighteenth century was Jacques Savary: see Jeannin, , Marchands d’Europe, 382. See also Lemarchand, Yannick, “ Jacques Savary et Mathieu de La Porte: deux classiques du Grand siècle,” in Les grands auteurs en comptabilité, ed. Colasse, Bernard (Colombelles: Éd. EMS, 2005), 39–54.Google Scholar
48. Porte, Mathieu de La, La science des négocians et teneurs de livre, ou Instruction générale pour tout ce qui se pratique dans les Comptoirs des Négocians, tant pour les affaires de banque, que pour les Marchandises, &chez les Financiers pour les Comptes (Rouen: P. Machuel et J. Racine, 1704; repr. 1782 Google Scholar), VIII-IX.
49. Mair, John, Book-Keeping Methodiz’d: Or, a Methodical Treatise of Merchant-Accompts, According to the Italian Form, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: W. Sands, A. Murray, and J. Cochran, 1749), 2 Google Scholar. This book was first published in 1736.
50. Ibid., 6.
51. Ibid.
52. Ibid., 20.
53. Ibid., 17.
54. Ibid., 19.
55. The Order for France was declared in 1673. For England, see Chambers, R. J. and Wolnizer, P. W., “ A True and Fair View of Position and Results: The Historical Background,” Accounting, Business and Financial History 1-2 (1991): 197–214.Google Scholar
56. Mair, Book-Keeping Methodiz’d, 17 and 36ff.
57. In reality, there were only seven merchandise accounts (General Merchandise; Spirits; Flours; Indigos, our acct.; Purchased Wines; Wines from Talance), since the three acounts “ Campeche Wood, our acct.,” “ Sugars” and “ Raw Sugars, our acct.” were inactive in 1755. Gradis’s two bankers were Chabbert& Banquet and Gaulard de Journy.
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This is a translation of: Crédit et filières marchandes au XVIIIe siècle