Rhode Island Union Bank (Newport, RI)

Episode Information

Episode UID
6376826890449
Episode Type
Suspension β†’ Reopening
Bank Type
state
Bank ID
637682689 hash
Start Date
May 12, 1837
Location
Newport, Rhode Island (41.490, -71.313)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
4de0010eb7405f0b

Response Measures

None

Events (1)

1. May 12, 1837 Suspension
Cause
Macro News
Cause Details
Suspended specie payments at same time as Providence and Boston banks during the 1837 panic
Newspaper Excerpt
suspended specie payments, simultaneously with all the other banks of Newport, on the 12th of May, 1837
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from The Rhode-Island Republican, September 13, 1837

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Article Text

The Rhode-Island Union Bank, of this town, of which CHRIST. G. CHAMPLIN, Esq., is President, and GEORGE C. MASON, Esq., is Cashier, was constituted a Deposite Bank of the United States, on the 13th of August, 1836, and suspended specie payments, simultaneously with all the other banks of Newport, on the 12th of May, 1837; being the next day after the banks of Providence and Boston had suspended specie payments. The balance standing, on its books, to the credit of the Treasurer of the United States, on the day of its suspension of specie payments, was $49,362,98; as appears by the return of the state of the bank, made on the following day, to the Treasury Department; the whole of which sum has since been paid. And all the drafts drawn, on the R. I. Union Bank, by the Secretary of the Treasury, previously as well as subsequently to its suspension of specie payments, having been paid, and its account with the Treasurer of the United States being closed, the Cashier of the bank has received a letter from the Hon. Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the Treasury, which has been handed to us for publication, and of which the following is a copy.


Article from Herald of the Times, September 14, 1837

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Article Text

It will be seen by the following statement, which we copy from the Rhode Island Republican of yesterday, that the Rhode Island Union Bank,o this place, has been conducted, as a Deposite Bank, with the strictest promptitude and honor, and the entire satisfaction of the Secretary of the Treasury-prov. ing, so far at least as the character of this Institution is concerned, the utter falsehood and absurdity. of the charges made in the late letters of the "revered chief," against the DepositΓ© Banks. "The Rhode Island Union Bank, of this town, of which CHRIST. G. CHAMPLIN. Esq., is President, and GEORGE C. Mason, Esq. is Cashier, was constituted a Deposite Bank of the United States, on the 13th of August, 1836, and suspended specie payments, simultaneously with all the other banks of Newport, on the 12th of May, 1837; being the next day after the banks of Providence and Boston had suspended specie payments. The balance standing, on its books, to the credit of the Treasurer of the United States, on the day of its suspension of specie payments, was $49,362.98; as appears by the return of the state of the bank, made on the following day, to the Treasury Department; the whole of which sum has since been paid. And all the drafts drawn, on the R. I. Union Bank, by the Secretary of the Treasury, previously as well as subsequently to its suspension of specie payments, having been paid, and its account with the Treasurer of the United States being closed, the Cashier of the Bank has received a letter from the Hon. Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the Treasury, which has been handed to us for publication, and of which the following is a copy.