“The story goes, a shopkeeper from Philadelphia travels to Baltimore, and they have a bank note for the bank of Pennsylvania,” said Jonathan Burton, director of development at the Independence Historical Trust, which raised funds for the museum. “They take it down to Baltimore, where they’re getting 80 cents on the dollar, because they don’t know the solvency of the Bank of Pennsylvania.”
The First Bank was Hamilton’s solution: A national bank with branches in multiple states would be a stable source of credit, a means of financing war debt and a way to displace foreign coins with national coinage.
Jefferson fought against it, arguing the Constitution didn’t offer authority for the novel federal institution. But Hamilton prevailed, and the bank in 1791 became one of the first major projects of George Washington’s presidency.“Our first central bank was the centerpiece of Alexander Hamilton’s financial system. … It was(his) fond hope that the bank would expand the money supply, extend credit to government andbusiness, collect revenues, make debt payments, handle foreign exchange, and provide a depository forgovernment fund,” wrote historian Ron Chernow.