A History of Money and Banking in the United States Before the Twentieth Century

A podcast by Murray N. Rothbard

65 Episodes

  1. 49. Epilogue: Return of the Morgans

    Published: 2/24/2011
  2. 48. Marriner S. Eccles and the Banking Act of 1935

    Published: 2/24/2011
  3. 43. The Hoover Fed: Harrison and Young

    Published: 2/24/2011
  4. 40. Conclusion to Part II

    Published: 2/24/2011
  5. 42. The Early Fed, 1914-1928: The Morgan Years

    Published: 2/24/2011
  6. 47. Banking and Financial Legislation: 1933-1935

    Published: 2/24/2011
  7. 33. The Beginnings of the Reform Movement: The Indianapolis Monetary Convention

    Published: 2/24/2011
  8. 36. Conant, Monetary Imperialism, and the Gold-Exchange Standard

    Published: 2/24/2011
  9. 38. The Panic of 1907 and Mobilization for a Central Bank

    Published: 2/24/2011
  10. 39. The Final Phase: Coping with the Democratic Ascendancy

    Published: 2/24/2011
  11. 41. From Hoover to Roosevelt: The Federal Reserve and the Financial Elites

    Published: 2/24/2011
  12. 44. The Advent of Eugene Meyer, Jr.

    Published: 2/24/2011
  13. 45. Meyer in the Hoover Administration

    Published: 2/24/2011
  14. 46. The New Deal: Going off Gold

    Published: 2/24/2011
  15. 31. The Progressive Movement

    Published: 2/24/2011
  16. 32. Unhappiness with the National Banking System

    Published: 2/24/2011
  17. 34. The Gold Standard Act of 1900 and After

    Published: 2/24/2011
  18. 35. Charles A. Conant, Surplus Capital, and Economic Imperialism

    Published: 2/24/2011
  19. 37. Jacob Schiff Ignites the Drive for a Central Bank

    Published: 2/24/2011
  20. 50. The Gold-Exchange Standard in the Interwar Years

    Published: 2/24/2011

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Murray Rothbard, in a complete revision of the standard account, traces inflations, banking panics, and money meltdowns from the Colonial Period through the mid-twentieth century to show how the American government's systematic war on sound money is the hidden force behind nearly all major economic calamities in American history. This audio edition is narrated by Matthew Menzinskis.