Financial History 134 (Summer 2020) | Page 33

In Law’s Debt By Howard Margot The 2018 tricentennial of New Orleans’s founding by the French was observed with all due fanfare in the United States and abroad. 2020 marks the 300th anniversary of a closely related event: the collapse of the Mississippi Bubble. People are not wont to celebrate epic failures, and history’s judgment of John Law, the Scottish gambler and economic theorist whose “System” created the Bubble, has not often been kind. Still, if there is any city that might consider honoring the architect of capitalism’s first great economic collapse, it is New Orleans. Law remains largely unknown in that city, where a Pantheon of official “founding fathers”—Louis XIV, Orléans, Pontchartrain, Bienville, even Crozat—enjoys toponymical immortality. But not so much as an alleyway bears the name of Monsieur Law. 1 France’s ruling class put its stamp on the place, happy to let Law’s Trade between Mexican Indians and the French at the Port of the Mississippi, between 1719 and 1721. This Mississippi Company propaganda portrayed New Orleans on what looks more like an Alpine lake—albeit one with palm trees—than the Mississippi River. name, cursed by myriad investors gone broke, be forgotten. One effort at not forgetting John Law is being made at The Historic New Orleans Collection, which for years has brought together manuscripts and printed items of the period that document Law’s career in France. These materials, some of which are shown here, help trace the development of his bank, his System, the Mississippi Bubble and their impact on the nascent Crescent City. Formally educated in Edinburgh, Law chose not to follow in his family’s banking business and moved to London. There, the tall, handsome, charming social climber leaped into the life of a dandy and gambler. When in 1694, barely aged 23, he killed a “romantic rival” in a duel, his life’s course was fixed. Convicted of murder and awaiting sentence, Law escaped prison and fled to Holland. “On the lam” in Europe over the next 10 years, he honed his card-playing and odds-making skills which, combined with returns on investments, netted him some six million livres tournois 2 . The year of Law’s duel, the Bank of England was founded through subscription, its royal charter granting a noteissuing monopoly in return for reducing Engraving of John Law by Leonardus Schenk, 1720. the crown’s crippling debt. Such quasinational banks had been proposed for many years; from abroad, Law followed these developments keenly. While in exile, he was introduced to Dutch and Italian banks far older and more sophisticated than any he had known at home: fueled by their countries’ overseas trading companies (whose shares were exchanged like specie on the market), some of these banks’ best customers were Europe’s debt-riddled governments. Law, amassing his millions gambling in Europe’s financial capitals, was circulating among (and snookering) precisely the sorts of The Historic New Orleans Collection, 1974.25.27.499 The Historic New Orleans Collection, The L. Kemper and Leila Moore Williams Founders Collection, 1952.3 www.MoAF.org | Summer 2020 | FINANCIAL HISTORY 31