<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>Chapter V</h2>
<p>The following October, having passed his eighteenth year by nearly six months,
and feeling sure that he would never want anything to do with the grain and
commission business as conducted by the Waterman Company, Cowperwood decided to
sever his relations with them and enter the employ of Tighe & Company,
bankers and brokers.</p>
<p>Cowperwood’s meeting with Tighe & Company had come about in the
ordinary pursuance of his duties as outside man for Waterman & Company.
From the first Mr. Tighe took a keen interest in this subtle young emissary.</p>
<p>“How’s business with you people?” he would ask, genially; or,
“Find that you’re getting many I.O.U.’s these days?”</p>
<p>Because of the unsettled condition of the country, the over-inflation of
securities, the slavery agitation, and so forth, there were prospects of hard
times. And Tighe—he could not have told you why—was convinced that
this young man was worth talking to in regard to all this. He was not really
old enough to know, and yet he did know.</p>
<p>“Oh, things are going pretty well with us, thank you, Mr. Tighe,”
Cowperwood would answer.</p>
<p>“I tell you,” he said to Cowperwood one morning, “this
slavery agitation, if it doesn’t stop, is going to cause trouble.”</p>
<p>A negro slave belonging to a visitor from Cuba had just been abducted and set
free, because the laws of Pennsylvania made freedom the right of any negro
brought into the state, even though in transit only to another portion of the
country, and there was great excitement because of it. Several persons had been
arrested, and the newspapers were discussing it roundly.</p>
<p>“I don’t think the South is going to stand for this thing.
It’s making trouble in our business, and it must be doing the same thing
for others. We’ll have secession here, sure as fate, one of these
days.” He talked with the vaguest suggestion of a brogue.</p>
<p>“It’s coming, I think,” said Cowperwood, quietly. “It
can’t be healed, in my judgment. The negro isn’t worth all this
excitement, but they’ll go on agitating for him—emotional people
always do this. They haven’t anything else to do. It’s hurting our
Southern trade.”</p>
<p>“I thought so. That’s what people tell me.”</p>
<p>He turned to a new customer as young Cowperwood went out, but again the boy
struck him as being inexpressibly sound and deep-thinking on financial matters.
“If that young fellow wanted a place, I’d give it to him,” he
thought.</p>
<p>Finally, one day he said to him: “How would you like to try your hand at
being a floor man for me in ’change? I need a young man here. One of my
clerks is leaving.”</p>
<p>“I’d like it,” replied Cowperwood, smiling and looking
intensely gratified. “I had thought of speaking to you myself some
time.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you’re ready and can make the change, the place is open.
Come any time you like.”</p>
<p>“I’ll have to give a reasonable notice at the other place,”
Cowperwood said, quietly. “Would you mind waiting a week or two?”</p>
<p>“Not at all. It isn’t as important as that. Come as soon as you can
straighten things out. I don’t want to inconvenience your
employers.”</p>
<p>It was only two weeks later that Frank took his departure from Waterman &
Company, interested and yet in no way flustered by his new prospects. And great
was the grief of Mr. George Waterman. As for Mr. Henry Waterman, he was
actually irritated by this defection.</p>
<p>“Why, I thought,” he exclaimed, vigorously, when informed by
Cowperwood of his decision, “that you liked the business. Is it a matter
of salary?”</p>
<p>“No, not at all, Mr. Waterman. It’s just that I want to get into
the straight-out brokerage business.”</p>
<p>“Well, that certainly is too bad. I’m sorry. I don’t want to
urge you against your own best interests. You know what you are doing. But
George and I had about agreed to offer you an interest in this thing after a
bit. Now you’re picking up and leaving. Why, damn it, man, there’s
good money in this business.”</p>
<p>“I know it,” smiled Cowperwood, “but I don’t like it. I
have other plans in view. I’ll never be a grain and commission
man.” Mr. Henry Waterman could scarcely understand why obvious success in
this field did not interest him. He feared the effect of his departure on the
business.</p>
<p>And once the change was made Cowperwood was convinced that this new work was
more suited to him in every way—as easy and more profitable, of course.
In the first place, the firm of Tighe & Co., unlike that of Waterman &
Co., was located in a handsome green-gray stone building at 66 South Third
Street, in what was then, and for a number of years afterward, the heart of the
financial district. Great institutions of national and international import and
repute were near at hand—Drexel & Co., Edward Clark & Co., the
Third National Bank, the First National Bank, the Stock Exchange, and similar
institutions. Almost a score of smaller banks and brokerage firms were also in
the vicinity. Edward Tighe, the head and brains of this concern, was a Boston
Irishman, the son of an immigrant who had flourished and done well in that
conservative city. He had come to Philadelphia to interest himself in the
speculative life there. “Sure, it’s a right good place for those of
us who are awake,” he told his friends, with a slight Irish accent, and
he considered himself very much awake. He was a medium-tall man, not very
stout, slightly and prematurely gray, and with a manner which was as lively and
good-natured as it was combative and self-reliant. His upper lip was ornamented
by a short, gray mustache.</p>
<p>“May heaven preserve me,” he said, not long after he came there,
“these Pennsylvanians never pay for anything they can issue bonds
for.” It was the period when Pennsylvania’s credit, and for that
matter Philadelphia’s, was very bad in spite of its great wealth.
“If there’s ever a war there’ll be battalions of
Pennsylvanians marching around offering notes for their meals. If I could just
live long enough I could get rich buyin’ up Pennsylvania notes and bonds.
I think they’ll pay some time; but, my God, they’re mortal slow!
I’ll be dead before the State government will ever catch up on the
interest they owe me now.”</p>
<p>It was true. The condition of the finances of the state and city was most
reprehensible. Both State and city were rich enough; but there were so many
schemes for looting the treasury in both instances that when any new work had
to be undertaken bonds were necessarily issued to raise the money. These bonds,
or warrants, as they were called, pledged interest at six per cent.; but when
the interest fell due, instead of paying it, the city or State treasurer, as
the case might be, stamped the same with the date of presentation, and the
warrant then bore interest for not only its original face value, but the amount
then due in interest. In other words, it was being slowly compounded. But this
did not help the man who wanted to raise money, for as security they could not
be hypothecated for more than seventy per cent. of their market value, and they
were not selling at par, but at ninety. A man might buy or accept them in
foreclosure, but he had a long wait. Also, in the final payment of most of them
favoritism ruled, for it was only when the treasurer knew that certain warrants
were in the hands of “a friend” that he would advertise that such
and such warrants—those particular ones that he knew about—would be
paid.</p>
<p>What was more, the money system of the United States was only then beginning
slowly to emerge from something approximating chaos to something more nearly
approaching order. The United States Bank, of which Nicholas Biddle was the
progenitor, had gone completely in 1841, and the United States Treasury with
its subtreasury system had come in 1846; but still there were many, many
wildcat banks, sufficient in number to make the average exchange-counter broker
a walking encyclopedia of solvent and insolvent institutions. Still, things
were slowly improving, for the telegraph had facilitated stock-market
quotations, not only between New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, but between a
local broker’s office in Philadelphia and his stock exchange. In other
words, the short private wire had been introduced. Communication was quicker
and freer, and daily grew better.</p>
<p>Railroads had been built to the South, East, North, and West. There was as yet
no stock-ticker and no telephone, and the clearing-house had only recently been
thought of in New York, and had not yet been introduced in Philadelphia.
Instead of a clearing-house service, messengers ran daily between banks and
brokerage firms, balancing accounts on pass-books, exchanging bills, and, once
a week, transferring the gold coin, which was the only thing that could be
accepted for balances due, since there was no stable national currency.
“On ’change,” when the gong struck announcing the close of
the day’s business, a company of young men, known as “settlement
clerks,” after a system borrowed from London, gathered in the center of
the room and compared or gathered the various trades of the day in a ring, thus
eliminating all those sales and resales between certain firms which naturally
canceled each other. They carried long account books, and called out the
transactions—“Delaware and Maryland sold to Beaumont and
Company,” “Delware and Maryland sold to Tighe and Company,”
and so on. This simplified the bookkeeping of the various firms, and made for
quicker and more stirring commercial transactions.</p>
<p>Seats “on ’change” sold for two thousand dollars each. The
members of the exchange had just passed rules limiting the trading to the hours
between ten and three (before this they had been any time between morning and
midnight), and had fixed the rates at which brokers could do business, in the
face of cut-throat schemes which had previously held. Severe penalties were
fixed for those who failed to obey. In other words, things were shaping up for
a great ’change business, and Edward Tighe felt, with other brokers, that
there was a great future ahead.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />