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See also: company whose operations in connexion with the See also: building of the Union Pacific Railroad gave rise to the most serious See also: political See also: scandal in the See also: history of the See also: United States Congress
.
The company was originally chartered as the Pennsylvania Fiscal Agency in 1859
.
In See also: March 1864 a controlling
See also: interest in the stock was secured by See also: Thomas Durant,
See also: vice-president of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and the Pennsylvania legislature authorized the adoption of the name See also: Credit Mobilier of See also: America
.
Durant proposed to utilize it as a construction company, pay it an extravagant sum for the See also: work, and thus secure for the stock-holders of the Union Pacific, who now controlled the Credit Mobilier, the bonds loaned by the United States See also: government
.
The See also: net proceeds from the government and the first See also: mortgage bonds issued to the construction company were $50,863,172.05, slightly more than enough to pay the entire cost of construction
.
According to the report of the See also: Wilson Congressional Committee, the Credit Mobilier received in addition, in the
See also: form of stock, income bonds, and See also: land See also: grant bonds, $23,000,000—a profit of about 48%
.
The defenders of the company assert that several items of expense were not included in this report, and that the real net profit was considerably smaller, although they admit that it was still unusually large
.
The work extended over the years 1865-1867
.
During the winter of 1867-1868, when adverse legislation by Congress was feared, it is alleged that Oakes
See also: Ames (q.v.), a representative from Massachusetts and See also: principal See also: promoter of the Credit Mobilier, distributed a number of shares among congressmen and senators to influence their attitude
.
Shares were sold at See also: par when a few dividends repaid a purchaser at this price
.
Some in fact received dividends without any initial outlay at all
.
As the result of a lawsuit between Ames and H
.
S . McComb, some private letters were brought out in See also: September 1872 which gave publicity to the entire proceedings
.
The See also: House appointed two investigating committees, the Poland and the Wilson committees, and on the report of the former (1873) Ames and See also: James Brooks of New
See also: York were formally censured by the
House, the former for disposing of the stock and the latter for improperly using his official position to secure See also: part of it
.
Charges were also made against See also: Schuyler See also: Colfax, then vice-president but See also: Speaker of the House at the See also: time of the transaction, James A
.
See also: Garfield, See also: William D
.
Kelley (1814-188o),
See also: John A
.
See also: Logan, and several other members either of the House or of the Senate
.
The Senate later appointed a See also: special committee to investigate the charges against its members
.
This committee, on the 27th of See also: February 1873, recommended the expulsion from the Senate of James W
.
Patterson, of New Hampshire; but as his See also: term expired within five days no See also: action was taken
.
The evidence was exaggerated by the Democrats for See also: partisan purposes, but the investigation showed clearly that many of those accused were at least indiscreet if not dishonest
.
The company itself was merely a type of the construction companies by which it was the See also: custom to build See also: railways between r86o and about 1880
.
See J . B . See also: Crawford, The Credit Mobilier of America (See also: Boston, 1880), and R
.
Hazard, The Credit Mobilier of America (See also: Providence, 1881), both of which defend Ames; also the histories of the Union Pacific Railroad Company by J
.
P
.
See also: Davis (See also: Chicago, 1894) and H
.
K
.
See also: White (Chicago, 1895) ; and for a succinct and impartial account, James
See also: Ford Rhodes, History of the United States, vol. vii
.
(New York, 1906)
.
The Poland and Wilson reports are to be found in House of Representatives Reports, 42nd Congress, 3rd session, Nos
.
77 and 78, and the report of the Senate Committee in Senate Reports, 42nd Congress, 3rd session, No
.
519
.
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