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Corporate Insurers in Antebellum America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 November 2012

Abstract

Over the last fifteen years, scholars have documented the rapid development of the U.S. financial system between the ratification of the Constitution in 1788 and the Civil War. To date, most of this work has concentrated on commercial banks and securities markets while neglecting the roles early marine, fire, life, and other insurers played in American financial and economic development. This article seeks to redress the balance by presenting new data on the number and authorized capitalizations of specially incorporated insurers in all states prior to 1861, by analyzing agency problems within the insurance industry, and by describing the economic roles fulfilled by those hitherto underappreciated corporate financial intermediaries.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2012

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References

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Bottomry and respondentia loans were specialized maritime lending contracts with an insurance feature. They were especially lucrative because the lender could openly charge what would otherwise be usurious interest. “The contract of Bottomry,” a contemporary noted in his commonplace book, “is in the nature of a mortgage of a Ship, when the owner of it borrows money to enable him to carry on the Voyage & pledges the keel or bottom of the ship as a security for the repayment.” It was “understood that if the ship be lost, the lender also loses his whole Money but if it return in safety, then he shall receive back his principal, and also the premium or Interest stipulated to be paid, however it may exceed the usual or legal rate of Interest.” “Respondentia,” another contemporary observed, “differs from Bottomry only in this that whereas the latter is upon the Ship, the former is upon the Goods on board & in that case the borrower is personally bound—In other respects the same principles govern in both cases.” Dr. Henry Pleasants Jr. Collection, Israel Pleasants' Commonplace book, vol. 1; Memo, 15 Oct. 1801, Edward Burd Papers, AM 0364, HSP.

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59 New Castle Mutual Insurance Company Minute Books, 1828–1962, Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, Del.

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62 Where price collusion existed, insurers could agree with each other to set premiums punitively high to extirpate conditions or behaviors they believed to be unnecessary. Where premiums were set competitively, insurers could share some of the expected gains from the new safety technology with policyholders without eliminating all of the arbitrage profit because they understood better than the median policyholder the extent of the savings that new technologies would bring.

63 James W. Henning, “100 Years, So What?” FHS.

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78 Peter Randolph Beverely to Robert Beverely, 31 Aug. 1819, Beverely Family Papers, VHS.

79 Peter Randolph Beverely to Robert Beverely, 14, 28, Dec. 1819, Beverely Family Papers, VHS.

80 Peter Randolph Beverely to Robert Beverely, 31 Jan. 1820, Beverely Family Papers, VHS.

82 Peter Randolph Beverely to Robert Beverely, n.d., Beverely Family Papers, VHS.

83 Peter Randolph Beverely to Robert Beverely, 8 May 1820, 6 Mar. 1824, 8 May 1826, B everely Family Papers, VHS.