1915 – DEATH OF NELSON ALDRICH, LEADER OF REPUBLICAN PARTY IN THE US SENATE
Aldrich was a key proponent of the Aldrich-Vreeland Act, a bill creating
 a National Monetary Commission in 1908, which studied the problem of 
monetary instability following the financial Panic of 1907. The 
Commission played a pivotal role in calling for “reform” of the US 
monetary system. The Act also established the “Aldrich-Vreeland system” 
which through the Comptroller of the Currency authorized some banks to 
issue new money. This helped the US deal with the financial crisis 
associated with WWI. The expanded money power of the government, 
however, was meant to be short-lived. The final volume of the 
Commission’s report called for a privately owned central bank, the 
“National Reserve Association,” in which “[c]ontrol was to be exercised 
completely by private bankers.” Passage of this Act was a stepping-stone
 to passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913.
 
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