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The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance

by Ron Chernow (1990)

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The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance

By Ron Chernow

Overview

Winner of the 1990 National Book Award for Nonfiction, "The House of Morgan" is Ron Chernow's sweeping history of the Morgan banking dynasty spanning from the mid-nineteenth century through the late twentieth century. The book traces the evolution of J.P. Morgan & Co. and its successor institutions through three distinct eras of American banking, using the Morgan story as a lens through which to examine the development of modern finance itself.

Key Themes and Arguments

The Baronial Age (1838-1913)

Chernow portrays Junius Spencer Morgan and his son John Pierpont Morgan as architects of a financial system in which a handful of private bankers wielded extraordinary power. J.P. Morgan's role in reorganizing railroads, financing the creation of U.S. Steel, and single-handedly halting the Panic of 1907 illustrates an era when private bankers served as de facto central banks. Chernow captures the complex character of J.P. Morgan -- simultaneously a ruthless monopolist and a patron of art and culture.

The Diplomatic Age (1913-1948)

The creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913 began to diminish the Morgans' quasi-governmental role, but the bank remained enormously influential through two world wars. The book details the Morgan bank's controversial role as financial agent for the Allies in World War I, its involvement in the reparations and war debt negotiations of the 1920s, and the political backlash that culminated in the Pecora hearings and the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, which forced the separation of commercial and investment banking.

The Casino Age (1948-1990)

The final section traces the divergent paths of the Morgan descendants: Morgan Stanley as an investment bank, J.P. Morgan & Co. as a commercial bank chafing under Glass-Steagall restrictions, and Morgan Grenfell in London. Chernow shows how the culture of relationship banking was gradually displaced by transaction-oriented trading, leading to the modern era of financial markets.

Significance

Chernow's work remains the definitive history of Wall Street's most influential institution. Its analysis of the tension between concentrated financial power and democratic governance is as relevant today as when it was written.

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