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Primary Source Sets
The Panic of 1837
Excerpts from The Pocket Cambist, a guide for exchanging currency between countries, 1836.

Excerpts from The Pocket Cambist, a guide for exchanging currency between countries, 1836.

A cambist is a person whose job is exchanging money or a manual with guidance for exchanging money of different national currencies. In the 1830s, the US was part of a vast system of international trade and financial exchange dominated by England as the global financial power.

Citation Information
Vere, Charles, excerpts from “The pocket cambist, containing tables of monies of the principal cities in all parts of the world ... with tables of exchange,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/a3572421fd7561cc0d242d17b6e4ec30.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of University of Michigan via HathiTrust.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
  • the author's purpose
  • historical context
  • audience

Item 5 of 12 in the Primary Source Set The Panic of 1837

Previous ItemNext Item
A letter from the cashier at Mohawk Bank in Schenectady, New York to William Hayes about a deposit to his account, 1834.
A five-dollar bill issued by Kirtland Safety Society Bank of Kirtland, Ohio, 1837.
A revolving table tool designed to calculate interest rates, 1839.
An excerpt from Sylvester's Bank Note and Exchange Manual, 1833
Excerpts from The Pocket Cambist, a guide for exchanging currency between countries, 1836.
A political cartoon representing negative public opinion and political opposition to the agenda of President Andrew Jackson, circa 1832.
A political cartoon issued in July 1837 that depicts a New York City street scene demonstrating the impact of the Panic of 1837.
An excerpt from an 1834 pamphlet with arguments from New York businessmen about effects of removing federal money from the national bank.
An 1841 token alluding to “hard times,” or the Panic of 1837, and targeting the policies of President Van Buren.
A receipt for the sale of twenty four bales of cotton sold on behalf of Aaron Spell, March 25, 1836.
A receipt for the sale of thirty bales of cotton sold on behalf of Aaron Spell, February 9, 1840.
A court document recording the settlement of a debt owed by Lancaster McNay through the transfer of five enslaved women and girls, 1839.

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