Why I Like Gold and Silver - A Story from the Civil War - Jared Dillian

February 18, 2016
Let me tell you again why I like gold and silver.
I was in Charleston not long ago for my mom’s birthday. We did a horse and carriage ride, a historical tour, around the city. I always thought those things were cheesy, but as it turns out, the horse and carriage tours are very highly regulated, the tour guides have to pass a series of knowledge exams and then take continuing education. I kid you not! Ours had been doing it for six years, and was good.
So as we went by the Calhoun Mansion on Meeting Street, the tour guide fella starts telling us about the house. It was built by a guy named George Walton Williams, who was the richest guy in town. This was back during the Civil War. It’s a 24,000 square foot mansion with 14 foot ceilings. It’s just monstrous. It cost $200,000 to build-- back in the 1860s! So how did Mr. George Walton Williams make his money?
Well, as you probably know, Charleston is a port city, and during the War, the Union Navy blockaded the port and then bombarded the city for weeks and months, but during this time, there were these guys who were “blockade runners” who would sneak by the navy ships, bringing necessary supplies to the city, which was under siege. Blockade runners made a lot of money--five grand a trip sometimes--but you know who made even more money? George Walton Williams did. He financed the blockade runners.
Williams was not the only one doing this, but he was the most successful, why? Because he insisted on being paid only in gold and silver. If you know your Civil War history you also know that there was a Confederate currency, and I don’t know if Mr. Williams had a particular view on the Confederate dollar, but at the conclusion of the war, the Confederate dollar collapsed, and everyone was left holding the bag--except for George Walton Williams. Williams became like a J.P. Morgan character in the city--Charleston was the center of Southern finance, and Williams singlehandedly bailed out the Broad Street banks. He also built a pretty cool house.
So these anti-gold idiots are just that, idiots, or else they have the memory of a goldfish, because currencies come and currencies go, as sure as night follows day. It is the natural order of things. And as you can see, it’s not about trading gold to get rich or getting long gold or buying one by two call spreads or getting fancy, it literally is about protecting yourself in the end. It’s not like Williams got rich. He just stayed rich. Everyone else got poor.
After getting shelled for months on end, Charleston evacuated. They evacuated. They did not surrender. It is an important distinction around here.
Don’t miss a golden opportunity.
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