|
History of the Treasury
Secretaries of the Treasury
< BACK
John Sherman
(1877 - 1881)
John Sherman (1823-1900) had enjoyed an illustrious career
in Congress (1855-1877) before President Rutherford B. Hayes appointed him
Secretary of the Treasury in 1877. As a member of the Senate Finance Committee
he had led the planning of Secretary Salmon P. Chase's
National Banking System. Later, as chairman of that committee, he oversaw
national policy on the postwar banking system, dominated by the debate over
the inflationary greenback. Champions of reconstruction and westward expansion
wanted to continue use of the plentiful greenback while conservative financiers
wanted to control inflation and use a currency backed by gold.
This matter grew complicated and became a sectional
issue when Westerners advocated a currency based on both gold and the
cheaper and more readily available Western silver. Although he was faced
with business failures and inflation, which magnified public opposition
to "hard money," Secretary Sherman advocated a gold standard and built
up the nation's gold reserves. He also recommended in 1880 that sweeping
changes be made in public service in order to retain valuable employees.
This recommendation resulted in the Civil Service Act of 1883. At the
end of Hayes's presidency, Sherman returned to the Senate where he continued
his fight against currency backed by silver.
About the Artist
Born in Boston, George P.A. Healy was one of America's
most prolific and talented portrait painter. He left a visual record of
the famous, rich, and powerful people who guided the young nation through
its' first century. Healy was educated in France under Baron Gros and painted
a series of portraits of American statesmen for King Louis Philippe of
France. When he returned to the United States in 1844, his reputation
as a portraitist was already well established, and he fulfilled many commissions
in Washington, D.C., in Chicago, and in the southern states. Healy painted
John Sherman from life for the Treasury Department in 1881.
Office of the Curator
All rights reserved. 2001
|
|