![]() The financial history of the Civil War in the West has been hitherto largely unresearched, and this dissertation explains certain social and economic outcomes that otherwise seem anomalous. The widespread distress caused by the land sales also intensified the state's notorious guerrilla insurgency, the worst such conflict ever fought on American soil. These land sales effectively ended the plantation system in Missouri and the leading role of Missouri's planters. After Confederate defeat, litigation arising from these loans resulted in sheriffs' sales of over a half million acres of farmland. In 18, Missouri's banks paid the equivalent of hundreds of millions of today's dollars in unsecured loans to the state's southern sympathizers, in return for sham collateral. The scheme's collapse eventually caused a revolution in land ownership and permanently altered the state's political economy. In 1861, a small group of pro-secession politicians, bankers, and wealthy men conspired to divert money illegally from Missouri's banks to arm and equip rebel military units then forming throughout the state. This dissertation explores a previously unknown Civil War financial conspiracy that backfired and caused a great deal of collateral damage among Missouri's pro-southern population. ![]()
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