e/Black Friday (1869)

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has glosseng: Black Friday, September 24, 1869, also known as the Fisk/Gould scandal, was a financial panic in the United States caused by two speculators’ efforts to corner the gold market on the New York Gold Exchange. It was one of several scandals that rocked the presidency of Ulysses S. Grant. During the reconstruction era after American Civil War, the United States government issued a large amount of money that was backed by nothing but credit. After the war ended, people commonly believed that the U.S. Government would buy back the “greenbacks” with gold. In 1869, a group of speculators, headed by James Fisk and Jay Gould, sought to profit off this by cornering the gold market. Gould and Fisk first recruited Grant’s brother-in-law, a financier named Abel Corbin. They used Corbin to get close to Grant in social situations, where they would argue against government sale of gold, and Corbin would support their arguments. Corbin convinced Grant to appoint General Daniel Butterfield as assistant Treasurer of the United States. Butterfield agreed to tip the men off when the government intended to sell gold.
lexicalizationeng: Black Friday
instance ofc/Economic disasters in the United States
Meaning
Russian
lexicalizationrus: Черная Пятница
lexicalizationrus: Чёрная Пятница
Chinese
has glosszho: 黑色星期五(1869年),是指1869年9月24日星期五,在美國金融市場發生的一場金融危機。這宗醜聞對當時的美國總統尤里西斯·格蘭特的管治威信構成頗大的衝擊。
lexicalizationzho: 黑色星期五
Media
media:imgBlack Friday 1869.jpg

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