And now we have come down to the memorable
summer and fall of 1857. No gathering clouds,
no far-distant, low-voiced thunder gave warning of
an approaching storm. The sky was clear, and the
sun of prosperity moving onward in his strength, when,
suddenly, from the West came a quick flash and an
ominous roll of thunder. Men paused, looked at
each other, and asked what it meant. Here and
there a note of warning was sounded; but, if heeded
by any, it came too late. There followed a brief
pause, in which people held their breaths. Then
came another flash, and another rattling peal.
Heavy clouds began to roll up from the horizon; and
soon the whole sky was dark. Pale face looked
into pale face, and tremulous voices asked as to what
was coming. Fear and consternation were in all
hearts. It was too late for any to seek refuge
or shelter. Ere the startled multitudes had stirred
from their first surprised position, the tempest came
down in its fury, sweeping, tornado-like, from West
to East, and then into one grand gyration circling
the whole horizon. Men lost courage, confidence,
and hope. They stood still while the storm beat
down, and the fearful work of destruction went on.
No commercial disaster like this had
ever before visited our country. Houses that
stood unmoved through many fierce convulsions went
down like brittle reeds, and old Corporations which
were thought to be as immovable as the hills tottered
and fell, crushing hundreds amid their gigantic ruins.
Among the first to yield was the greatly
extended house of Floyd, Lawson, Lee, & Co. The
news came up on the wires to S——,
with orders to stop the mills and discharge all hands.
This was the bursting of the tempest on our town.
Mr. Dewey had gone to New York on the first sign of
approaching trouble, and his return was looked for
anxiously by all with whom he was deeply interested
in business. But many days passed and none saw
him, or heard from him. Failing to receive any
communication, Squire Floyd, who had everything involved,
went down to New York. I saw him on the morning
of his return. He looked ten years older.
It was soon whispered about that the
failure of Floyd, Lawson, Lee, & Co. was a bad one.
Then came intimations that Mr. Dewey was not in New
York, and that his partners, when questioned about
him, gave very unsatisfactory replies.
“Have you any notes of the Clinton
Bank, Doctor?” said a friend whom I met in the
street. “Because, if you have, take my advice
and get rid of them as quickly as possible. A
run has commenced, and it’s my opinion that
the institution will not stand for forty-eight hours.”
It stood just forty-eight hours from
the date of this prophecy, and then closed its doors,
leaving our neighborhood poorer by the disaster over
two hundred thousand dollars. There was scarcely
a struggle in dying, for the institution had suffered
such an exhausting depletion that when its extremity
came it passed from existence without a throe.
A Receiver was immediately appointed, and the assets
examined. These consisted, mainly, of bills receivable
under discount, not probably worth now ten cents on
the dollar. Three-fourths of this paper was drawn
or endorsed by New York firms or individuals, most
of whom had already failed. The personal account
of Ralph Dewey showed him to be a debtor to the Bank
in the sum of nearly a hundred thousand dollars.
The President, Joshua Kling, had not been seen since
the evening of the day on which the doors of the Clinton
Bank were shut, never to be opened for business again.
His accounts were all in confusion. The Cashier,
who had succeeded him on his elevation to the Presidency
of the institution; was a mere creature in his hands;
and from his revelations it was plain that robbery
had been progressing for some time on a grand scale.
As soon as these disastrous facts
became known to the heaviest sufferers in S——,
the proper affidavits were made out, and requisitions
obtained for both Dewey and Kling, as defaulters and
fugitives from justice. The Sheriff of our county,
charged with the duty of arrest, proceeded forthwith
to New York, and, engaging the services of detectives
there, began the search for Dewey, who, it was believed,
had not left that city. He was discovered, in
a week, after having dexterously eluded pursuit, on
the eve of departure for England, disguised, and under
an assumed name. His next appearance in S——was
as a prisoner in the hands of our Sheriff, who lodged
him in jail. Very heavy bonds being required for
his appearance at court, there was not found among
us any one willing to take the risk, who was qualified
to become his surety. And so the wretched man
was compelled to lie in prison until the day of trial.
Immediately on his incarceration,
he sent for Mr. Wallingford, who visited him without
delay. He found him a shrinking, cowed, and frightened
culprit; not a man, conscious of rectitude, and therefore
firm in bearing, though in a false and dangerous position.
“This is a bad business, Mr.
Wallingford,” he said, on meeting the lawyer—“a
very bad business; and I have sent for you as a professional
gentleman of standing and ability, in order to have
a consultation in regard to my position—in
fact, to place myself wholly in your hands. I
must have the best counsel, and therefore take the
earliest opportunity to secure your valuable services.
Will you undertake my case?”
“That will depend, Mr. Dewey,”
was answered, “entirely upon how it stands.
If you are falsely accused, and can demonstrate to
me your innocence, I will defend you to the utmost
of my ability, battling your accusers to the last.
But if, on the contrary, you cannot show clean hands,
I am not the one to undertake your case.”
Dewey looked at Mr. Wallingford strangely.
He scarcely comprehended him.
“I may have committed mistakes;
all men are liable to error,” he replied.
“Mistake is one thing, Mr. Dewey,
and may be explained; fraud is another thing, and
cannot be explained to mean any thing else. What
I want you to understand, distinctly, is this:
If your connection with the Clinton Bank has been,
from the beginning, just and honorable, however much
it may now seem to be otherwise, I will undertake
your case, and conduct it, I care not through how great
difficulties, to a favorable issue. But if it
has not been—and you know how it stands—do
not commit your fate to me, for I will abandon you
the moment I discover that you have been guilty of
deliberate wrong to others.”
The countenance of Mr. Dewey fell,
and he seemed to shudder back into himself. For
some time he was silent.
“If there is a foregone conclusion
in your mind, that settles the matter,” he said,
at length, in a disappointed tone.
“All I ask is clear evidence,
Mr. Dewey. Foregone conclusions have nothing
to do with the matter,” replied Mr. Wallingford,
“If you know yourself to be innocent, you may
trust yourself in my hands; if not, I counsel you
to look beyond me to some other man.”
“All men are liable to do wrong,
Mr. Wallingford; and religion teaches that the door
of repentance is open to every one.”
“True, but the just punishment
of wrong is always needed for a salutary repentance.
The contrition that springs from fear of consequences,
is not genuine repentance. If you have done wrong,
you must take the penalty in some shape, and I am
not the man knowingly to stay the just progression
of either moral or civil law.”
“Will you accept a retaining
fee, even if not active in my case?” asked Mr.
Dewey.
“No,” was the emphatic answer.
A dark, despairing shadow fell over
the miserable man’s face, and he turned himself
away from the only being towards whom he had looked
with any hope in this great extremity of his life.
Mr. Wallingford retired with pity
in his heart. The spectacle was one of the most
painful he had ever witnessed. How was the mighty
fallen!—the proud brought low! As he
walked from the prison, the Psalmist’s striking
words passed through his mind—“I have
seen the wicked in great power, and spreading himself
like a green bay tree; yet he passed away, and lo,
he was not.”
When the day of trial came, Mr. Wallingford
appeared as counsel for the creditors of the Clinton
Bank, on the side of the prosecution. He did
not show any eagerness to gain his case against the
prisoner; but the facts were so strong, and all the
links in the chain of evidence so clear, that conviction
was inevitable. A series of frauds and robberies
was exposed, that filled the community with surprise
and indignation; and when the jury, after a brief
consultation, brought in a verdict of guilty, the expression
of delight was general. Detestation of the man’s
crimes took away all pity from the common sentiment
in regard to him. A sentence of five years’
expiation in the State prison closed the career of
Ralph Dewey in S-—, and all men said: “The
retribution is just.”
Squire Floyd lost everything, and
narrowly escaped the charge of complicity with Dewey.
Nothing but the fact of their known antagonism for
some two or three years, turned the public mind in
his favor, and enabled him to show that what appeared
collusion, was only, so far as he was concerned, fair
business operations. With the wreck of his fortune
he came very near making also a wreck of his good
name. Even as it was, there were some in S——who
thought the Squire had, in some things, gone far beyond
the rule of strict integrity.
Judge Bigelow, thanks to the timely
and resolute intervention of Mr. Wallingford, stood
far away from the crashing wrecks, when the storm
swept down in fearful devastation. It raged around,
but did not touch him; for he was safely sheltered,
and beyond its reach.