Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 July 2014
The collapse of the ambitious and experimental Ayr Bank (Douglas, Heron & Co.) was the central episode of the 1772–3 British credit crisis and served as a direct influence on Adam Smith's monetary analysis in the Wealth of Nations. This article identifies the issuance of redeemable annuities in response to the bank's stop of payments in June 1772 and the distressed nature of its asset liquidations afterwards as the main reasons behind the size of its losses. It furthermore uses primary manuscript evidence to reconstruct and extend the existing narrative of this famous episode, from the planning stages in 1773 while the bank was still fighting for its survival, to the retirement of its banknotes by the Edinburgh public banks in 1773–4, the legal and political manoeuvring behind the redemption of the annuities by Act of Parliament in 1774, and the over 40 years of asset unwinding that followed.
Bank of England Archives, London
Minutes of the Court of Directors: G4
Banking Department General Ledger: ADM
Barclays Group Archives, Manchester: BGA
Coutts Bank Archives, London: COU
Lloyds Group Archives, Edinburgh:
Aberdeen Bank papers: ABC
Bank of Scotland papers (Secretary's letterbook, Bond Book): BOS
Melville papers: MEL
The National Archives, Kew, London: Bankruptcy Commission Files, B3
The National Archives of Scotland, Edinburgh
Carruthers papers: GD207
Buccleuch Papers: GD224
Ogilivie-Grant Papers: GD248
Home-Robertson papers: GD267
Court of Session papers: CS237, CS181, CS44
The Royal Bank of Scotland Archives, Edinburgh
Glyn Mills papers: GM
Bristol Bank papers: MCB
Prescott Grote papers: PRE
Royal Bank of Scotland papers: RB