The Certificates of Indebtedness and Other Bank Data series is composed of memoranda and pamphlets sent from the Federal Reserve Banks to the banks in their districts with information regarding loan programs to facilitate the purchase of Liberty bonds and other administrative issues related to fundraising efforts for United States involvement in World War I. The series also includes statistics from banks regarding the number of bonds they had sold.
Arranged numerically by Federal Reserve District and then chronologically.
Series 2: Liberty Loans, 1917-1919
The Liberty Loans series documents the five issues of the loans: the four Liberty Loans and the Victory Loan. The majority of the records are related to publicity efforts of the Liberty Loan committees to promote the purchase of the bonds, including press releases of the publicity committee, newspaper clippings, posters and other advertisements, addresses, and a few photographs. Other records contain information about the bonds, such as circular letters to banks, forms, and subscription information. Also included are materials to encourage sellers of the bonds and information about the sales progress, such as newsletters, pamphlets, and memoranda.
Arranged chronologically by loan issue and then numerically by Federal Reserve District.
First Liberty Loan, 1917-1919
General, 1917-1918
Advertising Leaflets, 1917-1918
Forms for Application, 1917
Stickers, 1918
Women's Liberty Loan Committee, 1917
Advertising, 1917 May-June
Conversion, 1917 December
Forms, 1917 August 17-24
Partial Payment, 1917
Subscriptions, 1917 May-June
Accounting, 1917 May-June
Address and Meetings, 1917 May-June
Advertising, 1917 May-July
General, 1917 May-July
Towns and Committees, 1917 May-June
Towns and Committees, 1917 June 5-22
Committees, 1917 May-June
Conversion, 1917 June-October
Forms, 1917 May-September
News Clippings, 1917 June-July
Partial Payments, 1917 May-June
Speakers Bureau, undated
Subscriptions, 1917 March-June
Committees, undated
Forms, 1917
Partial Payment, 1917 May 25
Subscriptions, 1917 June 9-21
Descriptions, 1917 June 6
Forms, undated
Subscriptions, 1917 May-September
Committees, 1917 May 22-31
Conversion, 1917-1919
Descriptions, 1917 May 4-22
Partial Payment, 1917 May 10
Subscriptions, 1917 May-June
Advertising, undated
Conversion, 1917 November 28
Forms, undated
Partial Payments, 1917 May 24-26
Subscriptions, 1917 May-August
Advertising, 1917 May
Forms, 1917
Partial Payments, undated
Subscriptions, 1917 May-June
Advertising, 1917 May-June
Committees, 1917 May-June
Conversion, undated
Forms, 1917 June
Partial Payments, undated
Subscriptions, 1917 May-June
Second Liberty Loan, 1917-1919
General, 1917-1919
Addresses, 1917 September-October
Advertising, 1917
Descriptions, 1917 October-November
Forms, 1917 October-November
General Committees, 1917 October 12
Source Book, 1917
Stickers, 1919
Tax Exemption, 1917 August 28-29
Woman's Committee, 1918
Advertising, 1917 October 6-30
Allotments, 1917 October 8-10
Committees, 1917 October 5-30
Conversion, 1917-1919
Description, 1917
Forms, 1917
Partial Payment, 1917
Registered Bonds, 1918 January 25
Subscriptions, 1917 October 13-26
Taxation Features, 1917 October 23
Addresses, 1917-1918
Advertising, undated
Circular Letters, 1917 June-November
Committees, 1917 September-October
Conversion, 1918 August 26
Federation of Labor, undated
Forms, 1917
Partial Payment, 1917-1918
Speakers' Bureau, 1917
Subscriptions, 1917 October 17
Taxation Features, 1917-1918
Advertising, undated
Conversion, undated
Subscriptions, 1917 October 10-16
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1917 October-December
Committees, 1917 September-November
Conversion, 1917 October-November
Advertising, 1917 October 3-18
Committees, 1917 October 3-25
Conversion, 1918 May 9
Forms, 1917-1918
Subscriptions, 1917 October 1
Advertising, 1917 October
Committees, 1917 September-October
Conversion, 1918 August-September
Forms, 1917 October 1
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1917 October 4-19
Committees, 1917 October 12-30
Conversion, 1917 October 6
Subscriptions, 1917 October 1-26
Addresses, 1917 October 9
Advertising, 1917 July 30-October 13
Forms, 1917
Subscriptions, 1917-1918
Taxation Features, 1917 October 8-17
Third Liberty Loan, 1917-1919
General, 1918
Advertising, 1918 January 16-July 3
Descriptions, 1918 May 9
Forms, 1918 April-May
Subscriptions, 1918 September 9
Women's Committee, 1918
Advertising, 1918
Committees, 1918 April
Conversion, 1918 April 23-June 8
Description, 1918 April
Partial Payment, undated
Taxation Features, 1918 April 17
Addresses, 1917-1918
Advertising, 1917-1918
Cards, undated
Leaflets, 1918
Newspaper, 1918 March-April
Pamphlets, 1917-1918
Stickers and Novelties, undated
Miscellaneous, 1918
Committees, 1918 February 20-October 11
Conversion, undated
Description, 1918
Forms, 1918
News Clippings, 1918 April 11
Parades, 1918 April 26
Speakers' Bureau, 1918
Subscriptions, 1918 April
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1918 April
Banks, undated
Committees and Canvassing, undated
Conversion, 1918 March 5
Descriptions, 1918
Advertising, undated
Committees, 1918 March 18-June 6
Conversion, 1918 June 6-18
Descriptions, 1918 March 26-May 4
Subscriptions, 1918 April 11-June 11
Advertising, 1918 March 13-May 20
Conversion, 1918 April 5-19
Forms, 1918 April 6
Loss, 1918 August 23
Subscriptions, 1918 April 19-May 2
Advertising, 1918 August 24
Committees, 1918 April 29
Conversion, 1918-1919
Registered Bonds, 1918 September 25
Subscriptions, 1918 April 3-May 16
Advertising, undated
Conversion, 1918 April 12
Descriptions, 1918 April 5
Subscriptions, 1918 April 24-May 2
Committees, 1918 March 6-April 6
Conversion, 1918 April 9
Forms, 1918 April 26
Subscriptions, 1918 April 20-26
Advertising, 1918 April 3
Committees, 1918 February 7-April 25
Conversion, 1918 April 8
Descriptions, 1918 April 3-May 9
Partial Payment, 1918 April 9
Registered Bonds, 1918 April 29
Subscriptions, 1918 April 23
Fourth Liberty Loan, 1918-1919
General, 1918
Advertising, undated
Descriptions, 1918 October 14-24
Forms, 1918
Woman's Committee, undated
Boy Scouts, 1918 September 5
Conversion, 1918 November 15
Description, undated
Forms, 1918
Registered Bonds, 1918 October 15-18
Taxation Features, 1918 September 17
Miscellaneous, 1918 September 6
Addresses, 1918 September 24-27
Advertising, 1918
Leaflets, undated
Newspaper, 1918
Posters, 1918 August 27
Stickers and Novelties, undated
Descriptions, 1918 October 2-24
Forms, 1918
Photographs, undated
Registered Bonds, 1918 October 22
Subscriptions, 1918 September 28
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1918
Leaflets, 1918
Newspaper, 1918
Novelties, undated
Posters, undated
Subscriptions, 1918 September 18
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1918
Conversion, 1918-1919
Forms, 1918
Registered Bonds, 1918 September 5
Advertising, undated
Conversion, 1918 March 1-20
Partial Payment, 1918 November 4
Subscriptions, 1918-1919
Advertising, undated
Committees, 1918-1919
Descriptions, 1918 September 24
Registered Bonds, 1918 September 21
Conversion, 1918-1919
Forms, 1918 September 10-December 10
Lost Bonds, 1919 March 1
Victory Loan, 1918-1919
Advertising, undated
Descriptions, 1918 March 12-May 20
Forms, 1919
Tax Exemptions, 1919 April 23
Addresses, 1919 February 8
Advertising, dates not examined
Committees, 1919 March 19-May 1
Descriptions, 1919 March 19-April 15
Forms, 1919
Newspaper, undated
Partial Payment, undated
Speaker's Bureau, undated
Subscriptions, 1919 April 17
Taxation Features, undated
Advertising, 1919 February 4-May 2
Committees, 1919 March 17
Descriptions, 1919 March 11-April 19
Subscriptions, 1919 April 25-May 5
Taxation Features, 1919 April 22
Advertising, 1919 March 27-May 7
Committees, 1919 February 18-May 21
Conversion, 1919 March 26-April 1
Description, 1919 March 11-April 16
Forms, 1919
Subscriptions, 1919 March 29-April 7
Addresses, 1919 January 29
Advertising, undated
Committees, 1919 January 1-May 5
Descriptions, 1919 March 22
Forms, 1919 April 7
Committees, 1919 March 10-May 8
Descriptions, 1919 April 3-16
Forms, 1919
Partial Payments, 1919
Subscriptions, 1919 April 19-May 15
Advertising, undated
Committees, 1918-1919
Subscription, 1919 March 3-April 26
Advertising, undated
Committees, 1919 February 8-May 3
Forms, 1919 April 2
Subscriptions, 1919 April 22
Taxation Features, 1919 April 26
Advertising, 1919 March 28-May 10
Committees, 1919 March 22-April 28
Forms, 1919 April 1-25
Taxation Features, 1919 April 15-26
Series 3: Topical Files, 1912-1919
The Topical Files series is composed of a variety of materials related to World War I, especially fundraising and aid work. The majority of the materials are bulletins, newsletters, and other publications of fundraising and relief organizations describing their work, seeking donations, or promoting ways that individuals could aid the war effort. The series also includes newspaper clippings and articles about the war, especially related to finance, business and industry, and rationales for United States involvement in the war, as well as a small number of publications of government departments and information on fundraising efforts in allied countries.
Please see also Series 5: Oversized Materials for additional materials related to the American Red Cross and to atrocities committed by Germans.
General, 1918-1919
General Bulletin, 1917-1919
Legislative Bulletin, 1918-1919
Special Bulletin, 1918-1919
Dinner Invitations, 1912-1917
Federal Board for Vocational Education, Newsletter "The Vocational Summary", 1918 October-November
Finance, Economy and Taxation, 1914-1919
Food, 1917-1918
Foreign Loans, 1915-1921
General, 1915-1918
Australia, 1916 January
Canada, 1917-1921
France, 1916-1917
Germany, 1916-1917
Great Britain, 1916-1917
Italy, 1915-1916
German Atrocities, 1915-1917
Influenza, 1918 October 31
Newspaper Clippings(Regarding the War and the United States Business and Industry), 1914-1918
Pamphlets, 1916-1919
A-B, 1917-1919
C, 1916-1918
D-F, 1916-1919
G-H, 1917-1919
I-L, 1917-1918
M-R, 1916-1919
S-Z, 1916-1919
Private Organizations, 1914-1919
A-B, 1914-1918
Boy Scouts of America, 1917-1918
Boy Scouts of America, 1918-1919
D-H, 1917-1918
L-M, 1917-1918
National Security League, 1917-1918
N-U, 1914-1918
W, 1918-1919
Y.M.C.A., 1917-1918
Railroads, 1914-1917
General, 1915-1918
Registration, 1918 September 9-12
Signal Corps, 1918-1919
"Smileage News Herald", 1918
War Data, 1914-1919
General, 1916-1918
France, 1914-1917
Germany, 1916-1917
Great Britain, 1916-1918
United States, 1917-1919
United States, 1917-1919
War Trade Board, 1917-1919
General, 1918 May 4-November 28
Enemy Trading Lists, 1917-1919
Export Conservation Lists, 1918-1919
Journal, 1918-1919
Journal, 1918-1919
Rulings 12-716, 1918-1919
The War Savings Stamps series contains materials related to the sale of war savings stamps by the National War Savings Committee to raise funds for the war and to promote ways that people could aid the war effort through reduced consumption and an emphasis on thrift. The Liberty Loan Committee sometimes aided the National War Savings Committee in advertising and sales efforts, especially later in the war. The materials include advertisements on the importance of buying the stamps and information on how to start a war savings society, as well as newsletters on upcoming meetings and events, information for banks about issuing certificates, information for sellers of stamps, and statistics about sales progress.
Arranged alphabetically by state.
California, 1918-1919
Connecticut, 1918 August 20
Colorado, 1918 May 22-30
Delaware, undated
Florida, 1918 January 8-July 31
Georgia, 1918-1919
Illinois, 1918
Iowa, 1918 August 3
Kentucky, 1918 June 20
Maine, undated
Massachusetts, 1917-1918
Michigan, undated
Minnesota, 1918-1919
Missouri, 1918 March 23-September 14
Nebraska, 1918
New Hampshire, 1917-1918
New York, 1918-1919
New York, 1918-1919
North Carolina, undated
Ohio (Cleveland), 1918 May 6
Pennsylvania, 1918
Rhode Island, 1918
Texas, 1918-1919
Vermont, 1918
West Virginia, 1918
The Oversized Materials series contains newspaper advertisements, photograph albums, and scrapbooks related to Liberty and Victory Loan campaigns, as well as war savings stamps campaigns and a small amount of material related to the American Red Cross and atrocities committed by Germans.
Arranged by size, and then alphabetically by subject.
First Liberty Loan, 1917
First Federal Reserve District (Boston) Advertising, Posters, Newspapers, Novelties, undated
Victory Loan, dates not examined
Scrapbooks, 1917 September-1918
- Scope and Contents
The Liberty Loan Committee Records document the four Liberty Loan and the Victory Loan campaigns and include advertisements, committee memoranda, forms and descriptions of the loans, and subscription information. Additionally, the records include materials about other organizations active during World War I, especially those involved in fundraising and aid work, including the sale of war savings stamps by the National War Savings Committee.
Please see the series descriptions in the contents list for additional information about individual series.
- Arrangement
The Records have been arranged in five series:
- Collection Creator Biography:
Liberty Loan Committee
The Liberty Loan Committee coordinated campaigns to sell U.S. Treasury bonds to the American public from 1917 to 1919 in order to fund United States involvement in World War I. The Committee was managed by the Federal Reserve. Campaigns to promote the sale of the bonds were conducted by Federal Reserve District and emphasized the patriotic duty of citizens to aid the war effort through the purchase of the bonds.
United States entry into World War I necessitated a huge increase in government spending, both for the U.S. military and in aid for the Allies. One of the main fundraising efforts for the government were four Liberty Loans and a fifth Victory Loan, which sold U.S. Treasury bonds to the American public. The sale of the loans were managed by the Federal Reserve, which had been established only a few years earlier. The Federal Reserve Banks, and therefore the bond sale campaigns, were organized by twelve Federal Reserve Districts: Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco. The Federal Reserve was also responsible for managing the distribution of the funds in the nation's banks and withdrawing funds as they were needed by the government.
The Liberty Loan committees organized highly successful advertising campaigns based on patriotism to inspire the American public to buy the bonds, allowing the Treasury to sell them at a lower interest rate than the market would have set. The advertising campaigns took many forms. The Committee distributed posters and pamphlets, buttons and stickers, and many businesses decorated their store front windows with the ads. Prominent politicians, sports figures, and artists publicly bought bonds, inspiring their fans and supporters to do the same. "Four Minute Men" spoke after movies and plays about the importance of buying bonds. Parades were held featuring wounded veterans, and there were war-exhibit trains and aerial demonstrations by skilled fighter pilots that traveled across the country. More than 100,000 clergymen of many denominations delivered Liberty Loan sermons, and in May 1917 the National Women's Liberty Loan Committee was organized under the premise that women would provide a moral force in war finance. The Liberty Loan Committee became one of the largest committees in American history.
The First Liberty Loan of $2 billion was offered to the public in May and June 1917 and quickly oversubscribed by an estimated 4 million Americans. All four subsequent loans were also oversubscribed, in the first three by an increasing number of individuals. The Second Liberty Loan was offered in October 1917, the third was offered April to May 1918, the fourth, the largest of the loans, was offered September to October 1918, and the Victory Loan was offered from April to May 1919. All together, the Liberty Loans raised over 21 billion dollars for the United States war effort. Given the huge sums of money involved, the government needed to balance the movement of the money to avoid disturbing money markets, and the government also required the funds sooner than the Liberty Loan campaigns could provide. One of the most significant tools used to resolve this was through issuing certificates of indebtedness, which were also coordinated by the Federal Reserve. These certificates were short term government loans with low interest rates. Eighty-four series were issued up to June 1921, mostly in anticipation of liberty loans or receipts from taxes, spreading out the payment of funds to the government.
The Liberty Loan campaigns were successful in achieving the Treasury Department's object to market a huge increase in debt at a relatively low direct cost to the Treasury. The public bought most of the debt, and commercial banks bought approximately 20% of the total issue of the loans. The Loans also marked a significant shift in American credit, moving lending and borrowing into the social mainstream, where before it had been the province of skilled investors only.
- Acquisition:
The scrapbooks were transferred to the Mudd Manuscript Library in February 2008 from the General Collection in Firestone Library, Princeton University. No other provenance or acquisition information is available for this collection.
- Appraisal
No materials were separated from this collection during processing in 2008.
- Processing Information
This collection was processed by Adriane Hanson, Clelia Douyon and Grace Loro in 2008. Finding aid written by Adriane Hanson in August 2008.
- Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research use.
- Conditions Governing Use
Single copies may be made for research purposes. To cite or publish quotations that fall within Fair Use, as defined under U. S. Copyright Law, no permission is required. For instances beyond Fair Use, it is the responsibility of the researcher to determine whether any permissions related to copyright, privacy, publicity, or any other rights are necessary for their intended use of the Library's materials, and to obtain all required permissions from any existing rights holders, if they have not already done so. Princeton University Library's Special Collections does not charge any permission or use fees for the publication of images of materials from our collections, nor does it require researchers to obtain its permission for said use. The department does request that its collections be properly cited and images credited. More detailed information can be found on the Copyright, Credit and Citations Guidelines page on our website. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us through the Ask Us! form.
- Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
For preservation reasons, original analog and digital media may not be read or played back in the reading room. Users may visually inspect physical media but may not remove it from its enclosure. All analog audiovisual media must be digitized to preservation-quality standards prior to use. Audiovisual digitization requests are processed by an approved third-party vendor. Please note, the transfer time required can be as little as several weeks to as long as several months and there may be financial costs associated with the process. Requests should be directed through the Ask Us Form.
- Credit this material:
Liberty Loan Committee Records; Public Policy Papers, Department of Special Collections, Princeton University Library
- Permanent URL:
- http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/3j333227v
- Location:
-
Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library65 Olden StreetPrinceton, NJ 08540, USA
- Storage Note:
- Mudd Manuscript Library (scamudd): Box 1-54
- Bibliography
The following sources were consulted during the preparation of the organizational history: The ABC of the Federal Reserve System by Edwin W. Kemmerer. Princeton University Press: Princeton, New Jersey, 1936. "History Lesson: Loans for Nearly Everyone" by James Grant. Barron's National Business and Financial Weekly, June 6, 1992. A History of the Federal Reserve by Allan H. Meltzer. University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 2003. "Liberty Loan Triumph Seen Ten Years After" by Carson H. Hathaway. The New York Times, May 8, 1927.
- Subject Terms:
- Banks and banking -- United States
Bonds -- United States
Debts, Public -- United States
Finance, Public -- United States
Liberty bonds.
World War, 1914-1918 -- Finance -- United States
World War, 1914-1918 -- Propaganda -- United States - Genre Terms:
- Advertisements.
Clippings.
Memorandums. - Names:
- Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System U.S.
National War Savings Committee (U.S.)
Strong, Benjamin (1872-1928)