I
Credit fulfils an important role in society as it allows people to use future revenues to purchase goods and services in the present. Banks play a major role in bringing together demand and supply on present-day credit markets, but prior to World War II they only served a small, elite clientele. This did not mean, though, that credit markets and financial intermediation for ordinary people were absent or underdeveloped. In the footsteps of Muldrew, for instance, it has now been well established that people could accomplish quite a lot themselves (Muldrew Reference Muldrew1998; Finn Reference Finn2003; Ogilvie, Kükpker and Maegraith Reference Ogilvie, Kükpker and Maegraith2012; Fontaine Reference Fontaine2014; Van Bochove and Kole Reference van Bochove and Kole2014). Inspired by the work of Hoffman, Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal, it has likewise become clear that alternative intermediaries were available when necessary (Hoffman, Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal Reference Hoffman, Postel-Vinay and Rosenthal2000; Levy Reference Levy2012; Van Bochove and Van Velzen Reference van Bochove and Van Velzen2014). However, obtaining a comprehensive overview of the size and functioning of the non-bank segments of the credit market has been a great challenge for historians. They have therefore often turned to notarial archives as these have frequently been preserved fairly completely, but processing notarial deeds is very labour intensive.Footnote 1 A further disadvantage of notarial deeds is that they only provide information about new loans granted to relatively well-to-do members of society. Probate inventories and insolvency records, on the other hand, do provide insight into the modest loans of ordinary people, but only haphazardly and not for the overall stock of loans (Willems Reference Willems2009; Van Bochove and Kole Reference van Bochove and Kole2014). It consequently remains unclear how large the non-bank credit markets for ordinary people actually were.
This article exploits an exogenous shock, a law introduced in the Netherlands in 1856 (the Discipline Act or Tuchtwet), which forced lenders to record all unredeemed loans they had provided to a particular group of borrowers: seafarers.Footnote 2 Seafarers were an important group around the globe: they were numerous;Footnote 3 they provided a vital contribution to trade and hence the economy; and as wages were only paid after a journey they were always in need of credit. The Discipline Act forbade lenders from collecting the wages of seafarers as redemption payments, as borrowers had until then allowed them to do. The Act also stipulated that all unredeemed loans had to be registered in a government ledger. As unregistered loans would become void, this incentivised lenders to record all unredeemed loans. This article uses the ledger from the city of Amsterdam, which at around this time was one of the three largest ports in Europe (Aerts Reference Aerts, Aerts and de Rooij2006, p. 28),Footnote 4 to provide a unique snapshot of the overall size and composition of a particular segment of the non-bank credit market.Footnote 5 Using address books, seafarers' original IOUs, newspaper advertisements, petitions, minutes of parliamentary meetings and the population register, this article also provides deeper insight into the functioning of this part of the credit market. The combination of all sources, moreover, makes it possible to estimate the total number of new loans provided annually during the period 1839–52.
These sources demonstrate that lenders provided 2,000 to 4,000 new loans each year between 1839 and 1852. In July 1856, at the time that the 443-page ledger was assembled, a total of 13,708 small and medium-sized loans were fully or partially unredeemed. Together they amounted to a sum of around 416,000 guilders, or almost 21,000 monthly wages of a sailor.Footnote 6 A substantial part of this was provided by a relatively small group of specialised shopkeepers and boarding-house keepers, the infamous crimps of the sailor-town literature. While their vital role as providers of credit has been recognised in prior literature, little is actually known about their credit operations (Hugill Reference Hugill1967; Bruijn Reference Bruijn, Broeze, Bruijn and Gaastra1977, Reference Bruijn1978; Fingard Reference Fingard1978, Reference Fingard, Ommer and Panting1980; Dixon Reference Dixon and Fisher1984; Muldrew Reference Muldrew1998; Finn Reference Finn2003; Gamber Reference Gamber2007; Van Rossum Reference van Rossum2008; Landheer Reference Landheer2013; Fontaine Reference Fontaine2014; Van Bochove Reference van Bochove2014; Milne Reference Milne2016; Morris and Cozens Reference Morris and Cozens2017; Hell Reference Hell2017). The literature that focused on the shopping landscape and the products that shopkeepers sold also paid little attention to the credit that shopkeepers provided in the process of selling their goods (Lesger Reference Lesger2013; Furnée and Lesger Reference Furnée and Lesger2014). Moreover, the literature that focused on consumer credit primarily looked at the innovations introduced during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries (such as instalment credit, check trading and the credit card) rather than on the use of shop credit. Those publications that did focus on shop credit did not have data with a sufficient amount of detail as compared to what is available for mid-nineteenth-century Amsterdam.Footnote 7 This article thus contributes not only to the literature on non-bank credit markets, but also to the literature on shopkeepers and boarding-house keepers and their role as a source of credit.
The article proceeds as follows. Section ii introduces the credit market for seafarers and the Discipline Act. It also discusses the ledger in which all unredeemed loans were registered. Section iii then analyses the unredeemed loans recorded in this ledger. Section iv zooms in on the lenders and Section v focuses on one individual, Cas Spijker: the most important lender found in the ledger. Section vi extrapolates from Spijker to the overall market and Section vii summarises and concludes.
II
During the two decades prior to 1856 some 1,900 to 2,300 ships departed from the port of Amsterdam each year.Footnote 8 Many of the seafarers who sailed on these ships depended on credit to pay for board and lodging, to purchase shipping gear, and to buy goods for personal and household use as well as for private trade. Already during the early modern period seafarers in the Netherlands had discovered that they could use their future wages for obtaining that credit. By allowing the party responsible for the monitoring of their wage payments to withhold specified sums of money and to use these to make redemption payments to their lenders (and to record those on the IOUs), seafarers managed to effectively secure their loans. A municipal official who was present when seafarers were mustered and discharged, the so-called water bailiff (waterschout), was responsible for performing this task. The archival sources demonstrate that this official supported a lively credit market for seafarers (Van Bochove Reference van Bochove2014; Van Bochove, Van Lottum and Mourits Reference van Bochove, Van Lottum and Mourits2016; Blakemore Reference Blakemore2017).Footnote 9
The Discipline Act changed all this, however, as it prohibited the water bailiff henceforth from serving the interests of borrowers and lenders. The Act was introduced by the Dutch parliament in 1856 to address an issue unrelated to credit markets: the increasing desertion of seafarers on Dutch ships, who were lured away in foreign ports by wages that were driven up by the gold rushes in California and Australia.Footnote 10 To give captains and shipping companies more instruments to combat desertion and counteract its costs, lawmakers deemed it necessary to abolish the common practice of making wage payments to lenders (article 21). By no longer making these redemption payments, direct wage payments to seafarers would increase and this would enable captains and shipping companies to recoup a larger part of the costs of hiring more expensive crews abroad. Although the draft Act was intended to cover all loans, major lenders from Amsterdam and Rotterdam – through the common practice of petitioning parliament – as well as members of parliament insisted that changing the law without transitional arrangements would be unreasonable. The Minister of Justice agreed with them and the final Act therefore exempted as yet unredeemed loans. This only applied, however, when lenders registered these loans before a set date in a ledger with the local water bailiff. This not only provided a good solution to the antedating of loans, but as unregistered loans became void it also ensured that lenders had good reason to use the ledger (Bik and Roos Reference Bik and Roos1995; Schuman Reference Schuman1995).Footnote 11
The Discipline Act prescribed that lenders had to present their unredeemed IOUs to the water bailiffs during the month of July 1856. In Amsterdam, the water bailiff's office was located in the Schreierstoren in the middle of one of the seafarers' quarters and it was open for registering IOUs six days per week. On one occasion, clerks even worked overtime on a Sunday; presumably because the company of H. Lond, one of the largest lenders in town, had delivered its 1,314 unredeemed IOUs the day before and they did not want to start the new week with such a backlog. For every single IOU the clerks recorded basic information: the date on which it was entered into the ledger, the names of lender and borrower, the date of the (last repayment on the) loan and the unredeemed amount. Thus, the ledger did not contain the original IOUs, did not include information on borrowers' nationalities and destinations, and did not make a distinction between loans on which repayments had and had not been made. The clerks typically entered lenders' IOUs consecutively during a single day, but there existed two exceptions to this. First, a few lenders appeared on more than one day, but the first of their appearances was numerically always most important by far. This suggests that lenders typically managed their accounts well, but that a few IOUs were sometimes misplaced (but recovered just in time to be registered in the ledger). Second, in a few instances the loans recorded by one lender were interspersed with some loans of another lender. This suggests that lenders either presented loans on behalf of others or that they had purchased such loans on the secondary market.Footnote 12
The wide variety of lenders and the large number of loans they presented for registration in the ledger confirm that the incentive to register was indeed strong. The ledger not only contains large lenders, but also many small and medium-sized ones who made the effort to register just one (n = 74) or only a handful of IOUs rather than write them off. The ledger likewise contains active lenders (i.e. 119 persons who presented IOUs ‘dated’ 1856) as well as inactive ones (i.e. 47 persons with IOUs ‘dated’ 1851 or earlier). The background of lenders, moreover, was diverse: the ledger not only included shopkeepers and boarding-house keepers (see below), but also three ship's captains, seven shipping companies, an unmarried woman and 31 widows.
The water bailiff's ledger is thus a rich source, but before proceeding to the analysis it needs to be considered whether lenders withheld credit and pushed for repayments once lawmakers started debating the Discipline Act. There are several reasons for believing this was not the case. Advertisements and reports in newspapers show, for instance, that lenders in Rotterdam and Amsterdam united and protested against the Discipline Act rather late. While parliamentary debate took off in May 1855, these lenders only gathered on 19 February and 3 March 1856 respectively and decided, in line with the centuries-old Dutch tradition of submitting petitions to lawmakers, to petition parliament. It is worth noting that shopkeepers and boarding-house keepers petitioned many months after the captains (December 1855 to February 1856) as well as the Chambers of Commerce (May and June 1855), who both primarily focused on the Act's articles unrelated to credit.Footnote 13 That lenders put the Discipline Act high on their agendas relatively late suggests that they had either been unaware of the ongoing parliamentary debates or that they expected lawmakers to develop a transitional arrangement after being petitioned with reasonable arguments. Regardless of which was the case, lending strategies would not or only very briefly have been adjusted because the Minister of Justice already sympathised with the petitioners in parliament on 15 April.Footnote 14 The 1856 ledger thus provides an encompassing overview of the credit market for seafarers as it existed when the Discipline Act became effective.Footnote 15
III
During the month of July 1856 a group of 252 lenders presented 13,708 IOUs, amounting to around 416,000 guilders, for registration in the water bailiff's ledger. IOUs that survived in the estates of deceased seafarers, which were settled by the water bailiff, show that these were handwritten contracts as well as pre-printed forms. Large lenders typically relied on forms that also pre-printed their names and smaller lenders used forms to which they added their names by hand.Footnote 16 At least one of the large lenders, Cas Spijker, also kept account books and provided receipts for the goods that seafarers purchased.Footnote 17 The IOU was pivotal, however, as it had to be presented to the water bailiff to collect wage payments and to record repayments on.
Four characteristics of the IOUs deserve mentioning. First, specifications of the goods and services that were received on credit are usually absent.Footnote 18 Though the occupation of the lender is sometimes mentioned on the IOU, it can also be retrieved from additional sources. This way some insight can still be obtained about the goods and services involved (see Section iv). Second, loan repayments were contingent on the ship's safe journey (behouden reis) and the interest rate was implicit. Lenders added a premium – 10, 15 and 20 per cent seem to have been common – to the value of the goods and services that they provided.Footnote 19 Third, new loans were not always recorded on a new IOU. While Cas Spijker did document his 1839 and 1841 loans to Jonas Aberg on two separate forms, it was not uncommon to add new loans on the reverse of an IOU after an initial repayment. In one such case, a seafarer's wife purchased additional goods on credit – including children's shoes (kinder schoenen) – on three occasions while her husband was at sea.Footnote 20 Fourth, full or partial repayments were recorded on the IOU and signed for by the lender and water bailiff. The latter also recorded these payments in his account books.Footnote 21
After a seafarer returned to port his wages were used to repay his lenders.Footnote 22 When he had earned enough he repaid his lenders in full, but in many cases lenders received a partial payment in proportion to the size of their loans. Unredeemed sums were deferred to a future journey and then took priority over the more recent loans a seafarer might have contracted for that new journey. When subsequent payments were not made or when again they did not suffice, loans eventually ended up in the water bailiff's ledger of July 1856. This is, for instance, why prominent lender J. W. van Recken registered a debt of 18.65 guilders that seafarer J. Butter had owed him since May 1840. The water bailiff's account books contain evidence of this: on 11 May 1840 Butter paid half of the 37.30 guilders that he owed Van Recken, leaving 18.65 guilders for later journeys. Additional payments never took place, however, and Van Recken duly registered the unredeemed amount in the 1856 ledger. Scribbles in this ledger sometimes refer to these past partial payments as ‘last payment’ (laast voldaan) and ‘remaining’ (rest).Footnote 23 The 1856 ledger thus contains a mix of such old, non-performing loans as well as many recent loans on which repayments had not yet been made.
Except for the heterogeneous names of borrowers, all information in the water bailiff's ledger was entered into a database.Footnote 24 While the unredeemed amount was recorded for all but one IOU, the date of the (last repayment on the) loan was included less meticulously. For a large majority of the IOUs (75.7 per cent) the date was complete, but a substantial share of the entries (20.5 per cent) did not contain a day. The phenomenon was driven largely by the IOUs registered by a few prominent lenders. In the case of W. P. Kohl (424 out of 425 IOUs) days were often not recorded on his IOUs that survived in the estates of deceased seafarers. However, H. Lond (1,312 out of 1,314 IOUs), J. W. van Recken (296 out of 302 IOUs) and W. G. Fiege (187 out of 187 IOUs) typically recorded full dates on their IOUs. In these cases the water bailiff's clerks were most likely responsible for not copying the day recorded on the IOUs.Footnote 25 For an additional 2.2 per cent of the IOUs the year was available, but not the day and month. Only 1.5 per cent of the IOUs could not be assigned to a specific year, but as the temporal analysis below focuses on the year of the (last repayment on the) loan, this fraction is negligible.
Figure 1 shows the distribution of the years of the (last repayment on the) loans registered in the water bailiff's ledger. The substantial number of recent years was driven by loans made in 1855 and 1856 on which no, or only partial, repayments had been made as well as by first and subsequent repayments on older loans. The distribution's relatively long and decreasing tail also shows, however, that repayments had not recently been made on many other older loans. That numerous (last repayments on) loans were made more than five years before the ledger was put together suggests that a fair share of the new loans provided each year to seafarers (see below) performed poorly. It is important to realise, however, that lenders undoubtedly anticipated on (partial) defaults when choosing their premiums and setting the price–quality ratio of their goods and services.
Figure 2 builds on Figure 1 by showing percentile distributions of the unredeemed amounts. A straightforward interpretation of the data is complicated, as the ledger combined loans on which no repayments had been made with loans that were partially repaid. The 50th and 95th percentiles of each year group are nevertheless helpful for shedding light on the credit market for seafarers. The 95th percentile, for instance, will mainly have consisted of large loans on which no repayments had been made. The fact that the corresponding values for old as well as recent loans did not typically exceed 90 guilders is illustrative. Some loans were of course larger, but usually not by much: only 66 of the unredeemed amounts were for 200 guilders or more and only two of them exceeded 600 guilders (i.e. one for 1,030 guilders and one for 1,800 guilders). These values suggest that while IOUs did not usually exceed 200 guilders, most of them will have been smaller than 90 guilders. The 50th percentile, in turn, gives an impression of the lower bound of the value of new IOUs because loans below the 50th percentile will have consisted disproportionately of partially repaid loans. The modest U-shaped pattern of the 50th percentile is consistent with this as it points to the presence of relatively many fully unredeemed loans among older (because fewer partially repaid loans would still be included) and more recent dates (because full and partial repayments had not yet been made). Figure 2 hence suggests that new seafarer loans most likely ranged between 20 and 90 guilders.Footnote 26 These modest loan sizes notwithstanding, the credit market for seafarers managed to reach a substantial overall size.
IV
As lenders brought their IOUs to the water bailiff to have them registered in the ledger, their loans were usually recorded in it on one day and in consecutive series. There were a few exceptions to this (see Section ii), so that in a number of instances lenders had to be linked in order to derive unique persons. However, because the lenders constituted a relatively confined group and because the type of credit was very specific, the risk of falsely linking lenders was small. After completing the linking procedure, 252 unique lenders remained. This number in itself suggests that a sizeable and diverse group of people commonly lent to seafarers and felt safe to do so.
To shed more light on the background of the most prominent lenders, information was collected from three additional sources. The IOUs available in the estates of deceased seafarers were considered first because these most likely belonged to the lenders actually being scrutinised. The local address book was consulted next as it was less specific than the IOUs, but still not too general. The address book included many shopkeepers and thus more likely referred to the lenders under review than more general sources would. Since the IOUs considered cover the period 1834–51, the 1850–1 edition of the address book was used. Finally, the 1851–3 population register was checked.Footnote 27 Through these sources information was obtained on name, address, occupation, goods and services provided on credit, minimum career period, date of birth and place of origin. Tables 1 and 2 present the results for the largest lenders (i.e. those with a 1 per cent or larger share in the overall unredeemed debt) as well as for groups of lenders who did not meet this criterion.Footnote 28
Source: Database register waterschout.
Notes to Table 2:
a The age of the lenders refers to their age on 30 July 1856, the last day on which loans were recorded in the water bailiff's ledger.
b Algemeen Handelsblad, 3 April 1855, shows that J. H. Timmerman was no longer alive when the ledger was compiled.
c Van Recken was born on 2 November 1794 in Phiesewarden near Blexen, which his marriage certificate (dated 7 October 1829) listed as his place of origin. He died in October 1843 and his wife continued the ‘renowned’ store until her death in January 1845. Van Recken's death is corroborated by the fact that on the reverse of his IOUs it is indicated that payments were subsequently received by his widow and heirs. See Auswanderer aus dem Großherzogtum Oldenburg (www.auswanderer-oldenburg.de/getperson.php?personID=I76758&tree=Auswanderer); WieWasWie (www.wiewaswie.nl/nl/detail/35433099); Algemeen Handelsblad, 2 November 1843, 17 January 1845, 5 February 1845 and 14 March 1845; ACA, Waterschout, inv. nos. 169–71. Van Recken's address was taken from the 1843–4 address book. See ACA, Adresboeken, inv. no. 7.
Source: Table 1; notes 26 and 27.
Table 1 shows that there existed two groups of lenders: a substantial group whose involvement was infrequent and modest as well as a smaller group whose involvement was frequent and substantial. Some of the latter were no longer alive and others had retired from lending, as witnessed by the share of (last repayments on) loans registered for 1855 and 1856, but others were still very active. The more important lenders not only registered 15.9 times as many unredeemed loans on average (12.1 times without Spijker and Lond), but their unredeemed loans were also 56 per cent larger on average. As a result, this group claimed 24.8 times larger sums of money on average (20.3 times without Spijker and Lond). As the largest lenders (9.9 per cent of the number of lenders) combined for 63.6 per cent and 73.2 per cent of the registered number and value of IOUs respectively, Tables 1 and 2 give a good insight into the most important players in this credit market.
From Table 2 it becomes clear that the largest lenders had the occupations familiar from the descriptions of sailor-towns: tailors, cobblers, shopkeepers, drink sellers and boarding-house keepers. They were also situated in those parts of town where one would expect to find them: the sailor-town in the eastern part of Amsterdam (i.e. Geldersche Kade, Nieuwmarkt, Zeedijk and Nieuwebrugsteeg) and the shopping district in the western part of Amsterdam (i.e. Nieuwendijk, Kolksteeg and N.Z. Armsteeg). Boarding-house keepers occupied a rather modest position among the top lenders. This suggests that they obtained (part of) the two months' wage advance that seafarers received when they mustered.
The tables suggest that in 1856 the largest lenders were typically males born in Amsterdam, who were in their forties or fifties and who had been active as lenders for several decades. The top 25 was completed by lenders with more varied backgrounds. The presence of lenders born elsewhere in the Netherlands as well as those born in Denmark and Germany stands out and is consistent with what is known about migration and the Amsterdam labour market. The occupations that involved providing credit to seafarers were apparently sufficiently open to outsiders to allow them to become substantial lenders quickly (Van Lottum Reference van Lottum2007; Hell Reference Hell2017). Besides lenders of non-Amsterdam origin, the presence of the widow of C. J. Caspers points to the involvement of another interesting group. While the top 25 counted only one widow, the ledger actually contained 30 others (see above). At least one of these, the widow of W. Louwes, used a form that also pre-printed her name. The fact that widows successfully continued to supply loans suggests that they had already been closely involved in the businesses of their husbands when they were still alive.Footnote 29
The size and diversity of the group of lenders raises the question of how they could be assured that seafarers would not run up debts across town beyond their capacity to repay. While the water bailiff's service of making loan repayments from seafarers' wages solved the moral hazard problem, it did not protect lenders against the risks of adverse selection. The fact that the credit market for seafarers had existed for so long, and that so many and diverse lenders participated in it, suggests that a mechanism existed to mitigate adverse selection. Did long-term relationships between lenders and borrowers perhaps play a role? Or did boarding-house keepers play an intermediary role by, for instance, lodging their compatriots or by only referring their guests to specific shopkeepers (Hell Reference Hell2017)? Current knowledge about how lenders conducted their businesses is unfortunately still insufficient to answers such questions. Section v therefore takes a first step by reconstructing the daily operations of one major lender for whom several sources were available in addition to the water bailiff's ledger.
V
Cas Spijker was the most important lender in the water bailiff's ledger: numerically he missed first place by just 21 loans, but financially he ranked first by far (see Table 1). Spijker was born in Amsterdam on 7 February 1806 and, according to the population registers of the period 1851–6, he lived at Geldersche Kade 48 – or 453 according to the new house numbering system introduced in 1853 – with his wife, six to eight children and one maid. The population register listed Spijker as a shopkeeper (winkelier) and based on his lending he must have been operating as such since at least 1833. It is unclear where his shop was located then, but the 1837–8 edition of a local address book situated it at Geldersche Kade 53 (where in the 1836–7 edition another shop was still located). In a January 1843 advertisement in Algemeen Handelsblad Spijker announced the relocation of his shop to Geldersche Kade 48. In this advertisement he also mentioned that he ran a business ‘in Tobacco, etc., etc., etc., etc.’. That he indeed sold more than just tobacco is demonstrated by an IOU from 1848 in which a ship's carpenter confirmed that he owed Spijker money for ship's carpenters' tools, tobacco, coffee, soap, cigars and other unspecified goods. Despite this wide variety of goods, the local address books included Spijker as ‘shopkeeper and merchant in tobacco’ (winkelier en koopman in tabak) or simply as ‘in tobacco’ (in tabak). Spijker thus seems to have operated a general store for seafarers with a focus on tobacco. Interestingly, Spijker was also responsible for organizing support for unfortunate neighbours as a commissioner of his neighbourhood.Footnote 30
Besides the ledger, the water bailiff's archive contains additional sources that shed light on Spijker's lending. As the water bailiff was responsible for settling the estates of deceased seafarers, his archive holds many of the original IOUs presented by lenders to claim (partial) repayments from the seafarers' estates. This collection contains, among others, 246 IOUs from Spijker.Footnote 31 These IOUs cover the period 1833–52 and were all pre-printed.Footnote 32 The initial form, in use between 1833 and 1838, was fairly simple. An analysis of the 1838 forms revealed that Spijker then used two types of form: one on which the rank of sailor was pre-printed and one on which the rank was left blank. The use of such dedicated forms suggests that lending must already have been substantial by this time. In the years that followed, Spijker used an even broader set of dedicated forms. Four forms existed to record combinations of rank (sailor or blank) and literacy (with a special clause in case of illiteracy).Footnote 33 At some stage a pre-printed field for seafarers' ages was incorporated into the form as well.
Spijker typically recorded the rank, destination and boarding-house keeper of his borrowers. The latter might point to relationships between boarding-house keepers and lenders as a solution to adverse selection problems. However, based solely on Spijker's IOUs, it cannot be established decisively whether these relationships were exclusive and indeed whether they protected lenders sufficiently. Rank and destination, which were recorded together on 243 of the 246 IOUs, are fortunately easier to interpret. Sailors dominated with 195 IOUs and were followed by carpenters (9), sailmakers (9), cooks (7), boatswains (6), boatswains' mates (6), junior sailors (6), medical doctors (2), ship's stewards (2), a cooper and a helmsman.Footnote 34 Except for three seafarers who sailed within Europe, these seafarers sailed on the long-distance routes to Batavia, capital of the Dutch East Indies (218), Surinam (11), the Guinea coast (9) and South America (2).Footnote 35 The most common combination of rank and destination was the sailor going to Batavia (176). It is not surprising that this particular group dominated the IOUs found in the estates settled by the water bailiff. Because of the long voyage they presumably relied on credit more frequently than seafarers on other routes. In addition to this, crews on this route were large and numbered many sailors. With long voyages and the prevalence of tropical diseases, the absolute number of deceased sailors on this route must have been higher than that on other routes. It is therefore logical that sailors on the route to Batavia dominated the estates of deceased seafarers settled by the water bailiff.
The number of annual observations for most rank-destination combinations is too small to generalise, but the number of sailors going to Batavia is large enough to determine how borrowing within this particular group developed over time. Figure 3 suggests that the median loan of these borrowers increased substantially, but continued to fall within the 20 to 90 guilders range of new loans as found above. As Spijker was born in 1806, the increase points to a process through which he – as a young shopkeeper – established how much he could lend to particular rank–destination combinations and an expansion of his (lending) business. The latter tallies well with the fact that he started recording serial numbers on each of his IOUs in 1839: an indication that his business administration had indeed grown in the years before and required more careful monitoring.
The 187 serial numbers available for the period 1839–52 can also be exploited to estimate the annual number of loans provided by Spijker. As the highest serial number often dated from November or December, simple extrapolations were used to derive the total number of annual loans. These extrapolations set the serial number on 1 January at zero and drew a straight line through the latest combination of date and serial number of each year to derive the number of loans on 31 December of that year.Footnote 36 Figure 3 shows that the number of loans provided annually by Spijker fell substantially during the 1840s and this helps explain why he was not among the signatories of the 1856 petition that Amsterdam lenders submitted to parliament (see above). As borrowers were primarily seafarers on Dutch ships and as the number of Dutch ships that annually departed from Amsterdam increased (see Section vi), Spijker may have decided autonomously to reduce his lending or he may have been pushed out of the market by competitors.
Whilst the available sources do not make it possible to expand on the latter, they do contain evidence of the former for they suggest that Spijker had gradually specialised in making cigars instead of selling them to seafarers on credit. This helps explain why he sought cigar makers for his factory through advertisements in 1859 and 1860 and why the address books started referring to him as ‘cigar factory owner’ (sigarenfabrikant) and ‘cigar factory’ (sigarenfabriek) rather than merely ‘in tobacco’.Footnote 37 Spijker's change of business suggests that the profitability of producing cigars was higher than running his shop and selling to seafarers on credit. As the literature does not typically characterise the profits of shopkeepers and small factory owners as excessive, this forces us to rethink the premiums charged to seafarers (see above). In the literature these premiums have long been interpreted as being exploitative and those who charged them were looked upon with suspicion. The case of Spijker suggests, however, that premiums were high not to take advantage of a group of vulnerable borrowers but rather to cover the high costs and risks of lending to seafarers. Such a revision is even required if Spijker was in fact pushed out of the market by his competitors, because that would point to competitive markets and more agency and a better bottom-line for seafarers.Footnote 38
VI
Besides shedding light on the business of one specific lender, the Spijker data also make it possible to gauge the overall size and volume of the market for new seafarer loans in Amsterdam during the period 1839–52. The annual numbers of loans in Figure 3 were hence related to Spijker's share in each year class of the loans that were still unredeemed in July 1856. This share dropped in an almost straight line from close to 38 per cent in 1839 to just over 14 per cent in 1844 and then gradually declined further to just under 10 per cent in 1852. As Spijker's share in unredeemed loans must have correlated with his share in newly provided loans, each number of new loans provided by Spijker (as given in Figure 3) was divided by his corresponding share in unredeemed loans to estimate the total number of new loans provided to seafarers by all lenders. To use 1839 as an example, 60 of the 159 (last repayments on) loans registered in the water bailiff's ledger belonged to Spijker, giving him a share of 37.7 per cent for this particular year. As Figure 3 set the number of new loans provided by Spijker in 1839 at 747, the number of new loans provided by all lenders was estimated at 1,980.
The results are presented in Figure 4 and suggest that the non-bank credit market raised 2,000 to 4,000 new loans for seafarers in Amsterdam each year. The reliability of the estimation procedure is verified by two pieces of information: first, the fact that the estimates tally well with the order of magnitude documented for the number of (last repayments on) loans in 1855 (full year) and 1856 (incomplete year) in Figure 1; second, the fact that the increasing number of new loans closely matched the rising number of Dutch ships that departed from the Amsterdam port. The relationship between the two is logical: seafarers on foreign ships did not require credit since they enjoyed board and lodging on their ships while in Amsterdam, but seafarers on Dutch ships were discharged when they returned to Amsterdam and often depended on credit to bridge the period until their next departure. Collecting repayments from the water bailiff was only possible, moreover, when a ship returned to the Netherlands; something that was much more likely to occur with Dutch than with foreign ships.Footnote 39
With the size of a new loan ranging between 20 and 90 guilders (see above), the size of the credit market for seafarers ranged between 40,000 to 360,000 guilders per annum during the period considered here.Footnote 40 These were quite substantial sums, especially if one realises that the credit market for seafarers was just one niche in the non-bank credit market of a town like Amsterdam. It also raises the question of how such sums were raised by the lenders, especially since money was sometimes fixed for several years. Did they finance their loans themselves or did they rely on outside funding of suppliers or other lenders? The sources in the water bailiff's archive do not shed light on this issue, but it would be worthwhile exploring it in future research.
VII
Before the rise of banks, people organised credit themselves or with the help of alternative intermediaries. Due to a lack of encompassing sources, however, the size and functioning of these non-bank credit markets have been notoriously difficult to analyse systematically. Exceptional sources from the archive of Amsterdam's water bailiff allowed this article to overcome this problem. It could hence determine the size of one particular segment of the non-bank credit market: credit received by seafarers in the decades prior to July 1856. Seafarers relied on credit to obtain board and lodging, shipping gear and other goods. They secured loans by allowing the water bailiff to make redemption payments from their future wages. An example discussed in this article even showed that a seafarer's wife could obtain credit, while her husband was away, on the basis of his future wages.
Having access to their future wages enabled seafarers in Amsterdam to take out 2,000 to 4,000 new loans each year during the period 1839–52. These loans were relatively small and did not typically seem to have exceeded 90 guilders. Many of these loans were repaid in full, some were partially written off upon a seafarer's death and others were not, or only partially, repaid. These loans, together with similar loans made before 1839 and after 1852, were registered in the water bailiff's ledger in July 1856 in accordance with the Discipline Act. The ledger registered 13,708 IOUs presented by 252 lenders and representing about 416,000 guilders. The great number of new (1839–52) and (partially) unredeemed IOUs (1856), the substantial sums of money, the large and diverse group of lenders, and the wide use of standardised and pre-printed IOUs suggest that the market for seafarer credit was substantial and well-developed.
Although a core group of shopkeepers and boarding-house keepers dominated lending, lenders from all walks of life felt safe to enter the credit market for seafarers. The water bailiff contributed to this, but relationships between lenders and boarding-house keepers may also have played a role. Lenders protected themselves for sure by charging double-digit premiums, but this did not imply that profits were excessive. Premiums were relatively high because lenders had to recoup the costs and risks of lending. The example of Cas Spijker suggests that mastering the intricacies of the lending business involved learning: one had to develop an understanding of the sums that one could safely lend to each rank–route combination. The businesses of large lenders like Spijker were complex, based on formal contracts, involved careful recordkeeping and possibly required external funding. This new perspective on these key players in sailor-town suggests that much may be gained by no longer depicting this group negatively as crimps. Approaching them and their businesses more neutrally will undoubtedly improve our understanding of what they were actually doing in a practical and economic sense.
The new insights of this article also raise questions that go beyond the Dutch market for seafarer loans. Did municipal officials like the water bailiff help credit markets in other countries function more smoothly as well? And if the credit market for seafarers was already this big, how much credit did shopkeepers and alternative intermediaries raise in other segments of the non-bank credit market that involved ordinary people and their daily needs? Future research should try to further reconstruct that broad base of the non-bank credit pyramid.