This is a manually remastered annotated edition of Fowler's classic saga. Conspiracies and Corners, Greenbacks and Gold, War and Peace, Bubbles and Bear Raids, Riches and Ruin, Margin Calls and Crashes, the Great Panic and the Great Depression Wall Street ran red with the blood of suicides and murder. A lucky few survived and thrived, and of those, a tiny fraction had lasting influence.Enjoy the thrilling true story with this annotated remastered Kindle edition of William Worthington Fowler's classic chronicle of the New York traded markets from 1860-1880, a period that spanned the Civil War, the post war bubble, worthless paper money, the Black Friday Gold Panic of 1869, the Great Panic of 1873, and the consequent first and worst seven year Great Depression. He witnessed how U.S. government paper money replaced specie leading to bubbles, panics, and crashes.Fowler met the most influential financiers of the day including Jay Gould, James "Diamond Jim" Fisk, Jr., Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jacob Little, Daniel Drew, Leonard Jerome, Addison Jerome, David Groesbeck, and Henry Keep. Their fortunes rose and fell on margin, carry, and derivatives including puts, calls, and futures. They risked everything speculating in equities and a wide range of commodities including gold, silver, cotton, oil, and more. Fowler’s tale entertains as he exposes the great corners, trading rings, conspiracies, bear twists, manipulations, and frauds. The foreword and annotations by Janet Tavakoli draw parallels between the Panic of 1873 and Great Depression of 1873-1880 with the financial crisis of 2008 and the ongoing Great Recession. Edited to correct errors and inconsistencies in the original edition. Includes annotations with additional biographical and background material."A gem of a book. Fowler's writing on trading activity is probably the best of any period. As Tavakoli writes in the foreword, the traders' classic Reminiscences of a Stock Operator pales in comparison." San Francisco Review of Books"Its descriptions of the tremendous games of speculation, the rise and fall of fortune, the reckless regard and desperate adventure which shocked and disturbed the world are exceedingly graphic and spirited." John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892), Fireside Poet and author of Snow-Bound"Nearly one hundred and fifty newspapers...all of the leading journals of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Chicago,...most flattering notices, read everywhere with avidity." Orange Judd (Publisher)