As an attempt at stabilizing the British economy, the government, led by Prime Minister
Robert Peel, passed the
Bank Charter Act 1844. This act fixed a maximum quantity of
Bank of England banknotes that could be in circulation at any one time, and guaranteed that definite reserve funds of gold and silver would be held in reserve to back up the money in circulation. Furthermore, the act required that the supply of money in circulation could be increased only when gold or silver reserves were proportionately increased after the
fiduciary allowance. The Bank of England and the British currency were therefore at risk from drains of gold leaving the country or being withdrawn internally, which reduced the backing for its banknotes. In 1847, heavy drains occurred, and the act was 'suspended' when the
Bank of England was presented with a letter from the government indemnifying the Bank for a breach of the act. The crisis in the money market ended almost immediately, without any breach of the Act. The panic of 1847 cleared away a vast number of business houses and commercial firms, documented at the time by
David Morier Evans, a correspondent for
The Times. == Progress of the crises ==