The phrase “Black Friday” now signals doorbuster discounts and crowded checkout lines, but its first appearance in American life described something closer to ruin. On September 24, 1869, a scheme to corner the U.S. gold market collapsed in a single morning, wiping out speculators, seizing up Wall Street and earning the day a name that would outlive everyone involved. The shopping holiday took up the label much later. The original Black Friday was a market crash, and it remains a defining case study in how manipulation, leverage and political access can converge, and how quickly they unravel.
A Scheme Built On Access To The President
The plot centered on two financiers, Jay Gould and James Fisk, who ran the Erie Railroad and had built reputations for stock fraud, bribery and ties to the Tammany Hall machine. Gould, nicknamed the “Mephistopheles of Wall Street,” devised a plan to buy up gold and force its price higher, then sell into the squeeze.
The obstacle was the federal government. In the years after the Civil War, the Treasury held large gold reserves and sold the metal regularly in exchange for greenbacks, the paper currency issued to fund the war. Routine Treasury sales could cap any price spike. To neutralize that risk, Gould and Fisk cultivated Abel Corbin, a speculator who had married President Ulysses S. Grant’s sister, using the connection to argue to Grant that the government should hold off on selling gold. For a time the lobbying worked, and the conspirators accumulated gold contracts far exceeding the supply circulating in New York.
The Day The Government Broke The Corner
By late September the price had been driven from roughly $130 earlier in the year toward $160, and Fisk reportedly predicted it would clear $200. The Gold Room near Wall Street drew crowds of spectators and reporters as indebted traders watched the market climb beyond their ability to cover their positions.
Grant moved to break the corner. After meeting with Treasury Secretary George Boutwell on the evening of September 23, he authorized the sale of $4 million in government gold, a substantial sum against a New York market estimated at only about $15 million in floating supply. When the Treasury order hit on September 24, the price collapsed from around $160 toward $130 within hours. The stock market fell more than 20 percent over the following week, and the sudden reversal left speculators who had borrowed to buy gold unable to repay their loans. Crowds gathered outside banks and brokerages, and authorities called in forces to keep order.
Who Paid And Who Walked Away
The damage fell unevenly, which is part of why the episode still resonates. Gould, tipped off that the government was preparing to act, quietly sold near the top and emerged with his fortune intact. Fisk, kept in the dark by his own partner, kept buying as the price peaked and later simply refused to honor the contracts he had signed, shielded by judges aligned with the Tweed ring. Neither man spent a night in jail.
The fallout reached Washington. A congressional investigation, led by future president James A. Garfield, examined the scandal in 1870 and cleared Grant of direct involvement, though the affair shadowed the rest of his presidency, and a Treasury official who had leaked information to Gould lost his post. The ordinary investors who had been ruined had no such protection. The men who engineered the panic kept their money, while those who followed them into the trade absorbed the losses.
Why The Original Black Friday Still Matters
For a markets audience, the 1869 panic reads less as antique scandal than as a template. It illustrates the mechanics of a corner, the danger of trading on borrowed money into a manufactured spike, and the decisive power of a large counterparty, in this case the federal government, to reverse a market in minutes. It also showed how privileged information, then flowing through a president’s brother-in-law and a tipped-off Treasury insider, lets the architects of a scheme exit before the people they lured.
Those lessons shaped what followed. The episode strengthened the argument for a central authority able to manage the money supply and stabilize markets, a role the Federal Reserve would later formalize. Modern rules on market manipulation, disclosure and settlement exist in part because of failures like this one. Yet the basic pattern has recurred: the Hunt brothers’ attempt to corner silver in 1980 ended in its own collapse, and leverage-driven squeezes still surface in commodities and equities.
The shopping-day Black Friday, by contrast, emerged much later and by a separate route, eventually attaching to the day after Thanksgiving. The financial version came first, and it carried a warning the retail one dropped: that a market pushed too far on borrowed conviction tends to fall the fastest, and that the last ones in are usually the ones left holding the loss.











