Keen On America

A Willing Philadelphia Story: Richard Vague on the Wealthiest & Most Invisible American Founding Father

Mar 21, 2026
Richard Vague, financial historian and author, explores Thomas Willing — Philadelphia’s richest banker who financed the Revolution he opposed. Short episodes cover Willing’s smuggling of gunpowder, his bank’s role funding the war, his influence on Hamilton and the Constitution, ties to slave trading, and how elite finance shaped early American politics.
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INSIGHT

Leverage Research Led To Willing

  • The book began as an inquiry into banking leverage ratios and led to uncovering Willing's central role in early U.S. banking.
  • Studying the origin of leverage forced Vague to trace decisions back to America's first bank and its president.
INSIGHT

Willing Secretly Saved The Revolution

  • Thomas Willing financed the Revolution despite opposing independence early on.
  • Willing and Robert Morris used smuggling and bank credit to supply gunpowder, arms, and finance when Continental currency collapsed in 1780.
ANECDOTE

Hamilton's First Deal Was With Willing

  • Hamilton and Willing were neighbors and collaborators in Philadelphia.
  • Hamilton's first commercial transaction at 16 was with Willing, who later mentored him while Willing led the Bank of the United States.
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