The 'Bonus Bill' of
1817 was a
bill introduced by
John Calhoun to provide
United States highways linking The East and South to The West using the earnings ''Bonus'' from the
Second Bank of the United States. It was a part of the
American System, which was proposed by
Henry Clay, a colleague of Calhoun. Calhoun argued for it using general welfare and post roads clauses. The bill was strongly opposed in
New England, because people there feared that providing the means for settlers to travel would drain their population and create competing states in the area obtained in the
Louisiana Purchase. Though he approved of the goals, President
James Madison vetoed the bill as
unconstitutional under
strict constructionist ideals.
Bonus Bill of 1930s
Veterans of the First World War in the United States had been promised a cash bonus payable in 1945. Beginning in 1931, veterans organized to get full payment immediately. Congressman
Wright Patman and Senator
Huey Long were the leading proponents. Presidents
Herbert Hoover and
Franklin Delano Roosevelt strongly opposed the payment. 45,000 veterans calling themselves the Bonus Expeditionary Force or
Bonus Army marched on Washington in 1932 and were driven out by the Army. Congress passed several bonus bills that were vetoed and finally overcame Roosevelt's veto in 1936 ('Adjusted Compensation Payment Act, 1936',
January 27,
1936, ch. 32, 49 Stat. 1099). The Treasury distributed $1.5 billion in cash to the 4 million veterans.
References
Books
★ Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen. ''The Bonus Army: An American Epic'' (2004).
★ Donald Lisio. ''The President and Protest: Hoover, MacArthur, and the Bonus Riot'' (1994).
External links
★
Text of Madison's Veto of the Bonus Bill
★
Primary Documents with Veto Messages by Hoover