It is not the government. It is not fully private. It was written in secret by the people it was supposed to regulate. And it has operated in that same gray zone ever since.
In November 1910, six of the most powerful men in American finance boarded a private railcar at a New Jersey station under assumed names. They told their servants they were going duck hunting. Their real destination: Jekyll Island, Georgia — a private resort owned by a club of millionaires including J.P. Morgan, William Rockefeller, and Joseph Pulitzer. Behind locked doors, over nine days, they wrote the legislation that would become the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. This is not a conspiracy theory. It is documented history, confirmed by the participants in their own memoirs.
Frank Vanderlip, president of National City Bank (now Citibank) and one of the Jekyll Island attendees, wrote in a 1935 article in the Saturday Evening Post: “I was as secretive — indeed, as furtive — as any conspirator. Discovery, we knew, simply must not happen, or else all our time and effort would be wasted. If it were to be exposed publicly that our particular group had got together and written a banking bill, that bill would have no chance whatever of passage by Congress.”
The Federal Reserve’s own FAQ states it is “not owned by anyone” and is “not a private, profit-making institution.” The St. Louis Fed’s public education materials describe it as “both public and private.” This deliberate ambiguity is not an accident — it is the design. The Fed was built to hold enormous power while being accountable to neither voters nor shareholders in any conventional sense.
Each of the 12 regional banks has a 9-member board of directors split into three classes. Class A directors are elected by member banks to represent banking interests. Class B directors are also elected by member banks but are supposed to represent commerce and agriculture. Class C directors — the only ones appointed by the Board of Governors — are supposed to represent the public. The people setting your cost of credit were substantially chosen by the institutions that profit from that credit.
The New York Fed is in a category of its own. It holds a permanent seat on the FOMC, manages the Fed’s open market operations (buying and selling securities that create or destroy money), and serves as the primary regulator for the largest Wall Street banks. The presidents of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Citibank have historically sat on the New York Fed’s board. When the 2008 financial crisis hit, it was the New York Fed — not Congress, not the Treasury — that made the first emergency calls and wrote the first checks.
| District | City | Notable Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Boston | Research hub; New England banking oversight |
| 2nd | New York | Permanent FOMC vote. Executes all open market operations. Wall Street regulator. Most powerful by far. |
| 3rd | Philadelphia | Mid-Atlantic states; consumer finance research |
| 4th | Cleveland | Industrial Midwest; community development focus |
| 5th | Richmond | Southeast; major banking presence |
| 6th | Atlanta | Deep South, Florida; payments innovation |
| 7th | Chicago | Midwest agriculture and manufacturing oversight |
| 8th | St. Louis | Major financial education and public outreach |
| 9th | Minneapolis | Upper Midwest; vocal on “too big to fail” risk |
| 10th | Kansas City | Great Plains; agriculture and energy economics |
| 11th | Dallas | Texas and Southwest; energy sector expertise |
| 12th | San Francisco | West Coast; tech economy and Pacific Rim trade |
The Federal Reserve’s “independence” has always been a political construct — real enough to frustrate presidents publicly, fragile enough to bend under sustained pressure. The Fed was designed to be insulated from day-to-day political interference while remaining structurally beholden to the banking system it regulates. The conflict playing out in 2025–2026 between Trump and Powell is not new. It is the latest episode in a century-long tension between executive power and banker autonomy.
The Federal Reserve Act says governors can only be removed “for cause.” But the phrase has never been legally defined. The Supreme Court in 2025–2026 was being asked to determine, for the first time, exactly what it means. The outcome will define how much power any president has over the institution that controls the price of money in the United States — and by extension, the price of everything else.
The Federal Reserve is the most powerful financial institution in the world, and most Americans couldn’t pick its chairman out of a lineup. That’s not an accident — it is a feature. The people who built the Fed understood that power exercised in obscurity faces less resistance. Here is what the Fed controls, and therefore what controls your life: