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The General Building, also called the Tennessee General Building or the First Bank Building, is an office high rise located in downtown Knoxville, Tennessee.Constructed in 1925, the 14-story building is the only high rise designed by Charles I. Barber, [1] and has over the years housed the offices of dozens of banks, physicians, and various financial and architectural firms.
The bank was founded in 1834 as a branch of the Second State Bank of Indiana [2] and later became known as Terre Haute First National Bank. In 1983, First Financial Corporation was established as the bank's holding company, and in August 1984 it became Indiana's first multi-bank holding company.
FNB Corporation is a diversified financial services corporation based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and the holding company for its largest subsidiary, First National Bank. As of July 17, 2024, FNB has total assets of nearly $48 billion. [ 2 ]
In addition to being the second bank to fail in 2024, the failure of The First National Bank of Lindsay marks the seventh time a federally-insured bank has failed going back to 2021.
About 5,000 residents evacuated after the derailment of a freight train carrying flammable and toxic gas in eastern Tennessee were allowed home on Friday as investigators looked into the cause of ...
It is the former Tennessee headquarters of Regions Financial Corporation. [2] Regions moved in 2013 but still leases 250,000 square feet of space in the building. [ 3 ] Currently the Swiss Banking behemoth UBS has leased 138,000 square feet of the building in an effort to move back office jobs from southeast Nashville to downtown Nashville.
A plaque located below the clock next to the Chase Tower (originally First National Plaza). It was dedicated in 1979. It was dedicated in 1979. In 1969 the bank was reorganized as the primary subsidiary of the new First Chicago Corporation , a newly formed bank holding company. [ 7 ]
Samuel Hubbard's Mercantile Exchange Bank eventually became Florida National Bank [1] after Jacksonville's Great Fire of 1901.Millionaire Alfred I. du Pont acquired a major interest in the FNB shortly after moving to Jacksonville in the mid-1920s, but he was unable to gain control until the Great Depression struck in 1929. [2]