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Commerce was founded by Francis Reid Long with $10,000 in capital in 1865, just as communities were rebuilding during post-Civil War Reconstruction. Originally known as the Kansas City Savings Association, it was acquired in 1881 by Dr. William Stone Woods and renamed the National Bank of Commerce, claiming at the time to be the largest bank west of Chicago. [5]
The Kansas City Police Department (KCPD) is the principal law enforcement agency serving Kansas City, Missouri. Jackson County 16th Circuit Court Circuit Court Judge Jen Phillips swore in Stacey Graves as the 46th chief of police of the KCPD on December 15, 2022. [ 2 ]
CoreFirst Bank & Trust opened December 3, 1959 as Commerce State Bank. Commerce State Bank received trust power and in 1976 changed its name to Commerce Bank & Trust. [3] Commerce opened its first in-store branches (grocery store) in 1988. In 1997, the first location outside of Topeka opened in Emporia, Kansas. Commerce reached $1 billion in ...
Commerce Bank & Trust of Topeka, former name of CoreFirst Bank & Trust, Topeka, Kansas; Commerce National Bank, Columbus, Ohio; Global Commerce Bank, Doraville, Georgia; Texas Commerce Bank, acquired by Chemical Banking Corporation of New York in 1987; Virginia Commerce Bank, acquired by United Bank of West Virginia in 2014
Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves attends a memorial service for Drexel Mack, a civil process officer with Jackson County courts who was shot and killed during an eviction, at the Jackson ...
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John took Harry, then a teenager, to the local Democratic functions in Kansas City where Kemper was also in attendance. Kemper arranged for Truman to be a page at the 1900 Democratic National Convention in Kansas City. As a young man Harry would go to work in the National Bank of Commerce, 1903–1905, where Kemper was a director.
Commerce Trust Building is a 15-story tower built for Kansas City Missouri's biggest bank Commerce Bancshares in 1907, [3] and was Kansas City's second skyscraper following the New York Life building. It has a facade of red granite and white terra cotta tiles and was Missouri's tallest building when it opened.