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First Bank System, Inc. (CNB remained unchanged until after merger with U.S. Bancorp) U.S. Bancorp: 1993 Banc One Corp. Valley National Bank of Arizona: Banc One Corp. JPMorgan Chase: 1993 Bank of Boston Corp. South Shore Bank, Mechanics Bank, First Agricultural Bank of Boston Corp. Bank of America: 1993 First Union Corporation: Dominion Bank
BOK Financial Corporation — pronounced as letters, "B-O-K" — is a financial services holding company headquartered in Tulsa, Oklahoma.Offering a full complement of retail and commercial banking products and services across the American Midwest and Southwest, the company is one of the 50 largest financial services firms in the U.S., [2] and the largest in Oklahoma.
First Bank of Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri: Great American Bank, DeSoto, Kansas: Commercial bank [34] September 4, 2009: InBank, Oak Forest, Illinois: MB Financial Bank NA, Chicago, Illinois: Commercial bank [34] September 4, 2009: Platinum Community Bank, Rolling Meadows, Illinois: closed; FDIC payout of insured deposits Commercial bank ...
After the merger, Equity owned and operated 67 locations across Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, and was projected to have around $5.0 billion in assets. [34] Two months later, Equity Bank bought three bank locations and their assets in St. Joseph, Mo., from Security Bank of Kansas City. [35]
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.
The city of Stillwater last year put a project on hold as it sought advice about whether the law applied to a potential loan the city was interested in getting from Bank of America.
Commerce was founded by Francis Reid Long with $10,000 in capital in 1865, just as communities were rebuilding during 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. [3]
The bank received its state charter on February 16, 1847, and offered 3 percent interest on deposits and invested the first $1,000 in a city bond that paid 6 percent. Its early history was marked by deadly citywide disasters in 1849 of a cholera outbreak that killed more than 1,000 and the Great St. Louis Fire of 1849 of May 17–18 that ...