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Manganese is a ghost town and former mining community in the U.S. state of Minnesota that was inhabited between 1912 and 1960. It was built in Crow Wing County on the Cuyuna Iron Range in sections 23 and 28 of Wolford Township , about 2 miles (3 km) north of Trommald, Minnesota .
1902 bank building—founded, like the Clements State Bank Building, by businessmen from Springfield, Minnesota—representing the commercial investment of outsiders in a string of towns platted on a new railroad line. [20] 14: Minneapolis and St. Louis Railroad Depot: Minneapolis and St. Louis Railroad Depot: August 11, 1980 : Off Main St.
1926 - C.H. Klein acquires controlling share of The State Bank of Young America in Young America, MN and The State Bank of Cologne in Cologne, MN; 1927 - C.H. Klein opens Security National Bank in Montevideo, MN; 1931 - C.H. Klein and C.P. Klein opens Klein National Bank of Madison in Madison, MN; 1977 - The First National Bank of Waconia opens ...
In May 2015, the bank acquired Central Bancshares of Golden Valley, Minnesota for $134 million in cash and stock. [6] In 2017, the bank opened its first branch in Denver, Colorado. [7] In June 2018, Barry S. Ray was hired as the Chief Financial Officer. In November 2022, Charles N. Reeves was hired as the Chief Executive Officer.
Bank buildings in Minnesota (1 C, 1 P) U. U.S. Bancorp (1 C, 21 P) Pages in category "Banks based in Minnesota" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 ...
Bell Bank is a privately owned bank headquartered in Fargo, North Dakota, [1] with assets of $13 billion. [2] Bell Bank, which employs more than 1,900 people, [3] has 27 full-service banking locations in North Dakota, Minnesota and Arizona, [4] and mortgage locations in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Kansas, Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri, New Mexico, North Dakota, Tennessee and Wisconsin. [5]
Midwest Federal Savings and Loan was an American bank headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota that starting in the mid-1960s and collapsed in 1989. Its headquarters were located at 801 Nicollet Mall in what would later be called McGladrey Plaza. Midwest Federal was in business for ninety-nine years until its failure in 1989.
In July 2014, the organization – then named Spire Federal Credit Union – was voted to change from a federally-chartered into a state-chartered financial institution, and was renamed Spire Credit Union. In 2014, Greater Minnesota Credit Union (GMCU) merged with Spire, adding six branches in the greater Minnesota area. [5]