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First Financial Bank, N.A., was founded in 1863 as the First National Bank of Hamilton and was granted charter number 56 on August 10, 1863, under the National Bank Act. The bank opened its first branch in Hamilton, Ohio and started business on August 15, 1863. [7] In 1923, the bank's name was changed to First National Bank and Trust Company of ...
Alexander Hamilton was the first Secretary of the Treasury. In addition to sponsoring a national bank, Hamilton's other measures included an assumption of the state war debts by the U.S. government, establishment of a mint and imposition of a federal excise tax. The goals of Hamilton's measures were to: [2]
Hamilton's bank – the First Bank of the United States [29] - had a mixture of government and private ownership, and was subject to public oversight. The federal government appointed five of the twenty-five bank directors and held one-fifth (20%) of the Bank's stock.
First National Cincinnati Corporation made its first expansion move outside of Hamilton County by announcing in May 1975 the pending acquisition of the Yellow Springs, Ohio-based Miami Deposit Bank from Midwestern Fidelity Corporation for an undisclosed amount. [5] At the time of the announcement, First National Bank of Cincinnati had 24 offices.
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.
In 1791, former Morris aide and chief advocate for Northern mercantile interests, Alexander Hamilton, the Secretary of the Treasury, accepted a compromise with the Southern lawmakers to ensure the continuation of Morris's Bank project; in exchange for support by the South for a national bank, Hamilton agreed to ensure sufficient support to have the national or federal capitol moved from its ...
U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Hamilton, Alexander (December 13, 1790). "Final Version of the Second Report on the Further Provision Necessary for Establishing Public Credit (Report on a National Bank), 13 December 1790". Founders Online. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Madison, James (February 2, 1791).
The Bank of North America, First Bank of the United States, and Bank of New York were the first shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange. After the passage of the National Bank Act in 1862, the Bank of North America converted its business to operate under the new law. Its unique history presented a problem: the act required a national bank ...