14368. Peoples Savings Bank (New York, NY)

Bank Information

Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
savings bank
Start Date
November 14, 1883
Location
New York, New York (40.714, -74.006)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini
Short Digest
69ac7e578b86ef2d

Response Measures

None

Description

Articles indicate People's/Peoples Savings Bank was in receivership and treated as a defunct savings bank with unclaimed balances. No newspaper text describes a depositor run or temporary suspension; the institution appears to have failed and been liquidated with receivers and final dividends. OCR variants of the name (People's vs Peoples) were normalized to the given bank name.

Events (2)

1. November 14, 1883 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Justice Donohue yesterday ordered Marcus T. Hun, receiver of the Central Park and the People's Savings Bank, to turn over $2,006 92 on the final dividend of the moneys received by him from the assets of the former institution.
Source
newspapers
2. July 22, 1890 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
People's Savings Bank listed among defunct savings banks with unclaimed balances held by the State Superintendent of Banking; depositors must apply to claim balances.
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from New-York Tribune, November 14, 1883

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Article Text

CIVIL NOTES. The jury in the Supreme Court, before Justice Barrett, yesterday awarded $1,400 as damages to Edward M. Lee, ex-Governor of Wyoming Territory, in his suit for $5,000 damages in consequence of being thrown from his carriage by driving against a pile of sand at Broadway and Twenty-seventhi-st., on November 7, 1875. Justice Donohue yesterday ordered Marcus T. Hun, receiver of the Central Park and the People's Savings Bank, to turn over $2,006 92 on the final dividend of the moneys received by him from the assets of the former institution. He also ordered the referee to distribute $10,528 10 on the final dividend from $23,421 37 received by him. Henry N. Smith has obtained a temporary injunction in the Superior Court, restraining the United States Illuminating Company from erecting its poles in Forty-third-st., near Fifth-ave. Mr. Smith states that he purposes building an apartment house in the street and regards the poles as a nuisance. The argument for a permanent injunction will be made on Friday. Ashbel H. Barney has also obtained a temporary injunction from Justice Donohuc, in the Supreme Court Chambers, restraining the company from crecting a pole at Park-ave. and Thirty-eighth-st. Judge Ingraham, in the Superior Court, Special Term, yesterday denied a writ of mandaious in behalf of William H. Field to compel the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to produce its books of transfer stocks 80 that the relator could obtain the names and addresses of the holders of the preferred stock of the company. In denying the writ, Judge Ingraham holds that the courts of this State have no authority to grant the remedy sought, by a special proceeding, or in any other way than by active; and that, even if the court had this power, the relator 18 not entitled to it, under the circumstances, it appearing that the stock owned by Mr. Field was transferred to him long after the resolution of the Board of Directors authorizing the execution of the mortgage to aid in the opposition to which the inspection was sought. John McCall came from Ireland to this country in 1823, and in 1846 he bought two lots at Fifth-ave. and Eighty-seventh-st. for $270. He lived there until he died, in 1847. leaving a widow, who occupied the premises until 1860, when Central Park was opened. On the theory that Mr. McCall left no heirs, and that the lots had escheated to the State, the Legislature in 1860 passed an act releasing the State's rights to the widow, but reserving whatever rights any heirs might have. A. B. Tappan, a well-known lawyer of this city, took a conveyance of the lots from the widow subsequent to 1860, and from him the property passed to William N. Thompson, a western Bonanza King," who paid $30,000 for it. Alexander McCall, a brother of John, came to this country in 1825, it is asserted, and his heirs have brought suit before Judge Truax in the Superior Court to recover the property, alleging that their rights are not barred by the act of 1860. The property, under a clear title, is estimated at $100,000.


Article from New-York Tribune, July 24, 1890

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Article Text

# MONEY TO BE CALLED FOR DUE TO DEPOSITORS IN DEFUNCT SAVINGS BANKS. A LIST OF THOSE FOR WHOM SUMS EXCEEDING FIVE DOLLARS EACH ARE HELD BY THE STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF BANKING. Albany, July 22. Among the functions imposed upon him by law, the Superintendent of the State Banking Department is obliged to become a sort of second receiver of the assets of defunct savings banks. Between 1871 and 1879 some thirty savings banks doing business in this State failed or went into liquida- tion. The greater number of these were adjacent to or in New-York City. The usual legal course was pursued in the case of these insolvent corporations; receivers were appointed and the affairs of each bank closed up by due process of law, with the exception of a few where a final settlement could not be made because of undetermined litigation. The total amount of deposits involved was something like $15,000,000, of which about two-thirds has been paid to depositors in receivers' dividends. Of course in this as in every other business transaction of the kind, some of the receivers were particularly good appointments, and fortunately for depositors they managed the estate of the defunct bank with prudence and realized all that it was possible to realize out of the assets committed to their care. Others, whether from lack of moral force or financial skill, did not meet with the same successful career. Hence the dividends paid by these receivers ranged all the way from 15 to 87 per centum. William F. Russell, receiver of the Sixpenny Savings Bank, and Willis S. Paine, receiver of the Bond Street Savings Bank, declared the largest dividends. Under the provisions of the banking law, before a receiver of a savings bank can be discharged he must make a transcript or statement from the books of the bank of the names of all depositors and creditors who have not claimed the balances due them, and of the sums due to each respectively, and file such statement or transcript in the State Banking Department, at the same time transferring all such unclaimed moneys to the Bank Superintendent. The Superintendent is given power to receive and receipt for these moneys and to deposit them in some solvent savings bank in this State to the credit of the Superintendent, in trust, and he may pay over any balances to the owner thereof upon being furnished with satisfactory evidence of his right to the amount. The interest received from the deposits is applied toward defraying the expenses of caring for such moneys and the necessary clerical work incident thereto. Under this provision of the banking law there has been deposited with the State Superintendent of Bank- ing, in trust, $108,612 93, and he has paid on claims presented $32,658 92, leaving still in his hands upward of $75,000 in unclaimed balances which is due to the depositors in the following banks: Mechanics and Traders' Savings Institution, Sixpenny Savings Bank. Bond Street Savings Bank. German Savings of the Town of Morrisania. People's Savings Bank. Mutual Benefit Savings Bank Abingdon Square Savings Bank German Uptown Savings Bank. Central Park Savings Bank. Clinton Savings Bank. Security Savings Bank. New-Amsterdam Savings Bank. Morrisania Savings Bank. Oriental Savings Bank. Union Savings Bank of Saratoga Spa. Trades Savings Bank. Park Savings Bank of Brooklyn. Clairmont Savings Bank. To the rightful owners or their heirs of these balances still in the superintendent's hands Mr. Preston stands ready to pay at any time upon applica- tion. Claimants have but to forward their pass-books to the superintendent at his office here with an order inclosed to pay the balance still due, or in the event of the loss of the pass-book to furnish an affidavit of that fact, containing sufficient facts to establish identity and rightful ownership. Herewith are given the names of persons entitled to balances amounting to $5 and upward. Besides the amount due the depositors whose names are here given, there are between 2,000 and 3,000 depositors whose balances are under $5, and which in the aggregate make many thousands of dollars, the amount of them in the Sixpenny Bank making $20,000. # MECHANICS AND TRADERS' SAVINGS INSTITUTION John Austin, Allemannen Lodge No. 3, A. Allison, John Anthoine, Henry Abraham, Deboriah A. Allison, Edward W. Arthur, William Anderson, James Arnold, Louis Astrich, Polly Adolfe, Ellen J. Blevin. Frederick Bohde, Samuel Burrows, Patrick I. Brennan. Bridget Best, John T. Bucke, C. A. Bartholomew, Maria Barnes, Albrecht Benhert, James and E. Biringer. Cornelia Brown, James Bennett, Leslie D. Boyd, Margaret Block, Clodoner Boucher, Isaac Butterfield. John Carlin, Cremieux Benevolent Society, leze- kiah Couch, Ellen Couderes, Coachmakers' Union No. 1. Annie T. Carbrey, Thomas F. Clinton, Charles P. Champion, in trust: Charles P. Champion, C. M. Cowell, Eliza C. J. Caumann, Maria A. Clerch, R. Dudgeon, trustee James Dunn, Frederick Elmers, Ann Ellingham, J. W. Ekerson, Patrick Farrell. Barney Farnin, George Fox, Edward A. Frazier, H. Frost, Robert Farley, John Fitzpatrick, James Fay, executor; Marcellor Fay, H. Frost, Edwin Gibbon, James S. Green, P. Grebbe, H. H. Grebbe, administrator; James Grimmond, Eliza Graham, German S. Z. Cong'n, O. H. George and another, John Hughes, James How- land, Hannah Howell, George Hyenlein, Ann Hill, Eliza T. Hunter, D. Hyland, Margaret Hendrickson, John Hendricks, Matthew Haffner, James Harper, Henry Clay Matual Benefit Society, Francis Herman, Jr., David Hanna, Phillip Henry, Immanuel Lodge, T. S. U. O.; Hester Inslee, Jacob Just, David Jones, James Kelly, Maria A. Kavisch, Sarah J. Knox, Pat- rick Kelly, Henry Knebel, Emilia Kruger, Jane A. Kelly, Matthew Kelly, Ernest Kathenhorn, Thomas Kuman, Charles F. Koch (Dorothea Ross, administra- trix), F. J. Kallenborg, Leonie Kantz, J. Kenny, Anna Kohnken, James Lockstand, Elizabeth Lang. David Lent, John J. Lynch. Elizabeth Lamb, Andreas Leahner, William Lane. Jacob Mulford, Mechanics' Mutual Protection Society No. 62, Amanda Marshall, executrix: Louis Mount, jr., Patrick J. McGinnis, James McKinley, Annie Madigan, Alfred Marshall, Mary W. Majamesi, A. Mary Mott, Catharine Mc- Cauley, Fritz Muir, Margaret McKeone, Margaret Moses, B. Allen Murol, Francis Marsuler, Louis Nies, F. Nermule, Charles J. Naylor, Christopher Neubrand, David W. Noyes, W. O. Nall, Mary Ott and another, Putnam Chapter No. 8, O. of A. A.; Palestine Lodge No. 204, Janson Peppard, John M. Perkins, Pearson M. & Co., trust, Robert Park, Margaret Paul, Moses Patterson, Ellis L. Price, trust, Abram C. Price, Aug. Poger, Thomas J. Rose, Nathan S. Reed, Amy M. Reynolds, Cassie Rhoner, James Rafferty, John Rofer. T. B. Russum, John Robertson, Ellen Reilly, Catharine H. Romey, Maria Roloff, Henry M. Smith, Ed- ward Sellers, Sammis Alexander, Jane Shonnard, Susan Smith, Frederick W. Steuben, William Schneider, Charles Schumaling, Thomas Scott, Mary Ann Smith, Caroline Schultz, Herman Schumaker, Ellen M. Shugg. F. G. Smith, A. A. Scheidler, David L. Loper, P. Stoughton, etc., Thomas Shields, George F. Simpson, Margaret Thies, Margaret Terry, Henry Tigges, Abram V. Terhune, Peter and James Trainer, C. Tipper, Margaret Tully, Augustus Udile, Philip Uihlinger, Margaret Vernocke, Rosanna Van Dyke, trustee, John F. Van Dyke, Andrew M. Van Beurden, Mary Ann Wahter, Bennett Wilson, John Watkins, Solomon Weil, Maria A. Walker, John Walker, William Ward, Charles H. Wood Melinda Wolf H. A Whitefield