16191. First National Bank (Elizabeth, PA)

Bank Information

Episode Type
Suspension β†’ Closure
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
5114
Charter Number
5114
Start Date
December 19, 1913
Location
Elizabeth, Pennsylvania (40.269, -79.890)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini
Short Digest
b3e5f7e274e641e3

Response Measures

None

Receivership Details

Depositor recovery rate
60.5%
Date receivership started
1913-12-19
Date receivership terminated
1918-03-30
OCC cause of failure
Losses
Share of assets assessed as good
39.2%
Share of assets assessed as doubtful
57.1%
Share of assets assessed as worthless
3.7%

Description

Multiple contemporary newspapers (Dec 19, 1913) report the First National Bank of Elizabeth, PA, did not open by order of its directors and asked the Comptroller to appoint a receiver. No run is mentioned. Reports state the bank had too much slow paper and loans secured by real estate that could not be immediately turned into cash, motivating the request for a receiver; a national bank examiner was ordered to take charge.

Events (4)

1. March 19, 1898 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
2. December 19, 1913 Receivership
Source
historical_nic
3. December 19, 1913 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Appointment of a receiver was requested; Acting Comptroller ... will send a national bank examiner to take temporary charge.
Source
newspapers
4. December 19, 1913 Suspension
Cause
Bank Specific Adverse Info
Cause Details
Directors stated the bank had too much slow paper and loans secured by real estate that could not be immediately converted to cash, making continued operation inadvisable.
Newspaper Excerpt
the First National bank of Elizabeth, Pa., today notified the treasury department that it would not open its doors and asked for the appointment of a receiver.
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (13)

Article from The Topeka State Journal, December 19, 1913

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Article Text

National Bank Closes. Washington Dec. 19.-The First National bank of Elizabeth, Pa., today notified the !reasury department it would not open its doors and asked for s receiver. No details were given.


Article from The Bridgeport Evening Farmer, December 19, 1913

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Article Text

NATIONAL BANK ASKS FOR RECIEVER Washington, Dec. 19 Word was received by the treasury department today that the First National Bank, of Elizabeth, Pa., would not open its doors and asked for the appointment of a receiver. No details were given. Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane will send a national bank examiner to take temporary charge.


Article from Evening Times-Republican, December 19, 1913

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Article Text

PENNSYLVANIA BANK CLOSED. First National Bank of Elizabeth Asks Appointment of Receiver. Washington, Dec. 19.-The First National bank of Elizabeth, Pa., today notified the treasury department that it would not open its doors and asked for the appointment ,of a receiver. No details were given . Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane will send a national bank examiner to take temporary charge.


Article from The Chickasha Daily Express, December 19, 1913

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Article Text

PA. BANK FAILS TO OPEN DOORS Telegram by United Press. Elizabeth, Pa., Dec. 19.-The First National bank here did not open its doors this morning on the order of the directors. A receiver was requested but no reason was given. The comptroller of the currency ordered a bank examiner to take charge.


Article from Newark Evening Star and Newark Advertiser, December 19, 1913

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Article Text

Examiner Takes Charge of Elizabeth (Pa.) Nat'l Bank WASHINGTON. Dec. 19.-The First National Bank of Elizabeth, Pa., today notified the treasury department that it would not open its doors and asked for the appointment of a receiver. No details were given. Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane will send a national bank examiner to take temporary charge. PITTSBURGH, Dec. 19.-Bank Examiner Sherrill Smith, of Pittsburgh, took charge of the First National Bank of Elizabeth, at Elizabeth, Pa. this morning, on instructions from Washington, the directors of the bank having made the request. It was stated at the bank that it had too much slow paper on hand to make further operation advisable, but Examiner Smith refused to make a statement until he had gone further into the bank's affairs. The First National Bank of Elizabeth was organized in 1898 with a capital of $50,000. Its deposits were $440; surplus, $36,000, and its total resources, $580,000. The directors, later in the day, issued a statement declaring that they had asked the treasury department to take charge of the bank because it had loans, secured by real estate, which could not immediately be turned into cash. They expressed the belief that the institution would reopen for business. It was said in Elizabeth that almost one-half of the bank's deposits were in savings accounts.


Article from Norwich Bulletin, December 20, 1913

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Article Text

Wilson elm in the White House grounds to replace a Hayes elm blown down by a recent storm. Frank H. Rand, bursar and assistant treasurer of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, died at Pinehurst, N. C., yesterday. The Dissolution Suit against the United Shoe Machinery company as an unlawful monopoly was adjourned yesterday until January 6. Robert Hilliard, the actor. was sued at New Orleans, by William Page, his valet, for $5,000. Page alleges Hilliard beat him unmercifully. Mrs. Albert T. Patrick, whose husband served twelve years in Sing Sing prison as the alleged murderer of William Marsh Rice, died at Tulsa, Okla., yesterday. An Indictment For Murder was returned yesterday by the grand jury against Arthur C. Mack, who is alleged to have beaten his wife to death in Providence. The First National Bank of Elizabeth. Pa., yesterday notified the treasury department that it would not open its doors and asked for the appoint ment of a receiver. A Barbed Wire Fence along the Mexican boundary to check incursions into American territory was proposed in a bill introduced yesterday by Senator Ashurst. Fire, Starting in the Bryant & Company hay and grain building at Brockton, Mass., in a congested business district yesterday caused damage estimated at $12,000. President Wilson has directed the return to the civil government of the Philippines of the military reservation at Bonao, one of the small islands of the Jolo group. The House Yesterday passed a bill to appropriate $5,000 more for the expenses of the American delegates to the International Safety at Sea conference in session at London. Robbers Gained Access to the East Berlin and Westfield station houses and the Westfield section tool shed on branch lines of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Thursday night. Leaving Their Automobile at the curb in front of the Bixel Jewelry store at Bluffton, Ohio, yesterday, three men rushed into the store. seized a tray containing 8700 worth of diamonds and escaped. A Complimentary Dinner to W. Cam eron Forbes, former governor general of the Philippine island, was given last night by the Philippine society and the Harmony elub of America at New York. A New Record Price for New York City land is established in a transaction just recorded for a plot 73.4x100 located at Fifth avenue and Forty Second street, The price was $2,250. a 000, which is equivalent to $307 square foot. The United States Circuit Court of appeals at New York yesterday decided that the Waltham Watch company of Waltham, Mass., could not force Charles A. Keene, a New York jeweler, to stop selling their watches at cut prices. Two Hundred Women, members of the Women's Health league, were yesterday stationed in the principal streets of Pittsburgh at the opening of a campaign to enforce the anti-spitting ordinance. For Shooting Out Electric Lights during an automobile ride on the night of December 1, Louis F. Curtis, a aged 18 years, and a member of prominent and wealthy Newton, Mass. family, was sentenced to three months in jail yesterday. Secretary Garrison's announcement that when Major General Leonard Wood leaves his office as chief of staff of the army he will take command of the department of the east with head. quarters at Governor's Island, N. Y., has renewed speculation in army circles as to who will succeed him. The American Ambassador at Rome, Thomas Nelson Page, has arranged for the reception of Ira Nelson Morris, special commissioner, to seek the cooperation of Italy in the Panama-Pacific exposition, by the foreign minister, Marquis di San Giuliano, today. TO BE ELECTROCUTED FOR MURDER OF WIFE.


Article from Norwich Bulletin, December 20, 1913

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Article Text

The First National. Bank of Elizabeth, Pa., yesterday notified the treasury department that it would not open its doors and asked for the appointment of a receiver.


Article from The Detroit Times, December 20, 1913

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Article Text

ELIZABETH, PA., BANK CLOSES ITS DOORS WASHINGTON, Dec. 19.-The First National bank, of Elizabeth, Pa., did not open its doors today under orders from its board of directors, according to a message received by Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane. Appointment of a receiver was requested, but no reason for the shut down was given. Kane ordered a bank examiner placed in charge.


Article from East Oregonian : E.O, December 22, 1913

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Article Text

Elizabeth, Pa., Bank Closed. WASHINGTON, Dec. 22.-The First National Bank of Elizabeth, Pa., notified the treasury department it would not open its doors, and asked for the appointment of a receiver.


Article from The Olneyville Times, December 26, 1913

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Article Text

General Three persons were killed and six wounded in one day in "gunmen" battles in New Yory City The First National Bank of Elizabeth, Pa., has closed its doors and asked that receiver be appointed. Postmaster-General Burleson asked Congress to appropriate $1,000,000 to operate the parcel post until June 3. Senator Ashurst introduced a bill, appropriating $350,000 for a barbedwire fence along the Mexican border. There were 206 automobiles stolen in New York City to date this year. of which 154 have been recovered. During the 1913 fiscal year, the United States revenue cutter service rescued 327 persons from the sea. Mrs. Kate Wood Ray declined the office as chief of the Gary, Ind., police force, because she could not vote. Melvin H. Couch, a prominent lawyer of Monticello, N. Y., was found dead in the Masonic Temple of that city. The New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad will rename the Kent station on the Berkshire line, Woodrow. A new comet has been discovered by Washington astronomers, which will soon be visible with ordinary telescopes. Barnard Bennett, known to Harvard students as "Poco," the oldest clothes man and money lender, is dead at Boston. Philip Tomashefsky, "father of the Jewish stage in America," is dead at Centreville, N. Y. He was 69 years old. Sunday, February 1, will be "Go-tochurch" day in Chicago. All residents are requested to attend church on that day. In order to avoid congestion of the mails in the holiday rush, 8,000 additional men were employed on the railway mail service. Only 2,434 members of the New York National Guard qualified as marksmen or better under the new shooting rules calling for moving targets. Secretary of War Garrison and Secretary of the Navy Daniels recommended that the officers who attended the recent dinner of the Military OrdΓ©r of the Carabao be reprimanded. Gov. Glynn in his refusal to grant District Attorney Whitman's request that he be given State-wide power to investigate and prosecute, said Whitman is playing politics and knows the Governor has no authority to do as the prosecutor wishes. Mrs. Catherine Becker, mother of former Police Lieutenant Becker, convicted in New York of murder, is dead at Calicoon, N. Y. She did not know of her son's plight. The Board of appeals decided in favor of the Long Acre. Company against the Edison Company's ten-year fight to keep competition in supply of electricity out of New York City. The United States Court of Appeals upheld Federal District Judge Ray's decision that the Waltham Watch Company cannot fix the resale price of its watches by jobbers and retail ors.


Article from Milford Chronicle, December 26, 1913

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Article Text

Bank In Elizabeth, Pa., Closed. The Elizabeth, Pa., First National bank did not open its doors, under orders from its board of directors, according to a message received by Acting Comptroller of the Currency Kane in Washington. Appointment of a receiver was requested, but no reason for the shutdown was given. Kane ordered a bank examiner placed in charge.


Article from Highland Recorder, January 2, 1914

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Bank In Elipbath, Pa., Close The Elizabet, Pa., First National bank did not open its doors, under OF ders from its oard of directors, ar. cording to a mssage received by Acting Comptrollejof the Currency Kare in Washington Appointment of a receiver was redested, but no reason for the shutdown was given. Kane or. dered a bank exuminer place in charge.


Article from The Farmington Times, January 2, 1914

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Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York, was married in Paris to Mme. de la Marie. It is said that the New York American league baseball club has bid $500,000 for Ty Cobb. Total deposits of $107,205,542 were held by the 920 state banks of Kansas on Dec. 4, according to a compilation of reports made public by C. M. Saw. yer, bank commissioner. A wireless message from the sponsors of the Crocker land expedition sped to its leader, Donald B. McMillan, and his companions at Etah, Greenland, 1,600 miles away, from the nearest station in Canada. An aeroplane with sleeping cabins able to accommodate several passengers has just been submitted to successful tests at St. Petersburg. On the Missouri Pacific railroad near Boonville, Mo., a passenger train and freight train met in a head-on collision. The passenger train's fireman, Dan Johnston, was killed and two others seriously injured. Two men were killed and many other passengers were injured in a headon collision between a Union Pacific freight train and the eastbound Los Angeles limited train No. 8, near Black Buttes, Wyo. The proposal to change the name of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, to "Methodist Episcopal Church in America" has been defeated. ac. cording to figures given out by the Christian Advocate of Nashville, Tenn. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young was voted back into the superintendency of Chicago public schools after a stormy session of the board of education. All of the estate of A. Montgomery Ward, the Chicago mail order merchant, estimated at more than $5,000,000, will be kept in his family. according to the terms of his will. In a striking letter Franklin Lane, secretary of the interior, outlined in his annual report to the president a broad policy in the conservation of the vast natural resources be the United States. Attorney-General Barker explains why he brought suit against the railroads of Missouri to compel them to refund all moneys collected by them in excess of the amount authorized by the 2-cent passenger and maximum freight laws. He said the railroads had no right to the money in the first place, and could not consistently object to restoring to the proper owners that which belonged to them. 8 Former Judge Henry S. Priest, as attorney for receivers of the Frisco I railroad, was attacked in the United t States court in St. Louis on the a ground he had served too many interests connected with the road's affairs. f t A school for suffragists has been d founded in Pittsburg and will begin with the first of the new year, under t the auspices of the Equal Franchise e federation of western Pennsylvania. di There has been a tremendous inC crease recently in the number of B young men offering themselves to the W army recruiting officers for military b service. Last month there were 5,000 r applications, 2,000 more than ever beII fore recorded in time of peace. in Using her knowledge of jui-jitsu 10 with good effect, Miss Yoeh Ndoo Yu, p a Chinese student in the Teachers' a th college, New York, almost strangled a youth she asserted had robbed her. b) Posses with bloodhounds are search. al ing for the man or men who murdered of John Barrett. 60 years old, at his home to near Fort Plain, N. Y., after beating er his daughter Katherine, 20 years old, TI into insensibility. The father was by slain when he went to the aid of his daughter. ea be gi Richard Bartholdt, who has for 22 years represented a Missouri congres. se sional district, announces his retire su ment at the expiration of his present erm. ba fre Bank Examiner Sherill Smith of cir Pittsburg took charge of the First pe to National Bank of Elizabeth, at Eliza he eth, Pa., on instructions from Wash. ngton It was stated at the bank that