Mechanics Bank (Memphis, TN)

Episode Information

Episode UID
3869462290658
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
savings
Bank ID
386946229 hash
Start Date
October 15, 1854
Location
Memphis, Tennessee (35.150, -90.049)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
2af57905d67a56d5

Response Measures

None

Description

Multiple contemporary reports of a suspension in July 1855 and later references to the bank's failure; exact date of formal closing/receiver assignment not specified.

Events (3)

1. October 15, 1854 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
Twenty-five thousand dollars of the ten dollar ($10) bills of the Mechanics' bank, Memphis, Tenn., were stolen from the president's office, on the 15th ult.
Source
newspapers
2. July 11, 1855 Suspension
Cause
Bank Specific Adverse Info
Cause Details
Long-standing suspicion about solvency and lack of acceptance of its notes led to suspension.
Newspaper Excerpt
MECHANICS' BANK SUSPENDED.-There was considerable excitement upon the street yesterday, relative to the suspension of the Mechanics' Bank of this city.
Source
newspapers
3. * Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Three of them the Mechanics Bank at Memphis ... have failed.
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (7)

Article from The South-Western, October 25, 1854

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Article Text

# BY TELEGRAPH. [DISPATCHED TO THE SOUTH-WESTERN.] # ARRIVAL OF THE AFRICA---THREE DAYS LATER. Sebastopol Not Captured! Cotton Unchanged! NEW YORK, Oัั‚. 20. Cunard's steamship Africa has arrived, bringing intelligence from Liverpool to the 7th inst., three days later than the advices by the Baltic. The London and Paris letters by-the Africa entirely invalidate the report brought by the Baltic, in respect to the destruction of Sebastopol. It is evident that the report was put in circulation by the London stock jobbers for the purpose of bolstering up the money market. The latest papers state that the report that the supposed official statement that Menschikoff had surrendered, and Sebastopol been captured, dispatched by the Baltic, had been discovered to be untrue. In like manner we have assurance that the reported destruction and capture of fert Constantine, at the entrance of the roadstead of Sebastopol, together with two other forts, is without foundation. We are also assured the statement of immense losses having been sustained by the Russians in an engagement with the allied army, in the neighborhood of Sebastopol, is utterly false. The fabrication and circulation of these reports is a disgrace to the British press. LIVERPOOL, OCT. 7--No change in the cotton market since the Baltic sailed. Sales of the week, 60,000 bales. Nothing doing in breadstuffs, except corn for which the demand is fair. NEW YORK, Oัั‚. 20-The hon. Abbot Lawrence is dangerously ill. His family has been sent for, as his recovery is considered doubtful. The rev. John Bodhetia, a catholic priest, having been tarred and feathered at Ellsworth, Maine, for participating in a controversy on the school question, has died of the injuries inflicted on him. NEW YORK, Oัั‚. 19-The city council has voted $500, for the purpose of procuring a suitable testimonial for capt. Luce, for his bravery and devoted conduct on the occasion of the loss of the steamship Arctic. Letters from China announce that a new revolution has broken out. The first teller of the Ocean bank, N. York, is a defaulter to the tune of $90,000, and has absconded. BOSTON, OCT. 19-The know nothings of Massachusetts have nominated Henry J. Gardiner as their candidate for governor. Twenty-five of the shipwrecked passengers of the steamship City of Philadelphia, reached here to-day. CINCINNATI, OCT. 19-The banking house of Outcault & Co. failed to-day, and the event has produced some excitement. A run has been commenced by depositors upon the banks of Ellis & Sturgess and Smead & Co. It is the general impression that these establishments will meet the run, and the excitement subside. LOUISVILLE, ะžัั‚. 21-The steamer Nominee to sunk on Wednesday, at Warren's landing, upper Mississippi. Cargo mostly saved. The wreck lies in 12 feet water. No insurance. PHILADELPHIA, Oัั‚. 20-Pennsylvania has rejected the prohibitory liquor law by a majority of 3000 votes. The attorney general of the United States is preparing to carry the Booth case (in which the circuit court in the democratic State of Wisconsin decided against the constitutionality of the fugitive slave law) up to the supreme court. Booth is editor of the Wisconsin Democrat, the organ of senator Dodge. The yellow fever has ceased to be an epidemic in New Orleans. The Howard association has closed its infirmaries and ceased operations for the season. We learn from the Advocate that there is a considerable rush to the land office from various portions of Claiborne parish embraced under the provisions of the late graduation bill. Large quantities of valuable lands situated in the parish are now procurable at from twenty-five cents to one dollar per acre, according to the different classifications of the bill. LOOK OUT. Twenty-five thousand dollars of the ten dollar ($10) bills of the Mechanics' bank, Memphis, Tenn., were stolen from the president's office, on the 15th ult. They are numbered from 1 to 1250 inclusive, and dated July 4, 1854, with a large blue X engraved on the lower side of the bill, between the vignettes. The president gives notice that none of the bills of the above date, mark and denomination have been put in circulation by the bank, and therefore will neither be recognised nor paid. Merchants and travelers should be on their guard against these bills. It would be well to refuse all $10 bills on the Mechanics' bank, of Memphis, Tennessee. We are requested to state, says the National Intelligencer, that a gentleman of the State of Delaware, who was at Mr. Clayton's residence on Monday last, authorises, of his own knowledge, a contradiction of a statement in certain newspapers that Mr. C. had joined the know nothings. He says Mr. Clayton entertains the same opinions expressed by him last session in the senate on the unconstitutionality of all laws allowing aliens to vote without naturalisation in the territories, and that these are the same opinions expressed by him, as well as by Mr. Calhoun, Mr. Clay, Mr. Southard, and all the whigs in the senate of the United States, during 1835-6; but that Mr. Clayton belongs to no secret order or society whatever. The Washington Star finds that the aggre-


Article from Fayetteville Observer, November 9, 1854

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Save ThisFor the convenience of our mercantile and other readers, says the Nashville True Whig, we have obtained from a reliable source the following list of Bank Notes of doubtful and bad repute. The list only comprehends such as are likely to come in circulation here. It is of the Obinterest to every reader of server-save it: GEORGIA. The following are all "Wild Cat" Banks, and are generally refused by Brokers here. Some take them, however, at 10 to 13 per cent. discount: Merchants' Bank of Macon. " " Manufacturers' Planters and Mechanics' Bank. Atlanta Bank. KENTUCKY. The two following Banks are suspended, and there is nomarket for their notes here: Kentucky Trust Company. Newport Safety Fund Bank. TENNESSEE. The first named Bank below is broke, and the notes of the second are no sale: Farmers and Mechanics' Bank of Memphis. Mechanics' Bank of Memphis. VIRGINIA. The following Banksare no sale: Bank of Kanawha. Trans-Alleghany Bank. INDIANA. All the Free Banks of Indiana are no sale. COUNTERFEIT QUARTER EAGLES. -Two counterfeit. quarter eagles have recently been taken at the New York Post office. Ther are thus described by the Journal of Commerce. "It is made from a genuine New Orleans mint die, stole some years since, and bears the "O" under the talons of the eagle, Prof. John Torry, assayer here, has analy zed the coin, and finds that it is made of a casing of pure gold, filled with silver, and probably with platina, to increase the weight. The = eight is 60 5-10 grains. It is therefore worth $1 17 in gold, and 8 cents in silver, or $1 25 in raw material, besides the labor of making. The maker and vender could not, therefore, realize more than $1 each, which would seem too small a profit, except that the counterfeit is SO well done that there is but little risk of detection."


Article from The Daily Nashville True Whig, July 14, 1855

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MECHANICS' BANK OF MEMPHIS SUSPENDED. -The Memphis Whig of the 11th inst., contains the following:


Article from The Daily Nashville True Whig, July 14, 1855

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Article Text

MECHANIOS' BANK OF MEMPHIS SUSPENDED. -The Memphis Whig of the 11th inst., contains the following: MECHANICS' BANK SUSPENDED.-There was considerable excitement upon the street yesterday, relative to the suspension of the Mechanics' Bank of this city. The report is generally credited, yet we cannot say to what extent the suspension may affect the community, but it is generally thought that the amount of the bills in circulation hereabouts cannot be very large-probably a few thousand dollars. We went to the banking house for the purpose of obtaining more satisfactory information, but saw no one that could inform us as to the condition of its affairs or circulation. The greater portion of the bills we have seen in circulation are one two's, three's and five's, and the greater portion of that which is out is probably in the hands of mechanics and small dealers-a class of the community on whom the loss will fall the heaviest. For some time past there has been considerable suspicion about its solvency, and very few, if any, of the large dealers and brokers would keep any of the bills on hand, hence they have escaped pretty generally. We trust that this suspension will not create any suspicions or doubts as regards the other banking institutions of the city. EDWD. EVRETT.-The Boston Advertiser has published in an extra the great oration of the American Cicero-Edwd. Everett-delivered on the Fourth, in his native place, Dorchester, Mass. The following is the concluding paragraph; the whole address occupies nearly nine columns of the Advertiser: "Thus, my friends, in the neighborhood of the spot where in my early childhood, I acquired the first elements of learning, at one of those public schools which are the glory and strength of New England, I have spoken to you imperfectly of the appropriate topics of the day. Retired from public lite, without the expectation or the wish to return to it, but the contrary-grateful for the numerous marks of public confidence which I have received, and which I feel to be beyond my merits -respecting the convictions of those from whom I have at any time differed, and asking the same justice for my own-I own, fellow-citizens, that few things would better please me than to find a quiet retreat in my native town, where I might pass the rest of my humble career in the serious studies and tranquil pursuits which befit the de cline of life, till the same old bell should announce that the chequered scene is over and the weary is at rest."


Article from Fayetteville Observer, July 19, 1855

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MECHANICS' BANK OF MEMPHIS SusPENDED.-The Memphis Whig of the 11th inst., contains the followingMechanics' Bank Suspended.--There was considerable excitement upon the street yosterday, relative to the suspension of the Mechanics' Bank of this city. The report is generally credited, yet we cannot say to what extent the suspension may affect the community, but it is generally thought that the amount of bills in circulation here-abouts cannot be very Inige--probably a few thousand dollars. We went to the bank house for the purpose of obtaining more satisfactory information, but saw no one that could inform us AS to the condition of its affairs or circulation. The greater portion of the bills we have seen in circulation are one's, two's,three's,and five's, and thegreater portion of that which is out is probably in the bands of mechanics and small dealers-a class of the community on whom the loss will fall the heaviest. For some time past there has been considerable suspicion about its solvency, and very few, if any, of the large dealers and brokers would keep any of the bills on hand, hence they have escaped pratty generally. We trust that this suspension will not create any suspicions or doubts AS regards the other banking institutions of the city.


Article from Nashville Union and American, February 17, 1857

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# BANKS AND BANKING. We have published several communications on the subject of Banks, in which the writers propose changes in the present system of Banking. We believe that Barks have done serious injury to the great mass of the people, and that the injury is in proportion to the number created. We refer back to the time when our legislature gave every body the previlege to bank, and soon thereafter the country was flooded with Kincannon tickets, Chaffin, Kirk & Co. shinplasters, and others of like material. All these, like the moras multicaulis, became worthless, except as fuel to kindle a morning fire. Subsequently the Fermers' and Merchants Bank of Memphis was chartered. Then came the Bank of East Tennessee. The next birth in the Bank family was named the "Lawrenceburg Bank." The legislature of 1851-2 chartered the Citizens' Bank, and passed a general law allowing any person banking privilezes who would deposite $50,000 in bonds with the Comptroller. If the legislature following had looked back to the condition of the banks chartered by their illustrious predecessors, and made an estimate of the loss sustained by the hard working people in consequence of bank failures, surely they would have waited a while to see what tax the people could stand before burthening them with any more banks. But there was not yet a stopping place. After the adjournment of the legislature of 1853-4, (the same body that made JOHN BELL Senator,) we find on the statutes charters for eight more new stock banks. Three of them the Mechanics Bauk at Memphis, the Central Bank at Nashville, and the Miners' and Manufacturers' Bank at Knoxville, have failed. Two others the Bank of West Tennessee, at Memphis, and the Agricultural Bank at Brownsville, are said to be shivering in the chilly breeze of adversity. There was yet no stopping place Although JOHN BELL had failed politically and the three banks above named had failed pecuniarily, yet with all these evils staring them in the face, the legislature of 1855-6 chartered the Bank of America, with the power to establish two branches and the privilege of incressing its capital to one million two hundred thousand dollars, and to issue two dollars for one of capital paid. This same legislature seemed, by their action, to be of the opinion that there had been rather a loose way of banking in Tennesseee, and they passed an act requiring all the banks and branches to make semi-annual reports to the Governor, and that the branch bark reports should be "separate and d stinct from the return of the mother bank." But not one single branch has complied with this act. (It may be proper here to remark that the act makes an exception as to the State Bank, and that the Bank of America, Union, Planters and Citizens' Banks, are all that have branches. Even the Bank of America, chartered at the same session which required branches to report to the Governor, has paid no attention to this act. The same act also prohibits any bank or branch bank from having a circulation which shall "exceed its discounts more than $2,000." If the branches had made reports as required by law, the people could see and understand the practice of dodging the payment of their debts by giving the people of Clarksville notes payable at Rogersville or Dresden, and by giving the people of Nashville notes payable at Athens, Pulaski, Jackson or Knoxville. Now we ask the reader to run over the list of baks named in this article and estimate if he can the heavy tax sustained by the people in consequence of the failure of banks ereated by our legislature from the days of Kincannon to the present time. On whom has this loss fallen? Even at the risk of wounding the feelings of what, in refined circles, are called "commercial men," we say that the great injury dote by the breaking of a bank is done to the farmer, the mechanic and the day laborer. You rarely see a "commercial man" with broken bank money on his hands. He is right at the door of some bank where he can deposite such funds as will not get him exchange to pay his Northern or Southern debt he can deposite every day, and the next day the meanest money he has deposited is paid out on his check to the farmer for his cotton, corn, or other articles of trade, and to the mechanic for labor done on his house or steamboat. But suppose the bank breaks where the "commercial man" keeps his account: don't he lose then? In nine cases out of ten, not a red, but oftener makes by the failure; for he generally has a note or bill in the bank and he checks for the deposite to be applied to the payment of the note or bill ard often has a chance to buy up the notes of the bank at a heavy discount to take up his own paper. If he has no note of his own, he knows of a friend who has, and he will work in his broken bank deposite. The only way these "commercial men" lose by bank failures is when they become too knowing and buy up tank notes when the bank is going down hill and are caught in their speculation. We think it clear that banks have greatly injured the people pecuniarily. We go further:- With the single exception of a hypocritical know-nothing clergy, we think banks and banking are far shead of any thing in injuring the morals of the community. They do every thing in their power to avoid paying their debts. For instance: A cotton speculator draws a bill on his New Orleans merchant for $10,000. The bank discounts the bill. On looking over the money he has received for his bill he finds that it is all payable at Jackson, or Pulaski, or Dresden. He goes to one of these points to make his purchases and finds that by paying gold he can purchase at a lower price; so he goes to the branch bank and gets the coin. The cashier is mad because he had to pay an honest debt, and he immediately writes to the parent bank, tells what notes he redeemed fand what sort of man presented them. When this letter reaches the parent bank, there is a whispering between the president, cashier, and teller and the identity of Mr. Cotton speculator is fixed. Do you suppose he could ever get a bill discounted in that bank again? Not a bit of it. Why? Was that bill he drew not paid? Oh yes, the cotton speculator's bill was met promptly; but the bank did not expect to pay their notes! And because the bank was not successful in avoiding the payment of its notes, it will have no dealings with the man that makes it pay. But again: Banks injure the morals of the people by giving character to the paper of other Banke which they believe to be unsound, and if banks can do this thing, the example is apt to be followed and the fraud becomes general. For instance: A new bank is started without capital- The first object is to get out a circulation. The


Article from Memphis Daily Appeal, November 29, 1869

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LOCAL PARAGRAPHS. yesterday. in each were five dark and rainy Sunday was district arrests yesterday, There another up o six needings page o'clock. we of reproduce the meeting he this the Monumental on in Greenlaw speeches of and morning at regard the On to with the the Opera House corrected Church. Col.Ste Satus day night, and Judge will Brown, well repay the law- perusal. complete. phens They curious that touching It was a little resolt lutions, etc., full of unfurnished Judge Hunter, s unely generous, vers death of They are with most the mixed praise. was at times dealt not take one or Judge H. ungenerously. wreath We would which they have dileaf from about his memory. keeps the saloon twined Mr. Quinn, the who editorial street) rooms has of the at rectly under (No. 14 Jefferson some of the finest by APPEAL behind his bar was drunk bepresent whysky that ever Mr. Quinn wine, has, Irish anybody Crow some anywhere. elegant and Madeira general assort sides, and Scotch fine whisky, liquors (me judice). morning about ment of of fire clock, yesterday was caused the by The alarm half past of five flames issuing the from corner of Jefferson the discovery of the building Front on Row, over The second story street and timely discovery before of the City Bank. resulted in its suppression _though five min- destrucdelay much the fire damage would was have done caused the utes of the building. was mainly tion weather, production vesterday of toadstools. balmy. The to the rather than cheerless, devoted was clammy, and river brighten The sky The air was muddy, of sunshine to current in without ray ver-moving to the sea. streets its dull, heavy, onward course and people sat its tireless were deserted, with little disposi- who by to eloquent mistified gloomily ministered tion The to listen to firesides, leaden-eyed preachers, Day, and, audiences. To-morrow is St. Andrew's will be duly of to ancient customered and our honored according by the sons settled in Society Andrew's preparamidst. auld this The Scotia city St. have of to-morrow made ow even- usual of tions for a jolly assemble time first at their the officers ing. They of meeting during and instal the ensuing to French year: elected place to serve they adjourn a bowl of "dis- "hot which after John's which to a supper no and doubt will be Scotch, to the bottom. in his paper, says: the cussed Col. Gus. tinel, Signaigo, of Saturday that our Grenada are Sentin truly glad to fellow-citizen, learn secured Dr. friend We and enterprising of Graysp Moore, has of MemL. C. Lee, Robertson and for the Grenada, which is Messrs. phis, as civil engineers Eastern Railroad, With Houston to and be put men under as contract. Dr. Lee in at the the shortly such enterprisis road will be completed Messrs. Robert son and shortest helm, the Moore time stand possible. at the head of their store "The profession. Tipton Record Brodnax says: & Saturday Son, at The dollars of fifMason's the of M easrs. over Depot forty-five R. was T. robbed hundred last some Capt. night A part of the belonged to it teen in eash. hundre dollars, who had deposited The is C. Howard, for safe keeping. and it George the firm iron safe, have enwith wasin a the large thief must and conmoney supposer store that during the the day clerks had tered the until after when he succealed himself out to supper, the safe and rid- the all gone in going through No clue to yet & ceeded ding thief has, it of as its far contents. as we can learn, been L house of A. G. The wholesale Friday discovered. Robinson large pay payment Louisville on tobacco was their dealers, Capt. tray suspended Trezeyar of through this city him many Mem- who eling Jim. agent, had and dealings with them, with rethe men phis will houses receive firm this is announcer composed and of fair young business a gret energy as and enterp They have been season doing but, of qualifications. during the past of the money large business the stringency failure to make collec- were owing to and their involved and market they became suspend. Their liabilities e availaassets compelled tions, about to $175,000, amount and the to more amount to will probably It is thought that that ble than the above is sum. only temporary their ered- and the suspe dispension able to fully satisfy A fuH state- be they will be business. assets will to itors ment and of their the resultabilities public as and soon as it can be of prepared. given a large amount sewer Some days ago hid away in a following money was found The Herals will has be the of interest New York. to it. which "One of the keenthe its in to Memphis regard officers readers of the was United shown States one fa- of est cret of Service he Division at once recognized they are the the bills, and He states (Tenn.) that Mechanics altered. miliar face. tens of the Memphis This bank Judge was owned King, of Bank, bills circulated jon by with the late of Dr. the the Memphis, in conjunet the management Bank of that Folks, who had Merchants' banks failed, Farmers' and these Memphis on the market city. After the bills per thousand. were put Unserupu- a specuin 1854, dollars seeing a chance for them at lous sharpers, ten them up and altered Bank of lation, bought of the Mechanics' every bank of A in name a got to the_tens New Haven, and nearly the United States hold of the same by the name of notes Bliss and run them Me man amount of these agent of the large the redemption which resulted in upon of Memphis, carrying down with city chanics'. its collapse, known and the gentleinan is of that this these altered failing named it of a well Judd. His in theory 1862 to the Mechan- to get notes Bank were of circulation Louisville, or but, in danger them of bur- deics' them into W ho altered ied them tection, the where parties they were found.