Northwestern National Bank (Chicago, IL)

Episode Information

Episode UID
50801165
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
5080 national
Charter Number
508
Start Date
January 3, 1897
Location
Chicago, Illinois (41.850, -87.650)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
75534142234d358c

Response Measures

None

Description

No explicit suspension article provided; receivership is documented later in 1897, so closure inferred.

Events (4)

1. August 30, 1864 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
2. January 3, 1897 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
Chicago Banks Call for Money to Tide Them Over the Trouble. The Chicago banks have been telegraphing to New York...for assistance.
Source
newspapers
3. September 15, 1897 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Bailey, as trustee, holds the uncollected portion of the bills receivable pledged to the Northwestern National Bank of Chicago...the remainder of these bills receivable will be delivered to the receivers.
Source
newspapers
4. September 15, 1900 Voluntary Liquidation
Source
historical_nic

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from The Atlanta Constitution, January 4, 1897

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Article Text

ASKING THE EAST TO HELP THEM Chicago Banks Call for Money to Tide Them Ove the Trouble. Washington, January 3.-(Special.)-The situation relative to the banks in Chicago and other of the western cities is being considered by Comptroller Eckels and others of the treasury department. The condition of western banks is far more serious than is generally imagined by the public. The recent failures in Chicago and St. Paul have, according to the treasury authority, placed western finances in a tottering condition. For the past three days the Chicago banks have been telegraphing to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington banks for assistance. So far it is not believed by the treasury officials that satisfactory responses have been made in the east, therefore greater trouble is feared, and unless all the western banks go to each other's support it is argued there may be a general western bank panic. Comptroller Eckels said tonight that he had no fear of the southern banks, as few, If any, had any great interchange of business with the Chicago concerns, but the seat of apprehension lay exclusively at Chicago and points west of there. Mr. Eckels is, in truth, apprehensive, and while doing all within his power to avert a break in the west, he is not without fear that


Article from The Saint Paul Globe, September 29, 1897

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Article Text

Bailey, as trustee, holds the uncollected portion of the bills receivable pledged to the Northwestern National Bank of Chicago, under an agreement authorized by this court for settlement and an attachment suit in Chicago, and upon the payment of the balance of $7,000 the remainder of these bills receivable will be delivered to the receivers. The receivers have received full reports from time to time of the dispositions of all collaterals held by creditors, and the following is a summary statement of the assets remaining undisposed of on Sept. 15, 1897, with their book or face value as follows: