Bank of Pittsburg National Association (Pittsburg, PA)

Episode Information

Episode UID
522501246
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Reopening
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
52250 national
Charter Number
5225
Start Date
October 26, 1903
Location
Pittsburg, Pennsylvania (40.441, -79.996)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
a47c7c7dd3f3bfcd

Response Measures

None

Receivership Details

Depositor recovery rate
100.0%
Date receivership started
1931-09-21
OCC cause of failure
Economic conditions
Share of assets assessed as good
46.4%
Share of assets assessed as doubtful
49.2%
Share of assets assessed as worthless
4.4%

Description

Articles refer to city/state-wide banking actions (1907 60-day rule) rather than this specific bank by name; earlier 1903 mention of 'Pittsburg banks' going out of business is ambiguous.

Events (4)

1. October 23, 1899 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
2. October 26, 1903 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
The disturbances caused by the suspension of the Baltimore and Pittsburg banks which recently went out of business, have subsided and no further trouble is anticipated.
Source
newspapers
3. November 1, 1907* Suspension
Cause
Macro News
Cause Details
Banks (including Pittsburg banks) applied the 60-day rule and used clearing-house certificates during the nationwide Panic of 1907.
Newspaper Excerpt
The New York banks... applied the 60-day rule for withdrawal of deposits and resorted to the use of clearing house certificates... And then Detroit. Pittsburg. Cleveland. Buffalo, St. Louis and the banks of nearly every other city did likewise.
Source
newspapers
4. September 21, 1931 Receivership
Source
historical_nic

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from Daily New Dominion, October 26, 1903

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Article Text

The disturbances caused by the suspension of the Baltimore and Pittsburg banks which recently went out of business, have subsided and no further trouble is anticipated. The country is all right and it will not go to the bow-wows just at present.


Article from Alma Record, November 6, 1907

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Article Text

AS OTHERS SEE IT The following appeared as an ediorial in this mornings Grand Rapids Herald and in a clear and concise statement of the facts as relative to the present financial Hurry: "The end of the financial disturbance is believed to be in sight. The trouble originaed in New York. The "collapse of the copper corner pinched some of the brethren of high finance. Their embarrassment involved some of the banks with which they were connected. In a flash New York had a panic on hand. The New York banks. for their own protection. applied the 60-day rule for withdrawal of deposits and resorted to the use of clearing house certificates. This action was not necessarily an evidence of weakness. but was deemed essential to safety to prevent a blind. unthinking. unreasoning rush for money to be locked up in vaults or hoarded." New York is the country's great financial center. its money reservoir. When New York tied itself up in a knot. other cities were soon in a tangle, not through any fault of their own nor because of "local conditions.", but simply bceause New York had failed them. Chicago was the first to follow the New York example in applving th* 60-day rule_and resorting to clearing house certificates. And then Detroit. Pittsburg. Cleveland. Buffalo, St. Louis and the banks of nearly every other city did likewise. The banks of Grand Rapids are among the very few in the country that have continued to do business under anything approaching normal conditions. The banks here still pay cash on demand to satisfy all legitimate needs, but at the same time they are doing all they can to conserve their supplies of currency by the use of checks, certificates of deposit and exchange on New York and Chicago. But as stated, the end of the trouble. it is believed, is now in sight. The national banks all over the country are taking out additional circulation. is coming out of Washington at the rate of $1,000.000 to $1,500,000 a day. The government mints are working overtime on new coniage. and this money is being put into circulation as rapidly as possible. The greatest, factor of immediate relief. however. is the arrival of gold from Europe. The Kron Prinzessin Cecile brought $8,000,000 into New York yesterday. The Lusitania will arrive Friday with $10.000,000. Other ships are on the way