Auburn State Bank (Auburn, IN)

Episode Information

Episode UID
6103870191241
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
state
Bank ID
610387019 hash
Start Date
May 14, 1903
Location
Auburn, Indiana (41.367, -85.059)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
cec272ba2f20448c

Response Measures

None

Events (3)

1. May 14, 1903 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Receiver Leighty ... the receiver may be able to realize about $62,000. ... the defunct Auburn Bank of Auburn, Ind., now in the hands of a receiver.
Source
newspapers
2. May 14, 1903 Suspension
Cause
Bank Specific Adverse Info
Cause Details
Speculation and misapplication of bank funds by family/insiders and worthless notes left liabilities far in excess of assets.
Newspaper Excerpt
The latest advices from Auburn concerning the defunct bank situation are that the total liabilities... the receiver may be able to realize about $62,000.
Source
newspapers
3. March 1, 1904 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
State Bank Examiner E. M. Hinshaw ... believes that if the affairs ... are correctly administered the institution will be restored to solvency.
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from The Indianapolis Journal, May 15, 1903

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Article Text

AUBURN BANK DEVELOPMENTS. Liabilities Reach $169,000 Against $62,000 Available Assets. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FORT WAYNE, Ind., May 14.-The latest advices from Auburn concerning the defunct bank situation are that the total liabilities, instead of being $121,000 as Receiver Leighty supposed after his first examination, will reach $169,000. Against this large sum the receiver may be able to realize about $62,000. Mrs. Elizabeth McClellan, widow of the founder of the bank, who supposed herself rich, has given up all her property and barely makes good her own obligations. The money taken from the bank's assets by Don M. Garwood and Dr. E. L. Siver for investment in their industrial ventures seems to have been finally lost, and the notes given by them to the bank are worthless. The offer of Charles McClellan to turn over property in Detroit worth $30,000 affords little hope of relief from that quarter, as the Michigan concern in which he invested the bank's money has no rating whatever in Dun's. There is intense feeling against the family in Auburn, particularly against the son and the sons-in-law, who speculated the resources of the bank out of existence.


Article from The Indianapolis Journal, March 1, 1904

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Article Text

Bank May Be Solvent. State Bank Examiner E. M. Hinshaw returned here yesterday, after several conferences with stockholders of the defunct Auburn Bank of Auburn, Ind., now in the hands of a receiver. He believes that if the affairs of the company financed by the bank are correctly administered the institution will be restored to solvency.