New England Loan & Trust Company (New York, NY)

Episode Information

Episode UID
1139214291185
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
trust
Bank ID
113921429 hash
Start Date
September 26, 1898
Location
New York, New York (40.714, -74.006)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
a39a2d6f11709c48

Response Measures

None

Events (1)

1. September 26, 1898 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Otto T. Bannard was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan & Trust Company
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (12)

Article from Santa Fe New Mexican, September 26, 1898

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Article Text

Receive Appointed. New York, Sept. 56.-Otto T. Bannary was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan & Trust Company by Judge Slipman of the United States Circuit court, on a suit brought by the Real Estate Trust Company of Philadelphia and-frobillion Allen, of St. Albans, Vt. The company was a large lender of money on western mortgages.


Article from The Florence Daily Tribune, September 26, 1898

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Article Text

A Heavy Failure New York, Sept. 26-The New England Loan and Trust company have failed for $1,768,200. This money is mostly due on loans and mortgages in the South. A receiver has been appointed.


Article from The Providence News, September 26, 1898

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Article Text

Receiver Appoiated New York, Sept. 26.-Otto T. Bannard of 30 Broad street was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust Company, by Judge Shipman of the United States circuit court, on a suit brought by the Real Estate Trust Company of Philadelphia, and S. S. Allen of St. Albana, Vt.


Article from Rock Island Argus, September 26, 1898

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Article Text

New England Concern Collapses. New York, Sept. 26. - Otto T. Barnard was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust company. The company was a large lender of money on western mortgages.


Article from Deseret Evening News, September 26, 1898

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Article Text

A Receiver Appointed. New York, Sept. 26.-Otto T. Bannard of 30 Broad street was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan & Trust Co. by Judge Chipman, of the United States circuit court, on a suit brought by the Real Estate Trust company of Philadelphia and Sabillion Allen of St. Albans, Vt. The company was a large lender of money on western mortgages.


Article from The Anaconda Standard, September 27, 1898

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Article Text

Receiver Has Been Appointed. New York. Sept. 26.-Otto T. Bannard was to-day appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust company. The company holds many Western mortgages.


Article from Arizona Republican, September 27, 1898

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Article Text

A RECEIVER APPOINTED New York, Sept. 26.-Otto T. Bannard of 30 Broad street was today appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust company. The company has a large amount of loans in the west.


Article from The Denison Review, September 27, 1898

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Article Text

TRUST COMPANY FAILS. Receiver Appointed for New England Loan and Trust Company -Handled Western Mortgages. New York, Sept. 26.-Otto T. Bannard, of 30 Broad street, was appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust company by Judge Shipman, of the United States circuit court, on a suit brought by the Real Estate


Article from River Falls Journal, September 29, 1898

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Article Text

Loan and Trust Company Assigns. New York, Sept. 27.-Otto T. Bannard, of 30 Broad street, was appointed receiver of the New England Loan and Trust company by Judge Shipman, of the United States circuit court, on a suit brought by the Real Estate Trust company of Philadelphia, and Sabillion Allen, of St. Albans, Vt. The company was a large lender of money on western mortgages.


Article from The Providence News, October 1, 1898

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Article Text

FOUND AT HOBOKEN Body of President of the Failed N. E. Loan and Trust Co. New York, Oct. 1.-The body of Daniel O. Oesbaugh, president of the New England Loan and Trust company, who disappeared the day his company went into the hands of a receiver, was found today on the beach at Hoboken, N. J. Some boys at play made the discovery and the police were notified.


Article from New-York Tribune, May 19, 1900

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Article Text

MASTEN IN CHARGE OF TRUST COMPANY. Judge Lacombe, of the United States Circuit Court. yesterday appointed Arthur H. Masten, standing master of the court. to take such proofs as may be offered by the parties to the cause or any' other creditor of the New-England Loan and Trust Company, of Iowa, the principal offices of which are in this city, concerning the indebtedness of that corporation in the suit in equity brought by the Real Estate Trust Company, of Philadelphia, and Savillion S. Allen, of St. Albans, Vt. The standing master is also empowered to allow or disallow the claims presented to him. and to ascertain what claims, if any, are entitled to preference in payment. His notices inviting claims are to be published once weekly for a month in two newspapers here and in one newspaper in Des Moines, Iowa. In the same suit over a year ago Judge Shipman appointed Otto T. Bannard, of this city, receiver of the New-England Loan and Trust Company. The suit was brought on account of a default in the payment of the interest and principal of debentures aggregating a large sum.


Article from The Wichita Daily Eagle, June 15, 1901

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Article Text

ALL KANSAS MONEY Big Deal Made With Eastern Company FOR OKLAHOMA DEBTS Half a Million Dollars to be Cashed in Wichita. Winne & Winne of this city, have entered into a contract with the receiver of the New England Loan & Trust company of Broadway, New York, in which the Wichita firm agree to cash nearly $400,000 worth of Oklahoma mortgages, mostly on farms. The trust company was compelled to suspend several years ago on account of some speculations in the east and the business of the company went into the hands of a receiver. The receiver was recently ordered to sell the securities and wind up the business He tried the big financial centers, New York and Boston, and failed to raise the necessary cash. The proposition was then made to Winne & Winne of this city to sell them the bonds and the trade was closed. The Wichita firm only asking time to examine the Oklahoma records to see that the mortgages were regular, and their expert is now making the investigation. What is worthy of mention in this matter is the fact that this company was compelled to come west to get this large amount of money. Mr. Winne said last evening that not a dollar of the money that would go into these bonds belonged to the eastern states. It is all western money. A good many of these Oklahoma bonds will soon become due. If the men want to pay Winne & Winne will accept the money, but if they want to renew the loans, they will be accommodated because the firim has unlimited confidence in Oklahoma. This action of the Wichita company in securing these mortgages is only another evidence that capital is increasing and constantly accumulating in the west. When the western country was new the people had to depend very largely on eastern capital with which to develop its resources, but now the west has its own capital. Every time it raises a big wheat crop it gets more capital, because it sells more than it buys. This is a case where the accumulation of money means the balance of trade in favor of the west. Even the banks of Wichita are getting more money than there is a local demand for and they are sending money to New York to be loaned on call. If this accumulation is kept up outside investments will be sought. There are people here claiming that this money will be invested in rea lestate, but that does not take it away, unless the land belongs to a nonresident and when a non-resident buys farms of city property, he increases the supply of money unless the Sedgwick county man who sells takes his money and leaves the country, which is not often the case. Wichita is coming to be recognized as a money center and by this time next year it will have a good deal more money than it now has. The look of BEAU 4h.