National Bank (Adrian, MI)

Episode Information

Episode UID
1382101598
Episode Type
Suspension β†’ Reopening
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
138210 national
Charter Number
13821
Start Date
February 14, 1933
Location
Adrian, Michigan

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
9be6b7ece539316f

Response Measures

None

Description

Articles describe the Michigan bank holiday and the subsequent national bank suspension; the specific Adrian bank is not named.

Events (4)

1. February 14, 1933 Suspension
Cause
Government Action
Cause Details
Michigan governor's proclamation ordering an eight-day state-wide bank holiday (Michigan bank holiday).
Newspaper Excerpt
ordering all bank functions suspended for eight days.
Source
newspapers
2. March 4, 1933 Suspension
Cause
Government Action
Cause Details
Presidential proclamation instituting a nationwide banking suspension (March 4, 1933 federal banking holiday).
Newspaper Excerpt
to be climaxed on March 4 by a presidential proclamation closing all banks in the country.
Source
newspapers
3. November 1, 1933 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
4. September 5, 1942 Voluntary Liquidation
Source
historical_nic

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article Text

Sweeping Inquiry Started Into U. S. Banking Set-Up; Detroit Collapse Is Aired Washington, January 25β€”(US)β€”Sweeping investigation in every major financial center in the nation to determine if criminal activities precipitated the 1932-1933 nation-wide bank crash has been started by the Department of Justice. Agents have been sent to New York, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and other cities where there were failures of big institutions with resulting loss of hundreds of millions to depositors and stockholders. Revelations of the inquiry came after Senator Couzens, Republican, Michigan, suddenly brought out at today's Senate Banking Committee probe of Detroit banks that justice agents then were in the room. In response to Couzens's questions, J. H. Verhelle, former Controller of the Detroit Bankers' Company, said he had been repeatedly questioned by justice agents, particularly in regard to papers allegedly missing from the holding company's file. Verhelle then pointed out two justice agents. From other sources it was learned the inquiry is nation-wide. Failure of the Detroit Bankers' Company, a holding organization of institutions with 900,000 depositors and $810,000,000 in assets, combined with collapse of the Guardian Detroit Union Group, Inc., brought on the Michigan bank holiday, followed shortly by nation-wide bank suspension. Verhelle brought into testimony the name of Eugene Myer, former Governor of the Federal Reserve Board. Pressed by Ferdinand Pecora, Committee Prosecutor, as to why the 1931 financial statement of the company did not show capital assets had decreased $23,000,000 during the year, he said: "We held a conference with Governor Myer. He indicated to Mark Wilson, the company Vice President, that he would approve a write-off of $23,000,000 if it could be done with caution and not too much publicity. This was the first big write-off by a major institution. It was feared it might lead the way for others." Pecora flatly charged that the 1931 statement was false in that it did not show the write-off and reported earnings of $4.21 per $20 par value share of common stock. He produced a memorandum allegedly from Verhelle to other officials, dated October, 1931, saying losses to that date had been $48,000,000. Verhelle admitted some such memorandum had been written but refused positively to identify the one produced. The company paid 17 per cent dividends throughout the period the $48,000,000 loss was incurred, Pecora contending that capital assets were milked to do this.


Article Text

SMALL DEPOSITORS TO BE PAID IN FULL Unique Plan of Detroit Bank to Affect 136,000 Persons. Detroit, Feb. 13β€”(AP)β€”Within one day of the anniversary of Michigan's momentous bank holiday, official notice was issued today that 136,000 depositors with $1,000 or less in the Guardian National Bank of Commerce when it closed, will be paid in full through a plan believed to be unique in banking history. It was just one year ago tomorrow that Governor William A. Comstock signed a proclamation, at the request of the state's major banking associations, ordering all bank functions suspended for eight days. Before that period had elapsed, the bank holiday movement had spread to other states, to be climaxed on March 4 by a presidential proclamation closing all banks in the country. Today's announcement told of completion of arrangements whereby 200 larger depositors in the Guardian National waive their claims to any share in an eight per cent payoff financed by a Reconstruction Finance Corporation loan to make it possible for smaller depositors to get all of their money. All depositors already have shared in pro-rata payments totaling 60 per cent. The new pay-off, the announcement said, will begin about February 23. This payment will amount to about $8,000,000. The holiday tied up $698,544,766 in Detroit banks and trust companies alone, and two of the banks, the Guardian National and First National Bank-Detroit, did not reopen. Since then, Guardian depositors have received $70,000,000, while First National depositors have received 50 per cent of their accounts, or approximately $200,000,000.