Bank of Ellensburg (Ellensburg, WA)

Episode Information

Episode UID
1695169991333
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
state
Bank ID
169516999 hash
Start Date
January 13, 1911
Location
Ellensburg, Washington (46.997, -120.548)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
152d8fe8da5a3c23

Response Measures

None

Description

Court docket and later Supreme Court reference show a receiver was appointed; no articles here mention reopening or a run.

Events (2)

1. January 13, 1911 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
Hadley as receiver vs. Bank of Ellensburg
Source
newspapers
2. April 4, 1912 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
The supreme court affirmed the decision of Judge Kauffman in the case of C. R. Hadley, receiver vs. the Bank of Ellensburg
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from The Ellensburg Dawn, January 12, 1911

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Article Text

JANUARY TERM COURT DOCKET Superior court will convene on the 16th with a jury. The cases to be heard are as follows: The criminal docket has been arranged as follows: January 16-State vs. Richard Henry the negro of shooting fame who this time is to be tried on a charge of assaulting his wife. January 17-State vs. Jack Connors, who is up on a grand larceny charge. Connors is held on a charge of robbing several hotels. January 18 the case of George Wilson will be heard. He is charged with robbing the Coble lodging house. January 18 P. M. Leo Cimmia, charged with grand larcency from the Cle Elum State Cank, will be tried! January 16 George Renton will be tried for wife desertion and Paul Morgan will be tried for forgery. January 20 John Smith and John Henderson will be tried on charges of grand larcency and robbery, respectively. January 21 Ira Betts will be tried on a robbery charge. January 23 Charles Rosecranz will be tried on statutory charge. John Riley will also be tried the same day for a statutory offense. January 24 Lawrence Leonard and Fred Barnes will be tried on charges of burglary and grand larceny, respectively. The civil court docket follows: January 12-Peterson vs. Peters and Scammon vs. Scammon. January 13-Hadley as receiver vs. Bank of Ellensburg and Hadley vs. Clark. January 10-Miller vs. Schlotfeldt. January 15-Thomas vs. Washington National Bank. January 25-White vs. Dixon and Cle Elum State Bank vs. Cimmia. February 1 Armour Co. vs. Kinney, February 13 Sundquist vs. Altice and Coppock vs. A. C. Butler Co.


Article from The Ellensburg Dawn, April 4, 1912

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Article Text

It would look now as though the acreage of potatoes to be planted in the valley this year would be quite large. The meadows are quite green and afford short graing. Many new and beautiful, as well as expensive modern residences, are going up in every part of the city. Henry Rehmke of Port Orchard, is over visiting with old friends and looking after some business matters. Dr. I. N. Powers of Cle Elum, spent Sunday in the city. Ed Page and wife of Thorp, were in the city Sunday. Frank Page and wife of Thorp, down Sunday. John Goodwin and wife of Thorp, in the city Sunday afternoon. Some of the heaviest taxpayers in the corporation line are the Northern Pacific railway company, $92,337.39, the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway company, $84,024. Next comes the Northwestern Improvement company of Roslyn and Cle Elum, $8,000. That's some tax- and really ought to pay the expenses of Kittitas county, but far from it. Mrs. G. L. Barkley went over to Spokane Sunday night to look after some important matters and to attend the Inland Empire Teachers' Institute in that city this week. Wm. K. Briley went over to Corfu Thursday afternoon to conduct the funeral of Mrs. Chas. Hutton of that town. Dr. Harvey returned Friday from a visit to Vancouver, B. C. Mrs. W. H. Tharp has been seriously indisposed of late. The supreme court affirmed the decision of Judge Kauffman in the case of C. R. Hadley, receiver vs. the Bank of Ellensburg. A. C. Cummine, the deaf and dumb printer of Kennewick, was in the city Monday afternoon. J. C. Hubbell is in Seattle, attending the funeral of a friend.