National German American Bank (St Paul, MN)

Episode Information

Episode UID
294301165
Episode Type
Suspension β†’ Closure
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
29430 national
Charter Number
2943
Start Date
January 4, 1897
Location
St Paul, Minnesota (44.944, -93.093)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
b6340a0a23c10325

Response Measures

None

Description

Article 1 reports the bank closed its doors (1897) and Article 2 (1899) shows a receiver was later appointed.

Events (4)

1. May 9, 1883 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
2. January 4, 1897 Suspension
Cause Details
Article states the bank closed its doors without giving a specific cause; notes it had suspended and resumed not long ago.
Newspaper Excerpt
ST. PAUL, Minn. Jan. 4.β€”The National German-American bank closed its doors today.
Source
newspapers
3. September 29, 1899 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
National German-American Bank of St. Paul, Herman W. Phillips as receiver; ... the insolvency of the bank and the appointment of the plaintiff's as receivers.
Source
newspapers
4. November 27, 1912 Voluntary Liquidation
Source
historical_nic

Newspaper Articles (2)

Article from Jamestown Weekly Alert, January 7, 1897

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Article Text

ST. PAUL, Minn. Jan. 4.β€”The National German-American bank closed its doors today. It was capitalized at $1,000,000. J. W. Lusk is president and F. Weyerhaeuser is vice-president. This is the institution that suspended and resumed not long ago.


Article from The Saint Paul Globe, September 29, 1899

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Article Text

the Bases of the Cause of Action. The promissory notes given by William Dawson and his sons, William Dawson Jr. and Samuel E. Dawson, to the Bank of Minnesota, are again the subject of legal contention, Frank A. Seymour and W. H. Lightner, as receivers of the bank, having begun proceedings in the district court to establish a first lien upon all the property owned by the Dawsons. The defendants in the summons for relief, as it is designated, form a long list, as there are included all of the other corporations and persons who are known to have claims against the Dawson property. These defendants are as follows: Samuel E. Dawson, William Dawson, Mary F. Dawson, his wife, Alpheus B. Stickney, as assignee of William Dawson, insolvent; William Dawson Jr., Maria R. Dawson, his wife; Thomas L. Blood, as assignee of William Dawson Jr.; O. H. Arosin, as county treasurer; Allemannia bank, Allan Black, Helen E. Brown, Citizens' Savings Bank and Trust company, L. Bertram Cady, Michael Doran, Spencer E. Davis, F. E. Elmund, county treasurer; First National Bank of Detroit, Minn.; John W. S. Frost, Richard J. Hill, Jared How, Iowa Land company, limited, Edwin N. Lightner, trustee for Martha Lightner; Merchants' National Bank of St. Paul, Mechanics' National Bank of New York, Emma P. Matthews, as administratrix of the estate of George H. Matthews, deceased; National German-American Bank of St. Paul, Herman W. Phillips as receiver; Robert D. Stewart, Katherine S. Stewart, Margaret Schutte, Louis N. Scott, Rosa L. Schurmeier, as executrix of the estate of Gustave T. Schurmeier, deceased; M. H. Sullivan, as receiver of the Union Stock Yards bank, South St. Paul; enry Stein, St. Paul Title and Trust company., W. H. Yardley, as receiver of the Azotine Manufacturing company, and the county commissioners of Ramsey county Minnesota, and the Fort Dearborn National Bank. The summons, after setting forth the facts regarding the insolvency of the bank and the appointment of the plaintiff's as receivers, proceeds to relate that Feb. 6, 1896, Samuel E. Dawson and William Dawson made a promissory note to the bank for $10,000, and on the same date another note for $20,000; that on Aug. 18, 1896, Samuel E. Dawson, William Dawson and William Dawson Jr. made a note of $16,068.45; that on Nov. 1, 1896, the maker and another person made a note to the Bank of Minnesota of $1,500, upon which they subsequently paid $600, and on March 9, 1899, to secure the bank, assigned to plaintiffs the Dawson note of $16,068.45. The plaintiffs pray judgment that there is due them from the defendants, Samuel E. Dawson and William Dawson, $66,068.45, and from William Dawson Jr. $16,068.45, and that plaintiffs are entitled to a first lien upon all of the property owned by the defendants Samuel E. Dawson, William Dawson and William Dawson Jr.