United States National Bank (Centralia, WA)

Episode Information

Episode UID
873601377
Episode Type
Suspension โ†’ Closure
Bank Type
national
Bank ID
87360 national
Charter Number
8736
Start Date
September 21, 1914
Location
Centralia, Washington (46.716, -122.954)

Metadata

Model
gpt-5-mini (chosen from majority vote of a three-model LLM ensemble)
Short Digest
0dc744f1ec7f9910

Response Measures

None

Receivership Details

Depositor recovery rate
66.7%
Date receivership started
1914-09-21
Date receivership terminated
1922-03-31
OCC cause of failure
Fraud
Share of assets assessed as good
40.2%
Share of assets assessed as doubtful
34.3%
Share of assets assessed as worthless
25.4%

Events (5)

1. June 10, 1907 Chartered
Source
historical_nic
2. September 21, 1914 Receivership
Source
historical_nic
3. September 21, 1914 Receivership
Newspaper Excerpt
At the request of the board of directors, National Bank Examiner Mulit took charge of the two institutions.
Source
newspapers
4. September 21, 1914 Suspension
Cause
Bank Specific Adverse Info
Cause Details
Insufficient cash and overexposure to commercial paper and financing of affiliated mill and logging properties; examiners ordered suspension.
Newspaper Excerpt
The United States National bank with deposits of over $1,000,000 ... failed to open their doors today following an inspection of the institutions' books by Bank Examiner Lloyd L. Mulit.
Source
newspapers
5. September 23, 1914 Other
Newspaper Excerpt
Charles S. Gilchrist, first vice-president of the United States National Bank of Centralia, was ... sentenced to five years' imprisonment on a plea of guilty to charges of embezzlement.
Source
newspapers

Newspaper Articles (15)

Article from Daily Capital Journal, September 21, 1914

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

CENTRALIA BANKS FAIL FOR $1,250,000 Had Loaned Too Much Money to Themselves --- Tenino Bank, Also Fails Centralia, Wash., Sept. 21.-The United States National Bank with deposits of over $1,000,000 and the Union Loan & Thust Company, with deposits of over $250,000, failed to open their doors today following an inspection of the institutions' books by Bank Examiner Lloyd L. Mulit. The heaviest depositor in the banks was the city of Centralia, which had $90,000 on deposit. The closing of the institutions leaves the municipality with but $10,000 cash on hand from its spring tax receipts. The greatest factor in the closing of the doors of the two banks, according to George Dysart. one of the stockholdtrs, was over-confidence on the part of the bank officials in the handling of commercial paper, on which it was found impossible to realize when a financial stress came. It is said that the trouble is directly due to financing mill and logging properties in which the bank people were interested. United States Attorney Clay Allen and Marshal J. M. Boyles are in the city in connection with the closing of the banks, but their mission has not been announced. The closing caused no little excitement but the directors of both institutions assert they will turn over all of their private property and that depositors will be paid in full. The other two Centralia banks were prepared to withstand runs but none developed. The State Bank at Tenino, owned by the same interests as the two institutions which closed here, also failed to open its doors this morning. The failure of the Tenino bank, which is under the jurisdiction of the state bank examiner and not the federal authorities, was largely due, bank officials stated, to the fact that the bank had invested heavily in commercial paper similar to that held by the two local concerns.


Article from The Tacoma Times, September 21, 1914

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

TWO BANKS SUSPEND CENTRALIA, Sept. 21.-The United States National bank and the Union Trust company of Centralia closed their doors temporarily today. At the request of the obard of directors, National Bank Examiner Mulit took charge of the two institutions. The United States National had insufficient cash to transact business satisfactorily and for that reason suspension was ordered for readjustment. Since the Union Trust Co. carried its balances with the United States National It was necessary to include It in the suspension. It is generally understood here that the financial affairs of the two banks can be adjusted 80 that there will be no loss.


Article from Daily Capital Journal, September 23, 1914

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

BANK OFFICIAL IS GIVEN FIVE YEARS Charles S. Gilchrist, of Centralia Bank, Arrested Monday, Now in Prison Tacoma, Wash., Sept. 23.-Senteneed to five years' imprisonment on a plea of guilty to charges of embezzlement, Charles S. Gilchrist, first vice-president of the United States National Bank of Centralia, was today taken to McNeil's Island federal penitentiary to begin S serving his sentence. He was arrested Monday, following the closing of the rbank, by order of examiners and was n brought here for trial yesterday. Gilchrist's crime, as explained by George Dysart, a director of the defunct institution, consisted in taking in the money from the sale of about $15,n 000 worth of school bonds belonging to the estate of the late R. L. McCormick at of Tacoma and applying it to take up some worthless coal mine paper held by his bank. He is said to have made the transfer of funds because he knew the bank examiners were coming and he wanted to give his bank a good footing. He hoped to make another sale before it was necessary to settle for the McCormick bonds, but the governa ment examiners discovered the deal. There ere three counts in the inn, dictment returned by the local federal em grand jury, and Gilchrist could have 'm been sentenced to five years on each 11of these. Judge Cushman, bowever, or granting the request of Assistant District Attorney Fishburne, imposed the minimum sentence and allowed the la, counts to run concurrently.


Article from The Meridian Times, October 2, 1914

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

RECORD OF THE IMPORTANT EVENTS TOLD IN BRIEFEST MANNER POSSIBLE. Happenings That Are Making History -Information Gathered from All Quarters of the Globe and Given in a Few Lines. INTERMOUNTAIN. E. W. Swanbrough, a veteran automobile racer, was killed in a race at the Overland track at Denver. His machine plunged through a fence and a timber struck Swanbrough on the head. Unless the farmers east of Sandy, around Midvale, Crescent and Riverton, Utah, take drastic measures in fighting the hog cholera epidemic in those sections, the plague will spread throughout the state and become a serious menace, it is believed. Utah banks are not affected by the statement of the secretary of the treasury that he would withdraw federal deposits and federal emergency issued to banks which have high reserves and are charging high rates of interest, it was learned. None of the national banks in Utah made a request for emergency currency. Following a checking in by the United States bank examiner and the state bank examiner, the United States National bank at Centralia and the Union Loan & Trust company of Centralia, Wash., were forbidden to open their doors. The Twentieth infantry, which is now encamped at Fort Bliss, Texas, and at Fort Wingate, N. M., will return to Fort Douglas, Utah, when the troops are ordered away from the Mexican border. DOMESTIC. New rates filed by practically all the railways west of the Mississippi river and east of the Rocky mountains, withdrawing the privilege of shippers to concentrate into carload shipments at certain points less than carload shipments of butter, eggs, cheese and poultry, have been suspended by the interstate commerce commission until January 21, 1915. Theodore Roosevelt's youngest daughter, Ethel, wife of Dr. Richard Derby, will nurse the wounded in the hospitals of Paris and her husband will be a surgeon in the French city. William S. Evans, Philadelphia, f was elected president and San Francisco was chosen as the 1915 meeting place by the American Institute of Banking at the closing session of its twelfth annual convention at Dallas, Texas. a Thousands of customers attended the opening of Chicago's first municipal market on Thursday. Cabbage a sold at 2 cents, loose grapes, 5 cents, tomatoes, 2 cents, and noodles at 6 cents a pound. Radishes brought 0 3 cents and lettuce 5 cents a bunch. 7 Belated reports from missions esr tablished throughout the world by the Presbyterian church made public at New York tell of world-wide conditions unparalleled in the history of the church. There is no spot under I the sun, according to these reports, h where the European war has failed to strike a blow at commerce. 1The illness of Mrs. Helen Schuler at New Orleans was diagnosed as bubonic plague. This is the twentye eighth case reported since the malady was discovered June 27. The sovereign grand lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, in session at Atlantic City, N. J., reit fused to reduce the age limit of ade mission into the order. 0 Edward Teesdale, chief of staff of "General" Charles Kelley, who led an army of 1,400 unemployed men to Sacramento last winter, en route to Washington, D. C., has been released from the county jail at Sacramento after serving six months. S Two new cases of bubonic plague have been discovered at New Orleans. Henry A. Kolbe, high constable of Doylestown, Pa., was shot through the heart and killed by William Miller, 18 years old, as he was taking the young man to jail on a charge of having forged a check. Three men robbed the Baxter Springs, Kans., National bank of $8,000 and escaped. Hope that the United States would aid in bringing about the independence of their native land at the end of the great war was expressed in a telegram sent by the convention of Lithuanians at Chicago to President Wilson. The message also expressed a desire for a world-wide movement for general peace. Six persons were injured when a


Article from The Tacoma Times, February 5, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Receiver Enjoined CENTRALIA, Feb. 5.-Clinton A. Snowden, receiver for the United States National bank, has been enjoined from paying a dividend to the bank's depositors, unless there is money left after the city's claim for $54,000 has been paid.


Article from The Tacoma Times, February 10, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

BANK OFFICIALS TESTIFY Former officials of the United States National bank of Centralia testified before Judge Cushman yesterday in the case against Receiver Clinton A. Snowden to recover funds said to have been deposited after the bank had failed


Article from The Seattle Star, March 3, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

JU THE GIST Reuben Valenti, former Mexican official, killed himself at Guatemala city. It's likely Reuben would have saved himself this trouble by staying in Mexico. Attorney A. R. Tilden, Tacoma, appointed successor of Receiver Snowden of United States Nation. al Bank of Centralia.


Article from The Tacoma Times, August 4, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

WOMAN WINS $15,249 SUIT A decree, entitling Anna C. McCormick to recover $15,249.55 was issued yesterday by Judge Cushman in the federal district court in the case against A. R. Titlow, receiver for the United States National bank of Centralia.


Article from Washington Standard, December 10, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Trial of the suit recently brought by F. P. McKinney, receiver of the Olympia Bank & Trust company, against A. R. Titlow, receiver of the United States National bank of Centralia, to recover for the creditors of the local institution $55,000 held to its credit by the defunct Centralia institution which Receiver Titlow has refused to pay, will be started in the local superior court next Tuesday. Attorney P. M. Troy is representing Receiver McKinney.


Article from Washington Standard, December 31, 1915

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Lumber Mill to Be Sold. Notice of sale of the property of the Wabash Lumber & Shingle Co. of Tono, at public auction at the local courthouse January 8, is published among the "County Legal Notices" on another page. The mill has been in the hands of C. R. Skofield as receiver since the failure of the United States National bank of Centralia a year ago, while the legal phases of the receivership have been handled by J. H. Jahnke, a prominent Centralia attorney. The company's property is valuable and is expected to bring a good price at the sale.


Article from Washington Standard, January 21, 1916

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Will Not Appeal Bank Suit. F. P. McKinney, receiver of the defunct Olympia Bank & Trust company, stated this week that, because of the expense involved, he had decided not to appeal from the decision recently given by the federal district court at Tacoma, rejecting certain claims made by the receiver on assets of the failed United States National bank at Centralia. Stockholders of the local institution, who intervened in the receiver's suit, plan, however, to file a motion for rehearing in the district court.


Article from Washington Standard, March 31, 1916

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

Big Tono Mill Operating. The big mill of the Wabash Lumber & Shingle company at Tono, which was shut down when the United States National bank at Centralia was closed in September, 1914, and was recently sold at receiver's sale, resumed operations this week, employing 60 men and turning out 60,000 feet of lumber a day. A second logging road is to be built to supply the mill with timber recently bought from the Washington Union Coal company.


Article from Washington Standard, March 31, 1916

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

May Appeal Bank Suit. Arguments will be heard in the local superior court Friday on the application of F. P. McKinney, receiver of the Olympia Bank & Trust company, for permission to appeal to the federal circuit court at San Francisco the suit recently tried in the federal court at Tacoma against A. R. Titlow, receiver of the United States National bank of Centralia, which resulted in a partial victory for the local creditors. Most of the creditors of the bank favor the appeal, McKinney's application says. If it is taken and is successful, the bank will be able to pay its creditors in full.


Article from Daily Capital Journal, April 30, 1917

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

REFUSED TO HEAR APPEAL Washington, April 30.-The supreme court today refused to hear the appeal of the city 01 Centralia, Wn., seeking to recover $44,553.09 from A. R. Tilton, receiver of the United States National bank, Centralia.


Article from The Kennewick Courier-Reporter, June 23, 1921

Click image to open full size in new tab

Article Text

A dividend of 6 per cent has been declared by the receiver of the defunct United States National bank of Centralia, making 66 per cent so far paid to depositors. - -