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Huntington Plaza, formerly the Huntington Trust Building, is an office building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio.It is owned by Huntington Bancshares, and is part of the Huntington Center complex, which also contains the Huntington Center skyscraper, the Huntington National Bank Building, and DoubleTree Hotel Guest Suites Columbus.
In 1980, Farmers & Merchants Bank, Milford Center and The First National Bank of Burton merged with Huntington Bancshares. [14] In 1981, the bank acquired Alexandria Bank Company and renamed it The Huntington State Bank, with a loan production office opening in Cincinnati. In 1982, the bank merged with the Reeves Banking and Trust Company. [14]
The McCoy Center [2] is an office building located in Columbus, Ohio.The building was acquired by JPMorgan Chase & Co. with its 2004 merger with Bank One Corporation.Formally known as the Corporate Center Columbus (or more often and colloquially "Polaris"), the building was renamed after the merger to honor the McCoy family, who led the Columbus-based Bank One for three generations.
If you're traveling to another country, it's a good idea to exchange the United States dollars you plan to spend for some of the local currency. If you've never had to exchange currency before, the...
Huntington Bank's offices moved there from their old building nearby, at the southwest corner of Broad and High, in 1916. In 1925, with limited space for the quickly-growing bank, it built around the Harrison Building, incorporating it into the significantly larger Huntington National Bank Building.
(Reuters) -Major banks and business groups sued the Federal Reserve on Tuesday, alleging the U.S. central bank's annual "stress tests" of Wall Street firms violate the law. The lawsuit filed in U ...
The Preston Centre is located near Capitol Square in Downtown Columbus, on East Broad Street.It is the fifteenth-tallest building in Columbus, measuring 317 feet (97 m) tall.
The First Banc Group, Inc. was formed in 1968 as a holding company for City National Bank and was used as a vehicle to acquire other banks. As Ohio began to gradually relax its very restrictive Great Depression era banking laws that had severely restricted bank branching and ownership, City National Bank, through its First Banc Group parent, started to purchase banks outside of its home county.