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The W. W. Hetherington House is a historic house in Atchison, Kansas. It was built in 1879 for Webster Wirt Hetherington, the second president of Atchison's Exchange National Bank, founded by his father William. [2] The house was designed in the Romanesque architectural style by Alfred Meier.
The A. J. Harwi House is a historic two-story house in Atchison, Kansas. It was built in 1886 for Alfred Jonathan Harwi, the founder of the A. J. Harwi Hardware and vice president of Atchison's Exchange National Bank. [2] His son Frank purchased the Francis and Harriet Baker House, also listed on the NRHP. Alfred Jonathan Harwi (1916)
as 1st National Bank of Huntsville; merged with two other banks in 1971 1856 Exchange Bank & Trust [11] United States United States: Founding date of 1/1/1856 comes from predecessor bank - First National Bank of Leavenworth, Kansas. Exchange was founded in Atchison, Kansas in 1857. 1857 Baraboo State Bank United States United States: 1857 Santander
The house was built in 1879 for Balie Payton Waggener, an attorney, and his wife, Emma L. Hetherington, whose father, William W. Hetherington, was the president of Atchison's Exchange National Bank. [2] Waggener was the general counsel of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. [2]
Chemical Bank & Trust Co. JPMorgan Chase: 1952 Equitable Trust Company: Security Trust Company: Equitable Security Trust Company [16] PNC Financial Services: 1952 County Trust Company of White Plains, N.Y. Mount Vernon Trust Company: County Trust Company [17] BNY Mellon: 1954 Chemical Bank & Trust Co. Corn Exchange Bank & Trust Co. Chemical ...
Hilaria Baldwin is sharing how her husband Alec Baldwin's criminal trial impacted their family.. In the Feb. 23 premiere of their new TLC reality show The Baldwins, Hilaria and Alec have a candid ...
Between 1923 and 1925, together with a number of other New York banks, it held a small stake in the Connecticut-chartered Bank of Central and South America. In 1929, it was renamed the Corn Exchange Bank and Trust Company. In 1954, it merged with Chemical Bank and the combined entity took the name Chemical Corn Exchange Bank.
In 1952, Girard Trust Company acquired The Corn Exchange Bank's Philadelphia branches, and renamed itself Girard Trust Corn Exchange Bank. From 1964 to 1971, the bank was known as Girard Trust Bank, later Girard Bank.