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Along sections of Wood, Washington, Poplar, Market, Fentress and West Blythe Streets, Paris, Henry County, Tennessee Coordinates 36°18′10″N 88°19′33″W / 36.30278°N 88.32583°W / 36.30278; -88
The Bank of Commerce and Trust Company Building is a historic building in Downtown Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.. It was built in 1929 for the bank of Commerce and Trust, later known as the National Bank of Commerce (now part of SunTrust Banks). [2] Its construction cost $2 million. [2]
In 1997, NCBC and Ukrop's started First Market Bank, which the two companies owned jointly, with branches in Ukrop's Super Markets. This marked the company's entry into Richmond, Virginia. [5] That same year, the company opened its first Wal-Mart branches. [1] At the end of the year, NCBC had $4.7 billion in assets and 128 branches, 109 in stores.
The corporation acquired Reliant Bank through a merger in 2014. [5] [7] By September 2015, it announced it would use the brandname of Reliant Bank to avoid confusion with a defunct Nashville-based bank named Commerce Union Bank which later merged with Bank of America. [8]
In May 1934, Commercial Bank & Trust of PA was established in the Latrobe office of the former Peoples National Bank. Today, the company still use this building as administrative headquarters and the main retail office. [9] In 2008, the Corporation entered into a Stock Purchase Agreement with the shareholders of Ridge Properties Inc. to ...
Community Trust Bancorp operates a commercial bank, Community Trust Bank, and a trust company, Community Trust and Investment Company of Lexington. The bank operates over 80 retail branches, most of which are located in eastern, north-eastern, central, and south-central Kentucky. As of 2023, the bank had total deposits of US$4 billion and a ...
Paris is a city in and the county seat of Henry County, Tennessee, United States. [6] As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 10,316. [7] A 70-foot (21 m) replica of the Eiffel Tower stands in the southern part of Paris.
The Battle of Paris ensued west of the city on 11 March 1862 and is said to have ended with Federals retreating eastward through the town with Confederates in pursuit. [1] On 1 April 1862, Company F of the Fifth Iowa Cavalry arrived in Paris, commanded by Captain William A. Haw. He writes in his report: [8]