Sovran Bank

Sovran Bank
Industry Financial Services
Fate Merged to form NationsBank
Successor Bank of America
Founded 1983
Defunct 1990
Headquarters Norfolk, Virginia, United States
Products Commercial banking
Retail banking

Sovran Bank was a US-based regional bank that operated in Virginia between 1983 and 1990, and was the leading subsidiary of Sovran Financial Corporation. It was itself a product of a merger between First & Merchants Bank of Richmond and Virginia National Bankshares of Norfolk, both of which could trace back their history to the 1860s. In 1990 it was merged with Citizens & Southern National Bank to form C&S/Sovran Corp., which in turn merged with NCNB to form NationsBank which became Bank of America in 1998.

History

First & Merchants Bank

Richmond had no bank after the federal government had revoked charters of banks whose loyalty was questioned. So eight days after Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox, the city's financial leaders started a new federally chartered bank after meeting with Hamilton G. Fant. First National Bank opened for business in the Customs House. Lee was one of the new bank's early customers.[1]

Later it merged with National Exchange Bank and moved to 10th and Main streets. Despite the financial crises of the 1890s First National Bank had the most assets of any Richmond bank at the turn of the century (1900).[2]

National Bank of Virginia merged with First National Sept. 1, 1912.[3]

Alfred Charles Bossom of Clinton & Russell in New York City designed Richmond's first skyscraper at 9th and Main streets, completed in downtown Richmond in 1913. BB&T later occupied the building, which is on the National Register of Historic Places.[4]

Merchants National Bank merged with First National February 27, 1926, at which time the bank became First & Merchants Bank.[3]

In 1981, The National Bank of Fairfax merged with First & Merchants Bank. The first bank in Fairfax, Virginia, it was organized in 1902. In 1931, the bank completed construction of a new building on the site of the former Willcoxon Tavern. The Moore and McCandlish law firm, which had offices on the second floor of the former bank building built in 1905, occupied the building until 1972. Community Bank of Northern Virginia, organized in 1992 in Sterling, moved into the building that same year.[5]

Banks which merged with First & Merchants Bank:

Virginia National Bank

Norfolk National Bank was organized in 1885 and became "not only the leading bank of Norfolk, but probably the leading bank of Virginia, having recently increased its capital to one million dollars, with a surplus of half a million."[6] Norfolk National Bank, Trust Company of Norfolk (1895) and National Bank of Commerce (1867) joined to become Norfolk National Bank of Commerce & Trusts, which joined with Virginia National Bank of Norfolk to become National Bank of Commerce of Norfolk October 9, 1933.[7]

People's National Bank was organized in 1903 in Roanoke.[8]

In 1920, Church Street Bank at Church and Freemason streets in Norfolk became American Exchange Bank, whose deposits were taken over in 1924 by Virginia National Bank.[9]

Cliff Cutchins, who in 1980 became chairman and CEO of Virginia National Bankshares Inc. and held the same positions at Sovran until his 1989 retirement, started out as a teller in 1947 at Vaughan & Co. Bankers in Franklin, Virginia. In 1960, he became president of the bank, which his grandfather had founded in 1886. In 1962, a merger with two Southampton County banks formed Tidewater Bank and Trust Co., which in turn became part of Virginia National Bank.[10][11]

Virginia National Bank's 24-story Norfolk headquarters opened in January 1968.[12][13]

Richmond's Virginia Trust Company could be chartered only after special legislation, since trust companies were new in the south and not all banks could have trust departments. The original board of directors included a number of tobacco company executives. James B. Pace, the first president, was a tobacco executive and the head of Planters National Bank (which became United Virginia Bank). The Virginia Trust Company building, also designed by Bossom, opened May 31, 1921, was an example of Neo-Classical Revival architecture, using granite, marble, bronze and mahogany, with a "gilded, coffered ceiling" and "a facade patterned directly after a Roman triumphal arch." Virginia Trust Company merged with Virginia National Bank in 1973.[14]

Banks which merged with what became Virginia National Bankshares, Inc.:

Growth of Sovran Bank

The name Sovran came from Glenn Monigle & Associates Inc. of Denver, Colorado.[16]

In 1985, Sovran announced a merger with Suburban Bancorp,[17] the fourth-largest bank in Maryland at the time. Silver Spring National Bank, the first bank in Silver Spring, Maryland, in 1910, moved in 1925 when the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad underpass was built. The name changed to Suburban National Bank in 1938 when the bank took over Takoma Park Bank.[18]

In 1986, Sovran took over D.C. National Bancorp, based in Bethesda, Maryland. In 1987, Sovran added Kentucky and Tennessee by buying 71-year-old Commerce Union of Nashville, Tennessee.[1]

Sovran Bank was the largest bank in Virginia and in the District of Columbia, and it had offices in Tennessee and Maryland. In September 1989, Sovran and Citizens & Southern of Atlanta announced plans for a stock-swap merger. The combined bank had $47 billion in assets, $34 billion in deposits and 976 branches in eight states. It was originally to be named Advantor Financial Corporation.[19][20] However, it was eventually called C&S/Sovran. The merged bank had dual headquarters in Atlanta and Norfolk.

Only two years later, C&S/Sovran was sent reeling by problem loans in the Washington/Northern Virginia market. Under the circumstances, it had little choice but to agree to merge with NCNB Corporation of Charlotte. Ironically, C&S had merged with Sovran to fend off a hostile takeover attempt by NCNB. The merged bank became NationsBank.

References

  1. 1 2 "Bank of America Corporation - Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on Bank of America Corporation". referenceforbusiness.com. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  2. "Federal, State and Local Historic Districts, National Park Service. Retrieved March 21, 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 Moody's Bank & Finance Manual, 1983, Vol. 1, p. 1830.
  4. "First National Bank Building". nps.gov. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  5. Johnson, William Page II (Winter 2004). "The Old National Bank of Fairfax Building" (PDF). The Fare Facs Gazette. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  6. Tyler, Lyon Gardiner, ed. (1907). Men of Mark in Virginia, Ideals of American Life; A Collection of Biographies of the Leading Men in the State. Men of Mark Publishing Company. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  7. 1 2 Moody's Bank & Finance Manual, 1971, p. 368.
  8. Jack, George S.; Jacobs, Edward Boyle (1912). History of Roanoke County. Stone. p. 189. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  9. "Virginia National Bank of Norfolk". Norfolk Public Library. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  10. Nutter, David (1995-04-06). "William H. Ruffner Medal". Virginia Tech Spectrum. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  11. "Manor Terrace named After Cutchins" (PDF). German Club Forum. November 1999. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  12. Cossitt, F.D. (1968-01-28). "Business, Art Make a Pretty Picture in New VNB Building". The Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  13. "The Virginia National Bank Headquarters Bldg". cardcow.com. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  14. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved 2009-04-30.
  15. Moody's Bank & Finance Manual, 1983, Vol. 1, p. 586.
  16. Jay McIntosh, "N.C. Banks' Merger Plan Starts More Takeover Talk," The Charlotte Observer, January 18, 1990.
  17. "Sovran in Accord With Suburban". The New York Times. Reuters. 1985-09-25. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  18. McCoy, Jerry A. (2004). "SilverSpring: Then & Again". Takoma Voice. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  19. "Sovran Reports Rise in Profits". The New York Times. The Associated Press. 1989-10-19. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
  20. "Fed Approves Sovran Merger". The New York Times. 1990-07-25. Retrieved 2009-04-23.
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