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68 Sentences With "building and loan association"

How to use building and loan association in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "building and loan association" and check conjugation/comparative form for "building and loan association". Mastering all the usages of "building and loan association" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Jimmy Stewart as George Bailey, head of the local building and loan association, explains the fragility of banking as an enterprise.
In 1932, Walter Davis, Echols's grandfather and the owner of the largest building-and-loan association in central Colorado, disappeared, leaving behind $1.25 million in debt (some twenty-two million in today's dollars).
The building later housed the Assumption Building and Loan Association and the law offices of George J. LaCharite. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 16, 1984.
After the war, he engaged in the real estate and insurance business in Sumter, South Carolina from 1919 to 1945, and served as secretary of a building and loan association from 1923 to 1945.
Stephens also served as president of the Stephens National Bank; president of the Stephens-Hammond Company; and vice-president of the Nebraska State Building and Loan Association. He died in Fremont, Nebraska on January 13, 1939 and his remains were cremated.
Henderson was president of the Bank of West Tampa when it was founded in late 1905, an expansion of the Drew-Henderson-Harris bank. He was also president of the West Tampa Improvement Co., and the Tampa Building and Loan Association.
Wüstenrot Highrise Building The Wüstenrot Tower (German: Wüstenrot-Hochhaus ) is the central office building of GdF Wüstenrot, a German building and loan association, in Ludwigsburg. It was designed by architect Prof. Ludwig Kresse in Stuttgart. The address of the 72 metres (236 ft.
1913: Bank receives its state charter, becoming Busey State Bank. 1922: Trust powers are granted to the Shelby Loan & Trust Company in Shelbyville, Illinois. Pulaski Building and Loan Association opens to assist the St. Louis community with saving money and purchasing homes.
In addition, Lukens served as president of Pasadena Mutual Building and Loan Association, board member of two schools which were the Los Angeles State Normal School (college) and California Institute of Technology, and he was a member of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.
Klecka represented Czech voters and ran the Slavic Building and Loan Association. He also performed as acting mayor of Baltimore for a time in 1931. Klecka was born on 2 February 1878. His father Josef Klečka (from Nehodiv) was a prominent figure in Baltimore.
He founded the Norwalk Building and Loan Association in 1889. He co-founded the South Norwalk Trust Company. He was president in the 1930s before it was merged with City Trust in the 1960s. He was an editor and proprietor of the Daily Sentinel.
TCF branch footprint. Top: United States midwest, Lower Left: Arizona & Lower Right: Colorado. TCF Bank began business in 1923 as Twin City Building and Loan Association. It received a federal charter in 1936 and changed its name to Twin City Federal Savings and Loan Association.
On May 14, 2012, Park Sterling Corp. announced it was buying Citizens South Banking Corp. of Gastonia, North Carolina in a deal valued at $77.4 million. Citizens South began as Gastonia Mutual Building and Loan Association in 1904 and was "Gaston County's oldest community bank".
In 1872 he was elected mayor of Alton, and served four terms. He was originator and became president of the Building and Loan Association in Alton in 1883. Furthermore, Pfeiffenberger was one of the organizers and chairman of the board of directors of Citizens National Bank.
Tindley was acquainted with politicians and business leaders in Philadelphia, including John Wanamaker. He worked with business leaders to assist his members in finding jobs. He also encouraged members to start their own businesses and purchase homes. The church formed the East Calvary Building and Loan Association to offer mortgages.
After World War II, the American housing market expanded tremendously, especially in California. In 1947, Ahmanson purchased the Home Building and Loan Association, a savings and loan association with assets of less than $1 million, for $162,000. Alternate Link via ProQuest. Home Savings then became the cornerstone of H.F. Ahmanson & Company.
TCF Financial Corporation began business in 1923 as Twin City Building and Loan Association. In 1936, it was given a federal charter and renamed as Twin City Federal Savings and Loan Association. In 1986, it became a public company. In 1995, TCF increased its Michigan presence by acquiring the Great Lakes National Bank.
He worked for the Gut- Wiczynski Realty Firm and helped started the Capitol Building and Loan Association. In 1931, he served in the Wisconsin State Assembly as a Republican.'Wisconsin Blue Book 1931,' Biographical Sketch of Ben C. Wiczynski, pg. 231 He retired from Milwaukee Public Schools after being a teacher and school principal.
From this point P.A.'s trajectory upward was virtually uninterrupted, and he became the most important figure in Rockford's industrial, commercial, and civic development for the next 31 years. Altogether, P.A. would come to own stock in fifty Rockford-based companies. He was one of the founders of the Swedish Building and Loan Association. Peterson served as president of Sundstrand Corporation.
TCF Financial Corporation began business in 1923 as Twin City Building and Loan Association. In 1936 it was given a federal charter and renamed as Twin City Federal Savings and Loan Association. The company went public in 1986 chartered under the name TCF Banking and Savings, F.A. (TCF Bank). A year later, it reorganized as a holding company, TCF Financial Corporation.
He was elected to the Cape May City Council in 1895 and was its president, serving a three-year term. His brother-in-law was city solicitor J. Spicer Leaming. In 1899, he became the city treasurer, and he also served as director of the Mechanics and Laborer's Building and Loan Association. Leaming later served as postmaster of Cape May.
Bryant Baxter Newcomb (August 22, 1867 – February 1, 1945) was an American Republican Party politician, who served as the Mayor of Long Branch, New Jersey and served as the Director of the Monmouth County Board of Chosen Freeholders. He was director of the Long Branch Building and Loan Association. He was the business manager for the Monmouth County Publishing Company that published the Daily Record.
In 1892, Hoff formed the Tucson Grocery Company with partners L.G. Radulovich and A.V Grossetta. Five years later he became a founder of the Tucson Hardware Company. In this role he advertised himself as "Hoff of Tucson". His other business interests included being organizer and secretary of the Citizen's Building and Loan Association, secretary of the Tucson Board of Trade, and various mining interests.
One of his many side jobs involved editing and publishing the Wilmington Chronicle. He worked with the Chronicle for the fifteen years he stayed in Wilmington. He left the job at the Chronicle when he moved to Guilford County, leading to the closure of the publication. He was also register of deeds in Wilmington for a period of time, and organized the Perpetual Building and Loan Association.
Marquette Savings Bank is a bank headquartered in Erie, Pennsylvania, United States. It was established in 1908 by a consortium of 38 local businessman, under the name of Marquette Building and Loan Association. Marketed as "Erie's only hometown bank," Marquette has maintained its local appeal, despite now having 12 branches in the region. Marquette was honored by the global publication, The Economist in the Nov.
DeReef led the Milwaukee chapter of the NAACP. In Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944, author J. Clay Smith, Jr., describes DeReef as "a progressive force in the community" who "fought to advance the rights of blacks in Milwaukee." He served as president of the Columbia Building and Loan Association in Milwaukee and was a director of the Milwaukee Urban League. He lived at 774 Hubbard Street.
In 1910 he founded the Bergenfield Building and Loan Association and in 1919 the National Bank and Trust Company. He was a director of the Palisades Trust company until he resigned in 1940, because of his position as Chairman of the Board of the Bergenfield National Bank. He died on June 2, 1941 in Haworth, New Jersey, he was 77 years old. He was buried at the South Schraalenburgh Church cemetery.
James Murrill also became the President of Murrill and Keizer Company, which was a very profitable business for many years. It was very profitable so he gave the company to his employees whom he had much respect for. Many of these employees had worked for the company for over 50 years. Murrill was the president of the Lafayette Perpetual Building and Loan Association for forty years until his death in 1937.
Banks, United Daughters of the Confederacy, p. 87; Allardice, pp. 86-7. In 1871 Fiser was elected president of the Confederate Historical and Relief Association based in Memphis, and at the time of his death he was serving as president of the Office Security Building and Loan Association. Fiser died of dysentery in 1876, and his remains were buried in the Chapel Hill section of the Elmwood Cemetery located in Memphis.
From the 1920s to the 1930s Buff began painting murals. These were murals of architecture of buildings and large spaces. During this time some of the murals he produces were the Southern California Edison Company building in Los Angeles, the First National Bank of Phoenix, the William Penn Hotel in Whittier, and the Guarantee Building and Loan Association in Los Angeles. In the 1930s, Buff painted several lithographs, copies of other paintings.
For example, he had thousands of homes built in Tacony for his workmen. Funds to purchase these homes were made available through a building and loan association set up by the Disston firm. Mr. Disston was ready to grant any assistance needed to see to it that his workers could purchase a home, even if advances needed to be made. Other examples of Henry Disston's caring influence on the community was evident in everyday life.
He lost a chance for a third term when he was defeated by Republican Councilman William C. Farr, who also was endorsed by the Democrats and the Independent Parties in a highly contested election. A year after the election, Newman switched to the Democratic Party. Newman, a banker, was president of the Mechanics Trust Fund and the Bayonne Mutual Building and Loan Association. Newman died from Bright's Disease in his home on October 29, 1901.
1987: Busey First National Bank, Champaign County Bank & Trust and City Bank merges to form Busey Bank, a state chartered bank. 1991: Pulaski Building and Loan Association renamed to Pulaski Bank- reflecting their broad array of consumer financial services. 1993: Busey Bank celebrates its 125th Anniversary. With assets of $675 million and stockholders’ equity in excess of $53 million, Busey Bank is now one of the largest financial institutions headquartered in East Central Illinois.
In 1886, Terry joined the Knights of Labor and was chosen by those working with him to represent them to settle the strikes in Chicago that year. On March 29, 1886 he was elected judge-advocate of the Charter Oak Assembly of the Knights. At this time he was the only black man in the organization. That same year, 1886, he was elected director of the Central Park Building and Loan Association.
In 1926, the bank was incorporated as the Washington Rock Building and Loan Association. Sixteen years later, its name changed to Investors Savings and Loan Association. Through mergers, acquisitions, and internal expansion, the bank grew and eventually changed its name to Investors Savings Bank. In 1997, Investors changed from a New Jersey-chartered mutual savings bank to a New Jersey-chartered stock savings bank, and reorganized as a two-tiered holding company.
Magyar Bank is a bank based in New Brunswick, New Jersey with branches in Central Jersey.Magyar Bancorp The New York Times accessed 2 November 2015 The bank was founded in 1922 as the Magyar Building and Loan Association by a group of Hungarian immigrants and businessmen in New Brunswick, many of whom had settled in the city's Fifth Ward. ("Magyar" is Hungarian for the word Hungarian). In 1954, its charter was amended and the name changed to Magyar Savings & Loan Association.
Birkett served on the school board from 1867 to 1871 and was an alderman on Ottawa City Council from 1873 to 1878.Prominent men of Canada: a collection of persons distinguished ..., GM Adam (1892) During his term as mayor, electric streetcars were introduced in Ottawa. In 1871, he married Mary Gallagher; after her death, he married Henrietta Gallagher, her stepsister, in 1904. Birkett also served as president of the advisory board of the Dominion Building and Loan Association at Ottawa.
In Denver he entered the stock and bond business, and in 1920 founded the Bankers Building and Loan Association, and served as its first president and treasurer. He was active in many civic and religious organizations. He was director of the Denver Chamber of Commerce, which recognized him as Denver’s “most valuable citizen” in 1925. He was a member of Temple Emanuel, president of the Central Jewish Aid Society, and president of the Denver Lodge of the Independent Order of B'nai B'rith.
He served as Director of the Board from 1921 through 1933. In the early 1920s, he became president and director of the Long Branch Building and Loan Association, where he worked for 20 years. Bryant B. Newcomb's tenure on the Board of Freeholders coincided with the increased use of the automobile during the 1920s, and millions of dollars were invested in the county's infrastructure during this time. Newcomb was chairman of the roads committee which supervised construction of $2 million worth of county roads.
In January 1868 Poock was appointed to serve as a secretary of Dayton Building Association. After organization's closure in 1873, Poock was elected to serve as a secretary of the Concordia Building and Loan Association, serving in this capacity until April 1875. In April 1873 Poock and partners have established Germania Building Association where he served as secretary and a treasurer. In February 1883 Poock was appointed to serve as a director of Dayton Savings Bank, as well as being one of the bank's major stockholders.
It was established in 1913 as the Industrial Savings Bank by John Whitelaw Lewis and originally operated out of the Laborers' Building and Loan Association building designed by William Sidney Pittman. An Industrial Bank building on U Street was designed by Isaiah Hatton a few years later. The bank closed in 1932 but was reorganized and reopened by Howard University alumnus Jesse Mitchell in 1934. By 1947 the bank had $6 million in assets from over 14,000 depositors, more than 20% of whom were white.
According to Stearns, when he began as a judge, "there was not a court-house in the district. We held court where we could— in churches, in stores, school- houses, and sometimes in places not quite so respected." Alternate link at . Stearns also served as a regent of the University of Minnesota (1890–1895), president and treasurer of the Lakeside Land company, director in the West Duluth Land company, the Duluth Electric Light and Power company, the Masonic Temple association, the Duluth Building and Loan association and the Duluth Union National bank.
The Jeffery Manufacturing Company flourished in Milo-Grogan and provided many services for its employees. J.A. Jeffery, owner of Jeffery Manufacturing, established one of the earliest industrial infirmaries in 1889 and a cooperative store in 1904 in the factory block. In 1912, Jeffery also set up an employee cafeteria and a Building and Loan Association that helped financially assist its employees in building their homes. The employee population was quickly growing in Milo- Grogan and Columbus could not keep up with its police force, water, electricity, and fire services, causing an annexation from the city.
Two newspapers, the Chariton Courier and Keytesville Signal, served the community. Business and industry at that time consisted of Keytesville Roller Mill, a large water-powered grist mill on Muscle Fork Creek, two banks, a building and loan association, two hotels, a distillery, general mercantiles, restaurants, and sundry other businesses. Due to its location north of the Wabash Railroad line, the merchants of Keytesville needed a reliable and convenient way to attract potential customers. This led, in 1889, to the construction of a streetcar line, something one would only expect in much larger cities.
The Moore–Lindsay House was built starting in 1899 by William and Agnes Moore. The couple spent $5,000 to build their "Princess Anne" style home, at a time when most new houses in the Oklahoma Territory were being built for about $400. The Moores, who had moved from St. Joseph, Missouri, invested in real estate and, in 1899, was named president of the Norman Building and Loan Association. In 1907, the year in which the Oklahoma Territory became the state of Oklahoma, the Moores moved to Oklahoma City.
Norton was very involved in his community. He was a founder and charter member of the Hillcrest Country Club and served as a director of the Prudential Building and Loan Association. He was also a proud upholder of his faith, serving as president of the Board of Trustees of Congregation B'nai B'rith, the Jewish Men's Professional Club of Los Angeles, Nathan Straus Palestine Society, and Jewish Consumption Relief,. In addition, he was a director of the Federation of Jewish Welfare Organizations, the Jewish Welfare Fund, and Wilshire Boulevard Temple.
Godfrey served as president of the New Jersey Bankers' Association in 1906 and 1907. He has the distinction of being one of the very few in New Jersey who have served as Secretary of a local Building and Loan Association continuously for a period of 25 years. Additionally, he took a deep interest in school matters and was a member of the Board of Education for 12 years. Godfrey, a Republican, represented Atlantic County in the New Jersey General Assembly for three terms and was appointed Speaker of the House in 1915.
After a severe bout with influenza, Durham's doctors advised him to abandon the practice of law. In 1890, he moved to Lexington, Kentucky and engaged in banking. He helped organize the Central Bank of Lexington and served as the bank's cashier and also served as the treasurer of the Blue Grass Building and Loan Association. Remaining interested in politics, he was among the speakers at a May 14, 1894 rally to condemn the renomination of Congressman William Campbell Preston Breckinridge because of his admission, under oath, of having an extramarital affair.
After a year working as an agent for a building and loan association and a San Francisco law firm, Fong married fellow Stanford student Emma Howse in 1897, travelling to Denver, Colorado, to register the marriage, it being the only state where mixed marriages were legal at the time. Having decided business was not for him, he completed another three years' science studies at the University of California, Berkeley, obtaining is master's degree, all the while acting as pastor of the Oakland Chinese M. E. Mission at this time.
Throughout its history, Capitol Federal has maintained its commitment to the American dream of homeownership and dedication to its corporate philosophy of Safety in Savings, Sound Lending Policies, Quality Customer Service and Commitment to Community. Throughout its over 120-year history, Capitol Federal has been headquartered in Topeka, KS. Highlights September 16, 1893 A group of 15 men gathered for the first time to form a savings and loan. July, 1899 The association changed its name to the Capitol Building and Loan Association. 1926 Henry A. Bubb was hired.
He was a director and vice-president of the Prudential Trust Company; a director of the Prudential State Bank; and vice-president and a director of the Capitol Building and Loan Association, all of Topeka. He was an honorary life member of the Kansas State Horticultural Society, and an honorary member of the Kansas State Editorial Association, and was a director of the Kansas State Historical Society. In June, 1909, he was honored with the degree of A. M. from Baker University, and the following November he received the degree of LL. D. from the Kansas State Agricultural College.
During his time in office, Strauss oversaw construction of a city hall, library, firehouse, a building and loan association, an infirmary, and graded roads. During Strauss' term, General George Crook led troops into Mexico in pursuit of Geronimo. On June 19, 1883, following Apache leader's promise to surrender, Strauss organized a citywide celebration to honor Crook. Near the end of his term, Strauss encountered some legal issues. On June 6, 1884, Strauss and several members of the city council were indicted on charges of malfeasance in office for allegedly issuing a $5,000 promissory note without proper authorization.
A business section soon began to appear between Middlesex Avenue and the railroad tracks, and commercial and service establishments gradually began to assume a more modern aspect (the typical 18th century tavern, for example, was replaced by the equally typical 19th century hotel). The second half of the 19th century was a period of social, cultural and religious diversification in Metuchen. Between 1859 and 1866 the Reformed Church was organized, the first Catholic mass was celebrated and St. Luke's Episcopal Church was founded. In 1870 both the Building and Loan Association and the library opened, the same year that Raritan Township was incorporated.
His nephew is now the chairman of CL Financial. According to some sources, Dupey was known for his personal business mission statement "Give a man value, give a man service and he will support you." In the 1960s, Cyril Dupey became president of the Cooperative Bank of Trinidad and Tobago, president of the Building and Loan Association of Trinidad and Tobago, and a board member of E.B. Gibb, a trading company. In 1988, Dupey was awarded the Trinity Cross, the highest national award of Trinidad and Tobago, for his contributions to local business and community development.
He worked as both a Customs Service agent and as a postal service agent under President Ulysses S. Grant's abolitionist Postmaster General John Creswell. He was the first known African American postal inspector, serving from 1870 until 1879, after which he returned to operate a coal yard in Baltimore. "Myer's also organized and became President of the Maryland Colored State Industrial Fair Association, the Colored Business Men's Association of Baltimore, the Colored Building and Loan Association, and the Aged Ministers Home of the A.M.E. Church". The Frederick Douglass - Isaac Myers Maritime Park in Baltimore is named after Myers.
Denver Public Library - Park Hill Branch (1920) was designed by Merrill H. and Burnham F. Hoyt and is designated a Denver Landmark. Merrill H Hoyt was an active and respected member of Denver design, business and cultural community. He served as a President and vice president of the Colorado Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, the secretary of the Allied Architects Association who designed the City and County Building of Denver, and vice president of the Denver Building and Loan Association. He was active in his Masonic Lodge, the Denver Art Museum, Motor Club of Colorado, Issac Walton League, Lakewood Country Club and a member of the Denver Athletic Club.
Bank of Greene County is a federally-chartered savings bank headquartered in Catskill, NY with 15 branches located in the Hudson Valley counties of Greene, Columbia, Albany, and Ulster CountiesGreene County Bancorp 2016 Annual Report, p. 2 The bank was initially founded on January 22, 1889 as the Building & Loan Association of Catskill.Hilscher, Wide Awake Men, p. 1. Thomas E. Ferrier, Catskill Town Supervisor and owner of a brickyard and knitting mill, was elected as the Association’s first President.Hilscher, Wide Awake Men, p. 3-4. In 1911, the Building and Loan Association of Catskill changed its name to the Catskill Savings & Loan Association (CS&LA;), and began accepting savings deposits.
Metcalf married Mary Eliza Crozier of Wellington, Ohio who died in 1914; he married Alice L. Bullene on January 8, 1916. After being honorably discharged, he served as the president of the Douglas County Building and Loan Association, president of the Lawrence National Bank, and chairman of the board of the Federal Home Loan Bank in Topeka, Kansas. He also was the United States pension agent in Topeka for eight years and commissioner of pensions in Washington, D.C. for four months, after which he resigned. He was state senator for four years and was a member of the Lawrence, Kansas school board for seventeen years.
He graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, in 1864, at Yale in 1868, and in 1883 was admitted to the New York bar. From 1868 to 1891, he was engaged in newspaper work, during part of that time being on the staff of the New York Tribune, and was managing editor of the Evening Post, 1891–1900, resigning to devote himself to literary work. He was president of the Hackensack Mutual Building and Loan Association from its organization in 1887 and was president of the People's National Bank of Hackensack, New Jersey, from its organization in 1903 to 1916. He was president of the First National Bank of Ridgefield Park, New Jersey, from its organization in 1910 to 1913.
Klecka represented Czech voters and ran the Slavic Building and Loan Association. During World War I (1914-1918), most of Baltimore's garment industry workers were still of Bohemian, Lithuanian, and Russian descent, the majority of whom were Jewish and many of whom were young women. When the independence of Czechoslovakia was declared on October 18, 1918, the Czech and Slovak communities in Baltimore joined in the celebrations and for many years held annual festivities and parades commemorating Czechoslovakia's Independence Day. Many working-class Central and Eastern European immigrants, including Czechs, settled in the Curtis Bay neighborhood in the late 1800s and early 1900s, where many attended the St. Athanasius Roman Catholic Church.
Patrie was Manager of the Dolgeville Electric Light and Power Company from 1898 to 1905, and during this time was also appointed as Receiver of the Dolgeville Telephone Company and the Dolgeville Savings Building and Loan Association. In 1905, he began to work for the Dolgeville Felt Shoe Company, and became Secretary and Treasurer of this company in 1907. Later he was also Vice President of the First National Bank of Dolgeville, and a director of several other companies. He was at times a Trustee, and President, of the Village of Dolgeville. Patrie was a member of the New York State Senate (35th D.) from 1929 until his death in 1935, sitting in the 152nd, 153rd, 154th, 155th, 156th, 157th and 158th New York State Legislatures.
His success at creating and finding household uses for these compounds made Wells, Richardson one of the country's leading producers of them, and Van Patten became wealthy as a result.Vermont Historical Society, Annual Meeting Proceedings, 1918, page 292 Van Patten was President of the Champlain Manufacturing Company, which produced blinds, doors and sashes. He was also President of Burlington's Malted Cereals Company and the Burlington Building and Loan Association, as well as a Director of the Queen City Cotton Company. Charles S. Parke, Augustine B. Kellogg, editors, The Roller Mill, Volume 17, 1898, page 612John William Leonard, Albert Nelson Marquis, editors, Who's who in America, Volume 7, 1913, page 2154 He was also active in the YMCA, and served as its national president from 1882 to 1889.
He began his career in the railroad business, surveying first in the western United States the rail bed that became the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe. He also surveyed a small spur off the Richmond and Danville line to Athens, Georgia. In 1875, Hurt moved to Atlanta, where he organized the Atlanta Building and Loan Association, which he ran for thirty-two years. He also co-founded the Trust Company of Georgia—now part of Suntrust—and, starting in 1895, was its president for nine years. In 1882, he organized the East Atlanta Land Company, where he designed and developed Inman Park, a residential area connected to the city center by his Atlanta and Edgewood Street Railway Company, which opened along Edgewood Avenue in 1886.
After the war, he focused on the production of ladies' and children's shoes. In 1873, to avoid trouble with labor unions, Merriam moved his company to Newton, in northwestern New Jersey. Merriam was always held in high esteem by his employees, establishing a building and loan association to provide mortgages to his workers, and served on the boards of the First Presbyterian Church of Newton and the Merchant's National Bank. In 1892, to celebrate his 64th birthday, Merriam "distributed ten thousand dollars among those in his employ as a testimonial of his appreciation of their faithful performance of duty." Gravestone of Henry W. Merriam and his wife Frances Merriam in Newton Cemetery in Newton, New Jersey Merriam died on 26 October 1900 in Newton, New Jersey and was buried in Newton Cemetery.
Jones was the National Attorney General of the Mosaic Templars of America, an organization founded by John E. Bush and Chester W. Keatts, was, at the time, one of the largest African-American fraternal organizations in the nation, and one of the largest black-owned business enterprises. The organization provided burial and life insurance to members; operated a building and loan association, a newspaper, a nursing school, and a hospital; and offered other social programs to the community. Its international headquarters were located in Little Rock, Arkansas. Jones also served as the attorney, counselor, and legal adviser for several other African-American fraternal organizations, including the International Order of Twelve and Knights and Daughters of Tabor, which also had its headquarters in Arkansas, a few blocks from the Mosaic Templars.
Joined by R. Hawkins, they secured a charter from the North Carolina General Assembly to incorporate the Mechanics and Farmers Bank on February 25, 1907. The bank's incorporators and stockholders held their first meeting on July 29 and elected Fitzgerald, Merrick and Pearson president, vice-president, and cashier of the bank, respectively. The Mechanics and Farmers Bank began operations on August 1, 1908, serving the public out of the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Association's headquarters in Hayti, the black business district in Durham. White managers from other institutions frequented Mechanics and Farmers Bank during its first week of operations to assist its employees. After North Carolina Mutual opened a new headquarters on West Parrish Street on December 17, 1921, the bank moved its offices to the first floor of that building, sharing the space with the Mutual Building and Loan Association.
Brownell received a master of arts degree from UVM in 1873.Hiram Carleton, editor, Genealogical and Family History of the State of Vermont, Volume 2, 1903, pages 219 to 221 Brownell became a lawyer in Burlington. He was also active in local businesses, including serving on the board of directors of Burlington's electric street railway, board of directors member of the Burlington Building and Loan Association, Vice President of the city's Home Savings Bank, and President of the Burlington Mutual Fire Insurance Company.A.M. Best Company, Best's Insurance Reports, issue 9, 1909, page 310Jacob G. Ullery, editor, Men of Vermont Illustrated, 1894, page 47Case, Lockwood & Brainerd Printing (Hartford), The Annual Cyclopedia of Insurance in the United States, 1898, page 72 A Republican, he was Burlington's Grand Juror (municipal court prosecutor) for two years, and State's Attorney of Chittenden County from 1884 to 1886. He served as Assistant Secretary of the Vermont Senate from 1874 to 1880, and Senate Secretary from 1880 to 1890.
1938 Capitol Building and Loan Association changed its name to Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association. In difficult times, the association stood at $6 million in total assets, half of what it had been prior to the Crash of 1929. Although these were challenging times, the association came out stronger, leading to an era of success. 1941 Capitol Federal board of directors named Henry A. Bubb as president of the association. 1943 The association became “the largest federally insured association in the state.” 1950 Assets grew to more than $19 million; and the first branch office in Kansas was opened at 1201 Topeka Boulevard in Topeka. 1958 Assets reached $100 million. March 1959 John C. Dicus joined the association 1960 Capitol Federal installed its first "computer" - a Univac "tab" machine - in the Home Office at 6th and Kansas in Topeka. December 9, 1961 Capitol Federal's new Home Office opened at 700 South Kansas Avenue in Topeka on December 9, 1961.

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