In 1917 the Columbia Bank signs still flank the staircase, but a "To Let" notice tells of its move -- photo NYPL Collection |
In February 1864, with a capital of $1 million, the Ninth
National Bank was organized. The new
institution, which opened its offices at No. 363 Broadway, was immediately
successful. “From the first it had the
confidence of a very important share of the business community,” reported The
New York Times nearly three decades later, “and its prospects were bright form
the beginning…In the halcyon days of national banks it piled up its surplus and
dividends at a rapid rate.”
Among the employees was John T. Hill, the first paying
teller. Hill’s exemplary performance was
noticed. He was a young man who would go
places within the bank.
By 1870 the bank’s growth and reputation required a new
building. Two lots were acquired a block north on
Broadway at Nos. 407 and 409 between Walker and Lispenard Streets. A grand stone building was erected in the
highly-popular French Second Empire style.
It would resemble, in a much scaled-down version, the mammoth City Hall
Post Office which was just being planned.
Accessed by a set of wide stairs, the bank rose four stories
to a fish-scale tiled mansard roof. Here
ornate dormers, a stone balustrade, bulbous finials and a handsome cap provided
echoes of a Parisian boulevard for moneyed New Yorkers. Despite the paired Corinthian columns that
upheld the cornices of each floor, the vermiculated bands on the flanking piers
and the graceful arcades flanking the Palladio-inspired center window of the
fourth floor, The Times was tepid in its assessment. In describing the offices it said “They are
commodious, but by no means pretentious as bank quarters go.”
The bank was near the dry goods district; however it drew
its depositors from various businesses, earning its reputation as a “commercial”
bank. The directors sought, above all
else, to maintain a conservative character, eschewing cheap marketing .
The Times would note “It has not been one of the banks which has
heralded its business to the world. It
has not indulged in artistic calendars, memorandum books, and circulars. Its constituents have been well-to-do
businessmen, and the bank has maintained a character in consonance with theirs.”
By now the young teller John Hill had been promoted to
cashier.
Offices in the building were leased to the National Revenue
Reform Association, one of several reform groups that sought to overthrow the
corrupt Tammany Hall. The New York
Tribune reported on September 6, 1871 that “two or three Reform Associations,
led by prominent and active citizens of unquestioned character and professional
standing, also gave the ‘Ring’ much uneasiness, and these having now combined
are prepared to give it a great deal more.”
The National Revenue Reform Association offered the use of its rooms as
a headquarters for the anti-Tammany movement, although the offer was politely declined.
In 1874 Thomas A. Vyse resigned from the presidency of the
Ninth National Bank, focusing his energies on the firm of Vyse & Co. (It was around this time that the former
teller, John Hill, received yet another promotion.) Prior to his resignation, Vyse borrowed
$475,000 and gave as security a mortgage on property he owned. He requested that the transaction not be
recorded.
The seemingly shady deal came to light when, early in 1875,
Vyse & Co. failed. Creditors
scrambled to claim their portion of the assets but Ninth National, which had
never documented the loan, had a problem.
“Under these circumstances the bank, it was stated, would be a loser to
the full amount of the loan, and in consequence be seriously embarrassed,”
reported The Times.
Indeed the bank was embarrassed. But quick damage control by one of the Directors,
Barnett L. Solomon, convinced depositors that the bank was solvent. Solomon insisted that he “did not believe the
bank would lose a single dollar on any of its transactions with Mr. Vyse.”
While the bank was patching its bruised public image, it
continued leasing offices on the upper floors.
The same year C. S. Morton, an agent for the freight railroad The Canada
Southern Co-Operative had his headquarters here. By the time that the Mercantile Benefit
Association moved in, one-time teller John Hill was President of the bank.
Hill became the bank’s third president in 1877. Things went well until his wife’s wealthy spinster
aunt, Eliza Dayton, entrusted her finances to Hill’s brother, Charles. Unfortunately, Charles was not the best
financial advisor and on a single occasion lost $68,000 of Dayton’s money. In 1884 Eliza Dayton’s estate had suffered
loses so great that Charles Hill committed suicide. John Hill promised to restore the fortune of
his wife’s aunt.
Within time he did just that. The family honor restored, he continued the
life of a successful banker. He loved exotic flowers and built a fine
conservatory on his property. He owned at least a pair of valuable horses and was fond of
riding. The Times remarked “He led a
quiet life, was not socially inclined, and his wife and daughters are domestic
in their taste.”
The façade of the upstanding and honest bank president would
crumble upon his death at the age of 55 in 1891. To restore Eliza Dayton’s extensive financial
loses and to continue his comfortable lifestyle John H. Hill had constantly embezzled
from the Ninth National Bank from 1884 until his death.
When a borrower would repay his loan and receive his
collateral, Hill would pocket the money and the bank’s books would show the
loan still outstanding. In place of the
collateral he would put an envelope with the records of the loan. When a bank examiner would visit, he would
transfer securities into the loan envelopes until the investigation was
completed.
Hill contracted consumption in 1889 which worsened a year
later to the point that he was mostly bedridden. Still, he “managed to get down to the bank at
all critical junctures in his affairs and to accomplish the necessary juggling
of the securities which kept his crime a secret until after his death,”
reported The Times. “It was not,” said
the newspaper, “until after his death that the big defalcation was discovered.”
The president who had risen from teller had robbed his own
bank of $400,000—nearly $10 million today.
Amazingly the bank recovered. On August 4, 1891, five months after Hill’s
death, the bank announced itself “to be in a very prosperous condition now, and
to have pretty fully recovered from the effects of the Hill scare.”
The bank took yet another hit, albeit much smaller, a year
later when Johann C. K. Davidsen forged checks totaling $2,700. Davidsen was a bookkeeper at A. James &
Co., commission merchants “in the South American trade,” earning $10 a
week. While acquaintances noted the
disparity of the clerk’s income and style of living, he brushed it off saying he
had “private means.”
"Private means” meant he was simply signing and cashing checks on
his employer’s account at Ninth National Bank.
When the crime was discovered, Adolph James, one of his employers,
remarked that he “did not know of this ornamental side of Davidsen’s career.”
The bank, which was responsible for the stolen amount,
offered a $500 reward for the arrest of the 30-year old forger.
In November 1901 the bank merged with the National Citizens’
Bank. That bank had been founded in 1858
“during the California ‘Gold Fever,’” according to King’s Views of New York
City. The two competing banks were now
one and Ninth National gave up its familiar name. The arrangement would not last long,
however.
Businessmen crowd the sidewalk in front of the National Citizens Bank in 1903. King's Views of New York City 1903 (copyright expired) |
Less than three years later, in March 1904 the National
Citizens and the Central National Bank consolidated. Once again the bank’s name was changed; but
this time the merger would mean leaving the building at Nos. 407-409
Broadway.
By August the Netherland State Railway of Holland had leased
the front portion of the building vacated by the bank. The firm was still in the building when an
advertisement in The Sun announced the upcoming auction of the property on
April 19, 1906. It was purchased by
Olin G. Walbridge.
Walbridge had little time to develop his new real
estate. He died within the year leaving
an estate of $326,236 including the old bank building on Broadway. His will divided the estate equally among his
various heirs, resulting in a two-year court battle among family members that finally resulted in
son Francis Walbridge acquiring the building.
Walbridge was successful in returning the structure to its original banking function with Columbia Bank taking over the business floors. The same year that Francis Walbridge died in 1917,
however, the bank opened a new branch at No. 415 Broadway and discontinued business
at Nos. 407-409. Five days after the
announcement that the bank was leaving, the building was sold again at auction to
Max Marx on May 6, 1917.
The old Ninth National Bank building would never again be
used as a financial institution. Instead
it became home to firms marketing the up-and-coming typewriter. The Irving Typewriter Company established
its offices here, as did the Morse Typewriter Exchange Co.
Among the typewriter concerns here in 1919 was Morse Typewriter Exchange -- Typewriter Topics, October 1919 (copyright expired) |
In July 1924 Marx sold the building to Frank Hillman for
about $160,000. The jazz age had roared
into New York and the Great Depression was still years away. Popular taste turned to sleek, clean lines
and the Victorian dowager at No. 407-409 Broadway was decidedly out of style.
Although the building was no longer fashionable for a bank,
the location certainly was. On May 8,
1927 The Manufacturers Safe Deposit Company announced it would open a branch on
the site. Within five months the old
Ninth National Bank was gone and in its place was a new modern two-story
building designed by A. F. Gilbert.
A. F. Gilbert's 1927 bank still survives on the site. -- photo by Alice Lum |
Thank you, Mr. Miller, for this interesting article.
ReplyDeleteMy Great Grandfather Thomas A. Vyse, yep, president of that bank, passed away 100 years ago today. I have been delving into his history for the past couple of months and this is the most complete article I have found to date on the Ninth National Bank.
I have a couple of questions, though. Was Mr. Vyse the original president of the bank and one of the original founders? If you don't know the answer to that one, I'd appreciate a referral to a source. I'd also be interested in the History of Vyse & Co. as I've come up dry in that area. I've already plumbed the New York Times. Any other ideas? Thanks!
Thomas A. Vyse, Jr., was not the first president of the bank. That would have been Joseph U. Orvis. Vyse was a Director in the first years. A list of officers in 1865 is in the January 16, 1865 article in the New-York Daily News here: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030213/1865-01-16/ed-1/seq-3/#date1=1836&index=8&rows=20&words=A+THOMAS+VYSE&searchType=basic&sequence=0&state=New+York&date2=1922&proxtext=%22thomas+a.+vyse%22&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1
DeleteVyse & Co. was a manufacturer of "straw goods" and in 1874 won a bronze medal for sponge carpet mats at the American Institute. Although the firm failed within a year, it was back in business making straw women's hats.
1870 Census record shows Thomas Vyse (transcribed "Fyse") with a summer home in New London, CT, and a huge number of servants. Real estate valued at $500,000.
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