Barnett Bank

Last updated
Barnett Bank
Type Banking
Genre Financial services
Founded1877 [1] [2] [3]
FounderWilliam Boyd Barnett [4] [5] [6]
Bion Barnett
Defunct1997;26 years ago (1997)
Fateacquired by NationsBank
Headquarters,
Number of locations
600+
Area served
all of Florida and parts of Georgia
Services Financial
Total assets $41.2 billion

Barnett Bank was an American bank based in Florida. Founded in 1877, it eventually became the largest commercial bank in Florida with over 600 offices and $41.2 billion in deposits. Barnett was purchased by NationsBank in 1997. [7]

Contents

History

Foundation

The Bank of America Tower, originally the Barnett Center, which served as the headquarters of Barnett Bank until 1997 Bank of America Tower Jacksonville.png
The Bank of America Tower, originally the Barnett Center, which served as the headquarters of Barnett Bank until 1997

William Boyd Barnett was a merchant and a banker in northeast Kansas when he journeyed with his wife to Jacksonville to visit their oldest son in 1875. Sarah Barnett's health improved during their time in Florida, so the Barnetts returned to Kansas, liquidated their assets, and relocated to Jacksonville in March, 1877. Bion, their youngest son, was a senior at the University of Kansas and withdrew from school to join his parents. [8]

In the spring of 1877, the United States was in the middle of the Depression of 1873-79, and Jacksonville already had three banks. [9] The city's population was under 10,000 and there was no infrastructure to support a beginning tourism industry.

On May 7, 1877, Barnett opened the Bank of Jacksonville (BoJ) on the corner of Main and Forsyth with $43,000 in capital. William was president, Bion acted as bookkeeper, and one other person was hired as teller/clerk. Most Florida banks at the time were private and unregulated. In spite of being a newcomer and a Yankee, Barnett and the new institution slowly gained the people's trust, but at the end of their first year, deposits amounted to only $11,000. Undeterred, William invited his son, Bion Barnett, to be partner and passed along Barnett's five rules of business:

  1. Follow the Golden Rule. You cannot go wrong treating the other man as you would be treated.
  2. Give a man 50 cents if you can make a dollar out of him. In other words, be liberal in your dealings but always have a net profit. Do not do business at a loss.
  3. If a young man is of good habits - honest, capable, saving, giving close attention to his business and making progress but lacking in capital - help him. The young man of today is the businessman of tomorrow.
  4. Never make a promise you cannot and do not fulfill. Investigate carefully before granting a line of credit; once granted, there being no adverse change in your client's financial condition, fulfill your promise. Your word must be as good as your bond.
  5. Watch your expense account and your losses; your profits will take care of themselves.

According to Bion Barnett, "I have never found a flaw in it. It is good advice today." [7]

Fate

A conversation between Bion Barnett and Henry L’Engle changed the bank's fortunes. L'Engle, the Duval County Tax Collector, was annoyed because the bank holding the county's funds charged $6.25 for each transfer to New York City banks. Bion immediately offered to waive the fee if Duval County deposited their funds in the Bank of Jacksonville. L'Engle agreed, and the BoJ began to prosper. Within a year, L'Engle was appointed Treasurer for the State of Florida, and the state's accounts were transferred to BoJ. Within a few years, operating capital exceeded $150,000, and the Barnetts applied for and received a National Charter, pursuant to the National Bank Act. This allowed them to become the National Bank of Jacksonville. The institution's deposits exceeded $1 million in 1893. [10]

20th century

Barnett National Bank Building in 2011 Jax FL Barnett Natl Bank Bldg pano01.jpg
Barnett National Bank Building in 2011

The Great Fire of 1901 destroyed most of the city, but the National Bank of Jacksonville was the only bank still standing. William Boyd Barnett died September 2, 1903, and Bion renamed the institution Barnett Bank in his father's honor. [10]

In 1926, the Barnett National Bank Building was opened to house the company's operations and was built in the popular Chicago school style of architecture. At 18 stories, it was the tallest skyscraper in the city and remained so until 1954. [11] The bank survived various economic downturns and crises, including the Great Depression, ultimately emerging stronger. When Barnett died in 1958 at the age of 101, Barnett Bank had come to be known as "Florida's Bank". The bank continued to grow with the acquisition of many more Florida banks over the next two decades. [12]

However, under Chairman of the Board Hugh Jones, [13] Barnett Bank was slow to become involved in the rapidly evolving interstate banking mergers of the 1970s and 80s. Though eventually Barnett did make some purchases of out-of-state banks, starting in Georgia, it did so without growing its own brand recognition. While technically, according to federal statute, one bank cannot own another bank in another state, they can both be owned by the same holding company. Barnett, like other banks, grew across state lines in this way. But unlike other such banks, Barnett did not change the names of its new holdings, keeping the Barnett name exclusively within Florida. Ultimately, this weakened the company's stock, as the perception lingered that Barnett was not a major player in the area of mergers and acquisitions. Despite its slower than average growth, the holding company built a new corporate headquarters building in downtown Jacksonville: announced in 1987 and occupied in 1993, the year Hugh Jones retired. [13] At 42 stories, the Barnett Center was the highest building in Jacksonville, and the second-tallest in Florida as of 2010. As of 2019, the reinforced concrete Barnett Center (now, the Bank of America Tower) remains the tallest building in Jacksonville.

Demise

For many years, it looked like Barnett would be the only bank of Jacksonville's "Big Three" to ignore the lure of big money from nationwide banking conglomerates. Atlantic National Bank of Florida was the first to sell out to First Union in 1985/7, followed by Florida National Bank in 1990. [14] But in 1997, Barnett CEO Charles Rice, who was named Jacksonville's highest paid individual among public companies at $4.5 million (excluding stock options), offered the company up for sale, [15] just six weeks after a month spent at a drug rehabilitation facility for treatment of alcoholism. [16] Charlotte-based NationsBank made the highest offer, and the deal was done. At the time of Barnett's demise, the company had an annual payroll of a quarter billion dollars spread among 6,800 employees. [17] Rice, who had publicly stated more than a decade earlier that he would never sell Bion Barnett's bank to any of its competitors, became board chairman of NationsBank. However, less than a year later, NationsBank purchased Bank of America and took the Bank of America name, and Rice himself was forced out as chairman, becoming vice chairman of corporate development. [18] More than a few of those who lost their jobs found the situation ironic. After retiring in early 2001, [18] Rice died in a swimming pool accident in December 2008. [7]

Volunteering

In the 1980s, CEO Hugh Jones began a corporate-wide program of giving back to their communities. All the bank's employees, which numbered 1,000, were encouraged to donate time to the charitable cause of their choosing. The Community Involvement Initiative resulted in over 40,000 hours of assistance to worthy projects where they lived. [19]

Naming dispute

In late 2000 financier Reid Mack secured the Florida corporate names to three former Barnett Bank entities Barnett Mortgage Company, Barnett Lending Services, and Barnett Credit Services. Bank of America fought over the intellectual property rights to the names, and over the subsequent years Mr. Mack abandoned the possible use to the names. [20] [21]

Historic preservation

The Barnett Historic Preservation Foundation, Inc. was created in December, 1997, after NationsBank purchased Barnett. Former Barnett president Allen Lastinger joined several other bank officers to create a non-profit organization to preserve and document Barnett's historical legacy.

They acquired the company archives containing annual reports, investor presentations, press releases, correspondence, miscellaneous ledgers, videos and account books; then solicited former employees for other material, including photographs, scrapbooks, news clippings, marketing materials and employee publications. Over 70 interviews were conducted which generated 3,000 pages of transcripts that were included in an oral history component.

In 2001, the Barnett Bank collection was donated to the State Library and Archives of Florida, which also holds the Florida State Department of Banking records, as well as records from other defunct banks. [8] [22]

Related Research Articles

Chemical Bank was a bank with headquarters in New York City from 1824 until 1996. At the end of 1995, Chemical was the third-largest bank in the U.S., with about $182.9 billion in assets and more than 39,000 employees around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Publix</span> Supermarket chain in the southeastern United States

Publix Super Markets, Inc., commonly known as Publix, is an employee-owned American supermarket chain headquartered in Lakeland, Florida. Founded in 1930 by George W. Jenkins, Publix is a private corporation that is wholly owned by present and past employees and members of the Jenkins family. Publix operates throughout the Southeastern United States, with locations in Florida (858), Georgia (206), Alabama (88), South Carolina (69), Tennessee (55), North Carolina (53), and Virginia (19).

The United Services Automobile Association (USAA) is an American financial services company providing insurance and banking products exclusively to members of the military, veterans, and their families. It was founded in 1922 in San Antonio, Texas, by a group of 25 U.S. Army officers as a mechanism for mutual self-insurance when they were unable to secure auto insurance because of the perception that they, as military officers, were a high-risk group.

NationsBank was one of the largest banking corporations in the United States, based in Charlotte, North Carolina. The company named NationsBank was formed through the merger of several other banks in 1991, and prior to that had been through multiple iterations. Its oldest predecessor companies had been Commercial National Bank (CNB), formed in 1874, and American Trust Company founded in 1909. In 1998, NationsBank acquired BankAmerica, and modified that better-known name to become Bank of America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">CSX Corporation</span> American transportation company

CSX Corporation is an American holding company focused on rail transportation and real estate in North America, among other industries. The company was established in 1980 as part of the Chessie System and Seaboard Coast Line Industries merger. The various railroads of the former Chessie System and Seaboard Coast Line Industries that are now owned by CSX Corporation were eventually merged into a single line in 1986 and it became known as CSX Transportation. CSX Corporation currently has a number of subsidiaries beyond CSX Transportation. Previously based in Richmond, Virginia after the merger, the corporation moved its headquarters to Jacksonville, Florida, in 2003. CSX is a Fortune 500 company.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SunTrust Banks</span> Former American bank

SunTrust Banks, Inc. was an American bank holding company with SunTrust Bank as its largest subsidiary and assets of US$199 billion as of March 31, 2018. The bank's most direct corporate parent was established in 1891 in Atlanta, where it was headquartered.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Truist Financial</span> Banking company in the U.S.

Truist Financial Corporation is an American bank holding company headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina. The company was formed in December 2019 as the result of the merger of BB&T and SunTrust Banks. Its bank operates 2,781 branches in 15 states and Washington, D.C., and offers consumer and commercial banking, securities brokerage, asset management, mortgage, and insurance products and services. It is on the list of largest banks in the United States by assets; as of June 2021, it is the 10th largest bank with $509 billion in assets. As of January 2021, Truist Insurance Holdings is the seventh largest insurance broker in the world with $2.27 billion in annual revenue.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bank of America Tower (Jacksonville)</span> Commercial office in Jacksonville, Florida

Bank of America Tower is a skyscraper in the downtown area of Jacksonville, Florida, at the northwest corner of Bay and Laura streets. At 617 ft (188 m), it is the tallest building in Jacksonville, and the seventeenth-tallest in Florida. It was built as the headquarters of Barnett Bank and originally named Barnett Center, but the name was changed to NationsBank Tower in 1998 after Barnett Bank was acquired by NationsBank. NationsBank was soon acquired by Bank of America and the building's name was changed to Bank of America Tower in 1999. The 42-floor structure was designed by German-American architect Helmut Jahn, and is constructed of reinforced concrete.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">11 East Forsyth</span> United States historic place

11 East Forsyth, formerly known as the Lynch Building and the American Heritage Life Building, is a historic structure in Jacksonville, Florida. Originally developed by Stephen Andrew Lynch, as its current name suggests, it is located at 11 East Forsyth Street in Downtown Jacksonville. On December 23, 2003, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bion Barnett</span> American banker

Bion Hall Barnett was an American banker. In 1877 he co-founded Barnett Bank, known as "Florida's Bank", the largest in the U.S. state of Florida at the time of its acquisition by NationsBank in 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">EverBank</span>

EverBank, now TIAA Bank, is an American diversified financial services company providing banking, and investing services. It is based in Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. It operates through standard banking offices and through its Direct Banking division. EverBank Direct operates by telephone, mail, and over the Internet. As of September 30, 2015, EverBank had approximately $25.2 billion in total assets.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wells Fargo Center (Jacksonville)</span> Skyscraper in Jacksonville, Florida

Wells Fargo Center is a skyscraper in the downtown area of Jacksonville, Florida, at the southeast corner of Bay and Laura streets. Standing 535 feet tall, it is the city's second-tallest building. It was formerly known as the Modis Building until 2011, when Wells Fargo acquired the naming rights.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barnett National Bank Building</span> Commercial offices in Florida, United States

The Barnett is a skyscraper in the downtown area of Jacksonville, Florida, at the southwest corner of Adams and Laura streets.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laura Street Trio</span>

The Laura Street Trio is a group of three historic buildings located on and near Laura Street in downtown Jacksonville, Florida. The Trio consists of two perpendicularly arranged skyscrapers, the Florida Life Building and the Bisbee Building, plus a third structure, the Old Florida National Bank, which is framed by the other two in a unique pattern. The three buildings, constructed in the wake of the Great Fire of 1901, are architecturally significant, but are currently endangered.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">VyStar Credit Union</span>

VyStar Credit Union is a member-owned financial cooperative that is headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida. It offers a comprehensive selection of products, including deposit and loan services for consumers and businesses, as well as investments, insurance, retirement planning and financial counseling. Founded in 1952 as Jax Navy Federal Credit Union, VyStar is the largest mortgage lender and the fourth-largest financial institution in Northeast Florida. It is regulated by the Florida Office of Financial Regulation and federally insured by the National Credit Union Share Insurance (NCUSIF) offered by the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">One Commerce Square</span> Building in Memphis, Tennessee

One Commerce Square is a 30-story skyscraper in Downtown Memphis which is locally referred to as the "iBank Tower". The building was formerly known as the NBC Building and the SunTrust Building, and is the fourth tallest building in Memphis, Tennessee. The building is located at the corner of Monroe Avenue and South Main Street.

National Bank of Commerce was a bank headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee until it was taken over by SunTrust Banks in 2005.

Atlantic Coast Financial Corporation was an American publicly traded bank holding company headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida and listed on the NASDAQ Stock Market, which wholly owned Atlantic Coast Bank. In 2018, Ameris Bancorp completed its acquisition of Atlantic Coast Bank. The banks services were focused primarily on personal banking and business banking in the Northeast Florida, Central Florida and Southeast Georgia regions. The company has been recognized by the Jacksonville Business Journal as one of north Florida's "Best Places to Work" in both 2015 and 2016, and was also selected as one of Florida's "Best Companies" by Florida Trend Magazine in July 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">VyStar Tower</span> Skyscraper in Jacksonville, Florida

VyStar Tower is a skyscraper in the downtown area of Jacksonville, Florida, at the northwest corner of Independent Drive and Laura Street. Standing 357 feet tall, it is the city's sixth tallest building. It was formerly known as the SunTrust Tower, Jacksonville Center and the Humana Building, among other names. Completed in 1989, the building was designed in the postmodern style by the Jacksonville firm KBJ Architects.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laura Street</span> Street in Jacksonville

Laura Street is a north–south street in Jacksonville, Florida, United States, named for the daughter of the city's founder, Isaiah D. Hart. Historically, the downtown portion of Laura Street has been considered the financial district of Jacksonville.

References

  1. "Barnett: The rise and fall of Florida's largest bank | Modern Cities". www.moderncities.com. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  2. "Oops! Bank buys Barnett, but not its name". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  3. Strickland, Sandy. "Call Box: Cruise ships downtown and Barnett statue". The Florida Times-Union. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  4. "Barnett: The rise and fall of Florida's largest bank | Modern Cities". www.moderncities.com. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  5. "Oops! Bank buys Barnett, but not its name". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  6. Strickland, Sandy. "Call Box: Cruise ships downtown and Barnett statue". The Florida Times-Union. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  7. 1 2 3 Ginzl, David: "The Last Days of Barnett", Jacksonville Magazine , October 1998
  8. 1 2 Ginzl, David J.: "Barnett: The Story of Florida's Bank" ISBN   1-879852-72-1, University of Tampa Press, 2001
  9. "The Barnett gearing up to come back to life | Metro Jacksonville". www.metrojacksonville.com. Retrieved 2017-11-03.
  10. 1 2 Miller, Joseph E. (July 26, 2009). "Headstone: William Boyd Barnett (1824–1903)". Jacksonville Observer. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011.
  11. "Florida's Seminole Wars". THE JACKSONVILLE HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
  12. Dougal, April S. "Barnett Bank". answers.com.
  13. 1 2 Ivice, Paul (February 7, 2003). "Whistling at work: Florida Bank CEO grows bank from 'zero'". Jacksonville Business Journal.
  14. Witkowski, Rachel (September 18, 2009). "Lineup of NE Florida's big banks shuffling". Jacksonville Business Journal.
  15. "Records of Charles E. Rice, CEO of Barnett Banks, Inc. 1970-1998". State Library and Archives of Florida. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  16. Flynn, Barry (July 17, 1997). "Barnett's Chairman Now Back From Leave". Orlando Sentinel.
  17. Foley, Bill (September 14, 1997). "Bank rooted in city's past, present". Florida Times-Union.
  18. 1 2 Witkowski, Rachel (December 10, 2008). "Former Barnett Banks CEO dies at 73". Jacksonville Business Journal.
  19. Halamandaris, Bill; Halamandaris, W. (2004). The Heart of America: Ten Core Values That Make Our Country Great . Health Communications. p.  183. ISBN   9780757302220.
  20. Harrington, Jeff (October 13, 2000). "Banker to revive name of Barnett". St. Petersburg Times.
  21. Freer, Jim (October 13, 2000). "Oops! Bank buys Barnett, but not its name". Orlando Business Journal.
  22. "Barnett Bank Historic Preservation Foundation".