Marine Trust Company Building
237 Main Street, Buffalo NY
Built: |
1915 |
Architects: |
Green & Wicks |
Builders: |
Lnquist and Illsey |
Exterior stone: |
Granite from Stinchfield Quarry, near Hallowell, Maine (source) |
Style: |
Italian Renaissance Revival Commercial Building |
Status: |
Joseph Ellicott Historic Preservation District |
TEXT Beneath Illustrations
Erie County Medical Society historical plaque |
Marine Bank opened its doors on August 27, 1850, at 79 Main Street |
Marine Trust Company Building and its neighbors |
Marine Trust Company Building and its neighbors |
Façade (west elevation) on Main Street |
First an second stories feature rustication |
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Keystone: the ship that served as Marine Midland Bank's corporate symbol |
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4th-13 floors have straight headed windows with brick designs in piers and spandrels |
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15th-16th floors:
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Pedimented window cap supported by ancones |
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Left: Marine Trust |
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2015 Photos![]() ![]() |
Historic photos:
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Buffalo:
Lake City in Niagara Land In the summer of 1850, eight men gathered in Buffalo to form a new commercial bank. They had come from throughout the state -- General James S. Wadsworth of Geneseo, J. P. Beekman of Kinderhook, John Arnot of Elmira, John Magee and Constant Cook of Bath, William R. Gwinn of Medina, and George Palmer and James M. Ganson of Buffalo. [Both Palmer and Wadsworth of Buffalo had railroad connections. The two had finacial interests in aserved as diectors of the Attica and Hornell Railroad, while Palmer had links also with the Buffalo and State Line Railroad.] The geographic diversity of the men indicated that the plan was to extend eventually the bank's services across the state. [By 1981,] Marine Midland Bank N.A. accomplished that goal and has gone even further. It was the nation's 13th largest commercial bank with about 300 banking offices in more than new York communities and about 25 offices in foreign countries. Marine Bank was founded as a state-chartered bank on July 10, 1850, with capital of $170,000. Palmer was elected president and Ganson was named cashier. The new institution was called Marine Bank because much of its early business depended on the economic vitality of the city's lakefronts and riverfronts. From the first day it opened its doors on August 27 at 79 Main Street, Marine was the prominent bank for the thriving grain and milling industry on the waterfront. By the turn of the century, Marine Bank of Buffalo began to expand through merger. In 1897 it absorbed the American Exchange Bank and in 1902 it acquired the Buffalo Commercial Bank. That same year it became a national bank and changed its name to Marine National Bank of Buffalo. The next acquisition came in 1913 when Marine absorbed Columbia National Bank. Six years later Bankers Trust was acquired. Marine chose to become a state bank again, this time under the name Marine Trust Company of Buffalo. By the mid-1930s, Marine had acquired eight other banks. Marine had also taken the lead in the formation of Marine Midland Corporation, a holding company for affiliating 17 banks throughout New York. That first multibank holding company in the state was formed October 4, 1929. As a result of 11 mergers throughout Western New York, Marine Trust Company became Marine Midland Trust Company of Western New York in the 1950s. The name was changed again in the 1960s to Marine Midland Trust Company of Western NewYork and again in 1970 to Marine Midland Bank-Western. On January 1, 1976, all previously independent Marine Banks were merged into a single Marine Midland Bank with headquarters in Buffalo. The new bank was divided into regions, with Marine Midland Bank-Western Region based in Buffalo. Marine Midland Bank became a national-chartered bank in early 1980. As it entered
the 1980s, assets were close to $20 billion. |
Four years ago, the ship that served as Marine Midland Bank's corporate
symbol sailed into history.
Some notable chairmen: Seymour Knox I: Chair 1913-1915. Seymour H. Knox, II: Chair 1942-1970. Chairman when construction began on Marine's thirty-eight story building Northrup R. Knox: Chair 1970?-1996 |