A.P. Giannini
Branch Banking
The son of immigrants
loaned to immigrants when other bankers refused. He built a vast Western
banking empire, fueling California's growth, and created a national system of
branch banks to serve ordinary people.
Born to Take Risks
Amadeo Peter Giannini
has been called "America's banker." His Italian father traveled home
from the California gold fields, then brought a Genoese bride back to San Jose
in mid-1869, via the brand-new transcontinental railroad. His mother was also
an adventurous soul, leaving her family and homeland with a man she'd known for
only six weeks. Their son Amadeo, born in San Jose in May, 1870, would take his
own risks in the world of banking.
Bank of Italy
As a young man,
Giannini succeeded in the wholesale produce business, but grew bored. Angered
by the era's typical banking practices -- making loans to and servicing only
wealthy clients -- he founded the Bank of Italy in San Francisco in October
1904 as an institution for the "little fellows" -- the hardworking
immigrants other banks would not serve. He offered those ignored customers
savings accounts and loans, judging them not by how much money they already
had, but by their characters. Within a year, deposits were soaring above
$700,000 ($13.5 million in 2002 dollars).
Confidence
After a disastrous
earthquake and subsequent fires levelled much of the city in 1906, Giannini
created new confidence. He set up a temporary bank immediately, collecting
deposits, making loans, and proclaiming to all that San Francisco would rise
from the ashes. He based his business on openness and trust, making his
reputation by helping the city rebuild. Then he expanded the Bank of Italy
across California, breaking with an American tradition of independent local
banks by providing his egalitarian banking services to the "little
fellows" in the Yugolsavian, Russian, Mexican, Portuguese, Chinese, Greek,
and other immigrant communities. By the mid-1920s, he owned the third largest
bank in the nation.
Big Banker
In 1928, Giannini put
his banks into a giant holding company he called Transamerica Corporation,
reflecting his new ambition. In 1930, he formed the Bank of America, which
would eventually become the largest in the United States. As a measure of its
success, it withstood the Great Depression, funding large industrial and
agricultural interests as well as California's burgeoning movie industry and
even the Golden Gate Bridge. When Giannini died on June 3, 1949, at age 79,
hundreds of ordinary people showed up for his funeral.
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