| Apple Bank |
|
|
|
|
You might also be interested to read the following eBooks: Van Buren Publishing. E-Books on travel, business, art and other topics. Millions In The Rehab Business. Learn the step by step process of rehabbing homes that will make you tens of thousands of dollars every month. The Real Animal. The Animal has left the 900# business and nationwide scoreboard and now makes his plays exclusively at TheRealAnimal.com. The Apple Bank for Savings provides private and commercial banking services to the greater New York City area. It is the 4th or 5th largest New York-based bank and has 49 branches in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island and the Bronx, as well as Westchester , Suffolk and Nassau[1] counties. The bank offers a standard set of services: savings, checking, money market, investment accounts, student loans, mortgages, and lines of credit. It also offers high-yield internet savings accounts under the Grand Yield Direct[2] brand. HistoryApple Bank began its life in 1863 as the Harlem Savings Bank. It was established by a group of local merchants as a community-based mutual savings bank - a bank that is owned by its depositors. Harlem at the time was a village (it was not part of NYC until 1873) and the bank's first location - a storefront on 3rd avenue between 125th and 126th streets - was surrounded by farms and undeveloped lots. Six years later, the bank moved to a building of its own construction on 3rd and 124th. Business grew steadily and the bank had over five thousand depositors by 1876. By 1908, the number grew to over thirty two thousand as Harlem experienced influx of Jewish and Italian immigrants. At the same time, the bank engaged in construction financing as the area underwent a real-estate boom. The bank continued to do well as the demographics of Harlem changed. By the end of the 1920s, Harlem Savings was the 22nd largest mutual savings bank in the United States. The bank survived the Great Depression without incident. In fact, its strong financial position allowed it to purchase the Commonwealth Savings Bank in 1932. The acquisition provided the bank with two branches in the Washington Heights neighborhood: on 157th street and 180th street, expanding coverage north. In 1933, the bank dropped the second 'a' from its name to match the now-standard spelling of the borough's name. In the 40s, the bank had several branches in northern Manhattan and one on East 42nd street. After the end of WW2, the middle class was moving into the suburbs and the bank followed suit, opening a a branch in Manhasset, Long Island, in 1966 and moving its headquarters from Harlem to 42nd street two years later. The early 1980s proved to be a difficult time for financial institutions, but Harlem Savings faired better than most. In 1981 it used a $160 million grant from the FDIC to purchase the troubled Central Savings Bank. Created as the German Savings Bank (it was renamed to Central during WWI) in 1858, the bank counted Daniel F. Tiemann, then Mayor of New York as a charter member and operated out of the Cooper Union building before moving to a location at 14th Street and 4th Avenue in 1864. The acquisition gave Harlem Savings additional 7 branches including the now-historical Apple Bank Building (formerly Central's uptown branch) between 73rd and 74th Streets on Broadway and two branches in Nassau County on Long Island. In the 70s and early 80s, the bank's expansion into the suburbs was hindered by its name as it evoked images of "drugs, crime, and general deterioration". When the bank was building a branch in Massapequa, Long Island, in 1978, the plate-glass windows had to be replaced seven times after they were shattered by bricks. Despite some investment in the Harlem name, Jerome McDougal - chairman and CEO of the bank at the time - decided that a change was needed if the bank was to survive and expand. The Apple name and logo was created by a small consulting firm, Selame Design, in 1983. Despite some feeling that the name was undignified for a financial institution, McDougal pushed it through. Within the first month of the name change, Apple Bank gained 4,943 new accounts - three times the normal rate - and $116 million in deposits, compared to a loss of $26 million during the corresponding period in 1982. On the last day of 1986, Apple acquired the Eastern Savings Bank (established as the Bronx Savings Bank in 1905), thus obtaining three branches in the Bronx, two in Westchester, and two on Long Island. Apple now ranked 17th among the New York metropolitan area's thrift institutions, with assets of $2.7 billion. Another acquisition came in 1989, with the purchase of Sag Harbor Savings Bank - chartered in 1860 in Sag Harbor, New York to provide financial services for the whaling industry - for $29.5 mil., bringing in 5 additional branches serving Suffolk County. In the late 1990s, Apple Bank began an aggressive expansion into Brooklyn, opening 13 branches in that borough since 1997.
OwnershipIn 1985, Apple converted from a mutual savings bank to a stock-issuing public institution, selling 4.6 million shares for a total of $53.5 million. In 1990, a prominent real estate developer and investor Stanley Stahl, became the sole stockholder of the bank when he paid about $170 million. In August 1999, Stahl died and the bank is controlled by his estate. Financials
Trivia
External links
|
| < Prev |
|---|




