. Hartford and its points of interest ; illustrated from original photographs. ST. JOSEPHS CATHEDRAL—INTERIOR. 99. -ETNA NATIONAL BANK. ^TNA NATIONAL BANK OF HARTFORD (A. G. Loomis, President; A. Spencer, Jr., Cashier), No. 214 Main Street.—The .-EtnaNational Bank of Hartford was organized as a State institution in 1857, and re-organized under the national banking laws in 1S65. Its paid-up capital at firstwas $525,600, and changed to the present amount under the national its long and important history the -Etna has been associated with manyof the greatest fiuaucial movements of
. Hartford and its points of interest ; illustrated from original photographs. ST. JOSEPHS CATHEDRAL—INTERIOR. 99. -ETNA NATIONAL BANK. ^TNA NATIONAL BANK OF HARTFORD (A. G. Loomis, President; A. Spencer, Jr., Cashier), No. 214 Main Street.—The .-EtnaNational Bank of Hartford was organized as a State institution in 1857, and re-organized under the national banking laws in 1S65. Its paid-up capital at firstwas $525,600, and changed to the present amount under the national its long and important history the -Etna has been associated with manyof the greatest fiuaucial movements of the State. It has had as presidents such notable men as Judge E. A. Bulkeley, fatherof ex-Governor Bulkeley (a present Director); O. G. Ferry, a prominent mer-chant; Hon. Wm. R. Cone (of Hungerford & Cone), eminent as a lawyer, andA. R. Hillyer. The dominant spirit has therefore been in thorough accordwith all the most conservative and best interests of the State. The bank is one of the largest in the State, and has always been a staunchbulwark in local finance and commerce. The last statement, appended
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindustr, bookyear1895