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Remembering Maggie Lena Walker: the making of a black bank: Walker became the country's first woman president of a financial institution and founded one of the nation's oldest surviving black-owned banks.


Maggie Lena Walker's story, and the organization to which she dedicated her life, begins in 1867 with a nation struggling to repair the ills of slavery. At age 14, Maggie Lena Draper Mitchell (her birth name) joined the local council of the African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  fraternal society that later became the Independent Order of St. Luke Please note: The Order of Saint Luke is not affiliated with The International Order of St. Luke the Physician.

The Order of Saint Luke is a religious order in the United Methodist Church dedicated to sacramental and liturgical scholarship, education, and practice.
 (IOSL). She swiftly rose through its ranks to assume leadership as its Right Worthy Grand Secretary-Treasurer in 1890, and, as a result, became a pioneering insurance executive, financier, and civic icon at the turn of the 20th century.

Prior to 1890, the IOSL had 3,400 members, no reserve funds, no property, and a small staff. By the mid-1920s. Walker, a woman of boundless energy and spellbinding spell·bind  
tr.v. spell·bound , spell·bind·ing, spell·binds
To hold under or as if under a spell; enchant or fascinate.



[Back-formation from spellbound.
 oratorical or·a·tor·i·cal  
adj.
Of, relating to, or characteristic of an orator or oratory.



ora·tor
 skills, almost single-handedly brought the IOSL to solvency. In 1903, she established the St. Luke Penny
    Luke Penny (born February 8, 1981) is a former Australian rules footballer.

    Recruited to the Western Bulldogs in the 1998 AFL Draft as pick 14, Penny was seen as a project player who could lead the defence in years to come.
     Savings Bank savings bank, financial institution that, until recently, performed only the following functions: receiving savings deposits of individuals, investing them, and providing a modest return to its depositors in the form of interest. , one of the nation's oldest black-owned banking institutions in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . By 1924, at the peak of her leadership, she grew the IOSL membership to in excess of 70,000 in 1,500 local chapters. IOSL also boasted a staff of 50 working in its Richmond, Virginia Richmond IPA: [ɹɯʒmɐnɖ] is the capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia, in the United States. , headquarters, with assets of more than $400,000, and payments of more than $1 million in death claims. Despite her failing health and limited mobility, Walker successfully shepherded St. Luke Penny Savings Bank through the Great Depression. She would eventually merge it with two other black banks based in Richmond to form Consolidated Bank and Trust (No. 20 on the BE BANKS list with $87.28 million in assets), the longest surviving black bank in the country.

    This excerpt, from the book A Right Worthy Grand Mission: Maggie Lena Walker and the Quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby"
    quest after, go after, pursue

    look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the
     Black Economic Empowerment Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) is a program launched by the South African government to redress the inequalities of Apartheid by giving previously disadvantaged groups (black Africans, Coloureds and Indians) economic opportunities previously not available to them.  by the late Gertrude Woodruff Marlowe (Howard University Press Howard University Press is a publisher that is part of Howard University. External link
    • Howard University Press
    ; $29.95), professor of anthropology at Howard University Howard University, at Washington, D.C.; coeducational; with federal support. It was founded in 1867 by Gen. Oliver O. Howard of the Freedmen's Bureau, to provide education for newly emancipated slaves. A normal and preparatory department was opened the same year. , comes from chapter four, "Theory Into Action." This chapter is but a snapshot of the life of Maggie Walker, a woman whose mother was born a slave. Walker spoke often about the financial empowerment of the Negro community. But she also did something practical toward creating economic wealth for that community. This month, we remember Walker, a true visionary.

    --The Editors

    As an incipiently revitalized and transformed [Independent Order] of St. Luke moved into the Progressive Era, the vision Maggie Walker so skillfully skill·ful  
    adj.
    1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

    2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
     evoked in her speeches started to be shaped into, and enriched by, the experience of building business and service institutions. Walker and her colleagues spent these years crafting organizations, trying with minimal initial knowledge to learn rapidly enough to move on to the next step. In consonance con·so·nance  
    n.
    1. Agreement; harmony; accord.

    2.
    a. Close correspondence of sounds.

    b. The repetition of consonants or of a consonant pattern, especially at the ends of words, as in blank
     with the national culture, their key developmental concept was business, a field that many black leaders and white well-wishers emphasized as a major potential avenue of upward mobility upward mobility
    n.
    The state of being upwardly mobile.


    upward mobility
    Noun

    movement from a lower to a higher economic and social status
     for the African American community. W.E.B. DuBois, in his report of the 1899 Atlanta Conference on "The Negro in Business," called for the formation of a National Business Man's League, an idea that Booker T. Washington made a reality in 1900 when he founded the National Negro Business League....

    Walker's exhortatory ex·hor·ta·tive   also ex·hor·ta·to·ry
    adj.
    Acting or intended to encourage, incite, or advise.

    Adj. 1. exhortatory - giving strong encouragement
    exhortative, hortative, hortatory
     approach to community development presents cooperative economics as a strategy arising from core community values, but one in need of the kind of policing DuBois describes. As her speeches show, St. Luke members also saw it as a confrontational response to segregation. Others observing racial and economic dynamics at the turn of the 20th century agreed, as evidenced by public statements such as, "The almighty dollar Almighty dollar is an idiom often used to satirize an obsession for material wealth (the phrase implies that money is a kind of deity). The phrase is commonly attributed to Washington Irving, who used it in the story "The Creole Village", which was published in the November 1836  is the magic wand a wand used by a magician in performing feats of magic.

    See also: Magic
     that knocks the bottom out of race prejudice...."

    By 1900, there were two African American banks in Richmond: the True Reformers and the Nickel Savings Bank. The Nickel Savings Bank was also known as "Dr. Tancil's bank," since physician Richard F. Tancil was its president, and it operated out of his East End home for many years after its founding in 1896. ... Nickel Savings Bank was always small, not having started out as a depository for fraternal funds. Eventually, the Nickel Savings Bank's cashier, Mr. Bass, organized a fraternal organization called the People's Belief Association, and the bank became known as the People's Bank Peo´ple's bank   

    1. A form of coöperative bank, such as those of Germany; - a term loosely used for various forms of coöperative financial institutions.
    ....

    In the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
    midmost
     of the summer's community turmoil, Maggie Walker made her big move at the 1901 St. Luke Convention. Besides reporting a modest net growth of the Order, less than 700 new members, she outlined a plan for expanding its activities. Couched in her best "Onward Christian Soldiers" style, Walker described the army, recruited from the ranks of professionals, businessmen, and working men and women, that was ready to march bearing aloft the cross....

    First, she called for a savings bank, to be run by the men and women of the Order. She painted a word picture of the growth of money--the first part of which is carved on the memorial stone in front of the present Consolidated Bank and Trust building: "Let us put our monies together; let us use our [moniesl" let us put our monies at usury usury: see interest.
    usury

    In law, the crime of charging an unlawfully high rate of interest. In Old English law, the taking of any compensation whatsoever was termed usury.
     among ourselves, and realize the benefit ourselves. Shall we longer continue to bury our talent, wrapped in a napkin and hidden away, when it ought to be gaining us still other talents...."

    For several months in 1930, in preparation for the bank opening, Walker spent two hours a day at the Merchants National Bank of Richmond, studying the way things were done....

    Since everyone firmly believed that banks were the pinnacle of financial achievement never mind their size, black banks were proof, and cited as such, that conditions were favorable for African Americans in the South. None of the black banks belonged to the clearing house system for check cashing because the fee was steep, but the while merchants of Richmond demanded of the national banks that the black banks be accommodated, on threat of withdrawing their own deposits; so each cleared through a member, either free or for a small fee.

    James Hayes James or Jim Hayes is the name of:
    • James Hayes (Australian politician) (1831–1908), Australian politician from New South Wales
    • James Hayes (politician), American politician from New York
    • James Hayes (US soldier), American soldier
    • James E.
     drew up the charter for the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, which was granted by Virginia's newly created Corporation Commission on July 28, 1903. The Executive Committee of the [Right Worthy Grand] Council (the one elected in 1901) was named as the board of directors. [Walker was a member of that Executive Committee.] Each member had to own $100 of paid-up stock. From the beginning, there was an attempt to attract money from outside the state, initially through the St. Luke network. From the beginning, Walker was considered to "enjoy the unique distinction of being the only female bank president in the United States." Shortly after the charter was granted, she went north on a tour and gave several speeches about the bank, urging councils to make deposits. Walker had been invited to join the Virginia Bankers Association--an invitation none of the male presidents of the other three black banks had received. She accepted the invitation and remarked, "I shall hope to conduct myself so as to reflect credit upon my race and people...."

    The dream had been to have a bank run by women, but when the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank opened in St. Luke Hall on November 2, 1903, the cashier was Emmett C. Burke, recruited from the True Reformers Bank, where he had been head bookkeeper. He was paid $50 a month. Burke was an inspired choice, competent, and loyal. He had both "ability and character." He worked very well with Walker and was able to confront her when necessary for the good of the bank, such as over the suitability of her sons' behavior when they worked there. In contrast with the Order, there was never any serious question of succession at the St. Luke bank once Walker let go of the fantasy that one of her sons would take over....

    In fall 1904, the St. Luke bank bought a three-story brick building at 112 Broad Street for $13,500, payable in two years. Extensive renovations were necessary to fit it out for the bank (which needed a brick vault) and proposed store ([called the Emporium] which required an elevator). Rather than wait until the renovations were finished to open the Emporium, Walker decided to rent a building at 6 West Broad Street that belonged to John Mitchell. Broad Street was a choice location and was also the dividing line Noun 1. dividing line - a conceptual separation or distinction; "there is a narrow line between sanity and insanity"
    demarcation, contrast, line

    differentiation, distinction - a discrimination between things as different and distinct; "it is necessary to
     between black activities on the north side and white activities on the south. This division has been so much a part of Richmond social history that in 1985 when Richmond Renaissance asked the Rouse Enterprise Development Corporation to design a central shopping area for the city, the design featured a bridge across Broad Street because the mayor "realized that Richmond would not get anywhere as long as it was seen as a racially divided city."

    Of all the St. Luke projects, the Emporium was symbolically crucial because it was to provide the employment for women that [were] the cornerstone of St. Luke's St. Luke's or St Luke's can refer to:
    • St Luke's, a district of London;
    • St Luke's High School, a Catholic secondary school in Barrhead, Glasgow.
    • St Luke's C. of E., a primary school in Formby, Liverpool, England.
    • The name of a church, see St.
     development program. The bank, after all, only employed two people besides the officers at this time. The Order was growing in the number of employees needed to process the endowment assessments, staff the printing shop, and manufacture regalia, but the new enterprise, to be managed and run almost endowment by women, was eagerly anticipated. On [Jan. 15, 1905], more than five hundred people came to a mass meeting held at St. Luke Hall and unanimously decided to proceed with the Emporium. The sale of stock started with each department of the Order subscribing to purchase shares. Maggie Walker was president; Joseph Meyers was vice president and probably managed the store, since he is shown among the employees; Emmett Burke, the bank's cashier, became treasurer; and the bank's assistant cashier, Mary Dawson For Canada's Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, see .
    Dr. Mary Dawson is the curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pennsylvania and the chairperson of the Division of Earth Sciences.
    , was secretary. This time, all 26 board members--18 women and eight men--could qualify with the purchase of only $50 worth of stock. How many of them actually did is not indicated in the available record. James Hayes as ranged for the Emporium's charter, which was granted March 13, 1905....

    There was also discussion of how to instill in·still
    v.
    To pour in drop by drop.



    instil·lation n.
     race pride in school children, to increase their knowledge of African American history African American history is the portion of American history that specifically discusses the African American or Black American ethnic group in the United States. Most African Americans are the descendants of African slaves held in the United States from 1619 to 1865. , leaders, and literature, an area many felt was neglected. Savings banks were praised as a major instrument for mobility of impoverished peoples. W.P. Burrell gave a paper reviewing the history of black savings and loan savings and loan n. a banking and lending institution, chartered either by a state or the Federal government. Savings and loans only make loans secured by real property from deposits, upon which they pay interest slightly higher than that paid by most banks.  institutions and noted that most blacks in Virginia kept their money in white banks. He explained how building and loan associations worked and gave stern examples of the practices of loan sharks--which made bank loans much more preferable....

    The bank moved into its new building in October 1905, and the Emporium followed in late November. The bank was put in the dry goods dry goods
    pl.n.
    Textiles, clothing, and related articles of trade. Also called soft goods.

    dry goods npl (COMM) → mercería sg

    dry goods 
     department, a location, which some people criticized or ridiculed, but which was calculated to draw trade. The bank was growing slowly but steadily, having handled by January 1906 almost $170,000. Loans and mortgages had become a large portion of its business. Each one had to be passed by the St. Luke board, but it was possible for small depositors to be heard. Brown points out that many of the bank's loyal supporters were laundresses. The classic tale is that of the one-legged shoeshine boy who by thrift, faithful saving, and judicious borrowing, was able to buy a parlor with three chairs, a house for himself, and one for his mother, all on 3% interest. The community function of George Bailey and his bank, and its precariousness, as portrayed in one of America's favorite films, It's a Wonderful Life, comes very close to the spirit of the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank....

    These had been years of extraordinary activity and a great deal of accomplishment for Walker and St. Luke, with the establishment of a newspaper and printing business, a new building, a bank, and a store. Things were about to change. While it was not yet apparent, the exciting era of St. Luke's expansion into new business was over.

    POSTSCRIPT

    In January 1919, the Commercial Bank and Trust Company was chartered. As a new African New African is an English-language monthly news magazine based in London. Published since 1966, it is read by many people across the African continent and the African diaspora.  American bank it grew rapidly and at the end of 1921 reported resources of $132,212. In April 1920, a second new African American bank, Second Street Savings Bank, opened. There were four African American banks in Richmond: St. Luke and Mechanics, associated with fraternal organizations, and the two new ones associated with long-established, local, commercial insurance companies. At the end of the year, Walker called a conference with all four presidents ... to explore ways they could cooperate. At the time, St. Luke Penny Savings Bank announced it had passed the half-million mark in resources. By fall of 1930, she had initiated merger negotiations with Commercial Bank and Trust (and Second Street Savings Bank). Economic conditions were very threatening, and only if all the resources of the city's African American community were combined would survival be possible. Intensive negotiations over the next months culminated in the final merger. The new Consolidated Bank and Trust opened on Jan. 2, 1931, with resources of $864,000. Consolidated Bank and Trust survived the Depression by pursuing conservative policies, and it ... remains in business today. This year, Consolidated Bank and Trust ranked No. 20 on the BE BANKS list with $87.28 million in assets.

    From A Right Worthy Grand Mission by Gertrude Woodruff Marlowe. Copyright [c] 2003 by Howard University. Published by arrangement with Howard University Press.
    COPYRIGHT 2004 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Article Details
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    Title Annotation:Book Excerpt; St. Luke Penny Savings Bank
    Author:Marlowe, Gertrude Woodruff
    Publication:Black Enterprise
    Geographic Code:1USA
    Date:Jun 1, 2004
    Words:2230
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