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Banking in Oklahoma, 1907-2000 / Michael J. Hightower ; foreword by Frank Keating.

Lippincott Library HG2611.O5 H538 2014
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hightower, Michael J., author.
Keating, Francis Anthony, 1944- author of foreword.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Banks and banking--Oklahoma--History--20th century.
Banks and banking.
History.
Oklahoma--History--20th century.
Oklahoma.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
xvii, 482 pages ; 25 cm
Place of Publication:
Norman OK : University of Oklahoma Press, [2014]
Summary:
The story of banking in twentieth-century Oklahoma is also the story of the Sooner State's first hundred years, as Michael J. Hightower's new book demonstrates. Oklahoma statehood coincided with the Panic of 1907, and both events signaled seismic shifts in state banking practices. Much as Oklahoma banks shed their frontier persona to become more tightly integrated in the national economy, so too was decentralized banking revealed as an anachronism, utterly unsuited to an increasingly global economy. With creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913 and subsequent choice of Oklahoma City as the location for a branch bank, frontier banking began yielding to systems commensurate with the needs of the new century. Through meticulous research and personal interviews with bankers statewide, Hightower has crafted a compelling narrative of Oklahoma banking in the twentieth century. One of the first acts of the new state legislature was to guarantee that depositors in state-chartered banks would never lose a penny. Meanwhile, land and oil speculators and the bankers who funded their dreams were elevating get-rich-quick (and often get-poor-quick) schemes to an art form. In defense of country banks, the Oklahoma Bankers Association dispatched armed vigilantes to stop robbers in their tracks. Subsequent developments in Oklahoma banking include adaptation to regulations spawned by the Great Depression, the post-World War II boom, the 1980s depression in the oil patch, and changes fostered by rapid-fire advances in technology and communication. The demise of Penn Square Bank offers one of history's few unambiguous lessons, and it warrants two chapters--one on the rise, and one on the fall. Increasing regulation of the banking industry, the survival of family banks, and the resilience of community banking are consistent themes in a state that is only a few generations removed from the frontier.
Contents:
A brand-new state
The war years
The roaring twenties
The dawn of conservative banking
The home front
Postwar oklahoma
Boom
And bust
The rest of the story
The change
Great expectations
Toward the new millennium
Epilogue : crossroads of communities.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9780806144955
0806144955
OCLC:
875240131

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