Elementary Banking by American Institute Banking

March 17, 2010

PREFACE

THE Institute course of study in Elementary Banking, was originally adopted in 1918. Many experienced bank clerks had left their institutions and entered either the military or naval service. Their places were filled by young men and women with little, if any, business training or experience. With the idea of providing a practical and logical course of study for these newcomers in the banking profession, as well as a foundation for the Institute Standard courses of study, a text-book covering the elements of banking and law seemed to be desirable. J. F. Ebersole of the University of Minnesota, who had been teaching an elementary banking course in Minneapolis Chapter, was selected to prepare such a book, based on the lectures given in Minneapolis Chapter. That book has been a distinct success. The present text entitled “Elementary Banking” is based on the book just referred to. However, the original text literature has been completely revised and brought to date, in some cases being rewritten and rearranged, and, in addition, four chapters on bank bookkeeping and accounting have been added. Chapters I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII and VIII have been revised by James B. Birmingham, Assistant Cashier of the National City Bank of New York ; chapters IX and X have been revised and rearranged by Richard W. Hill, Member of the New York Bar and Secretary of the American Institute of Banking; and chapters XI, XII, XIII and XIV were prepared by Arthur K. Schulz of the Chase National Bank of New York. John M. Chapman, Lecturer on Banking in the School of Business of Columbia University, assisted in the necessary rearrangement of the text. Thomas Ritchie, Comptroller, and Martin L. L. Henry, Auditor, both of the Chase National Bank of New York, were generous with constructive criticisms of the accounting material.

A successful banker is composed of about one-fifth accountant, two-fifths lawyer, three-fifths political economist, and four – fifths gentleman and scholar total ten-fifths double size. Any smaller person may be a pawnbroker or a promoter, but not a banker.

George E. Allen.

Please Activate the Full Screen Mode for Better Viewing Pleasure (2nd button from the left)


LINK




EMBED




Share

Related posts:

  1. Elementary Banking by Howard Wolfe Preface by O’Howard Wolfe This book is not the result...
  2. American Finance with Chapters on Money and Banking by Albert Bolle PREFACE. No one will question the need of a systematic...
  3. American Banking by Parker Willis A London financial expert soon after the passage of the...
  4. Money and Banking Illustrated by American History PREFACE DURING the past three years a marked change in...
  5. The Czechs and Slovaks in American Banking by Thomas Capek PREFACE ONE phase — a very important one — of...

Tags: , , ,

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Featured Websites

Featured Stock Market Books

A Financial Chapter in the History of Bombay City

In 1897 the Editor of the Advocate of India invited me to contribute to its columns a narrative of the rise, growth and collapse...

Read more »

The New York Stock Exchange; a Discussion of the Business Done, Its Relation to Other Business, To Investment, Speculation and Gambling by H S Martin

FOREWORD The New York Stock Exchange can The be said to have been begun 125 years. Beginning ago 100 years of which it has...

Read more »

The Essential Features of Securities by Byron Webber Holt

What Our Problem Is There are available for purchase or sale securities of the widest possible variety, issued by countless corporations, municipalities, states, nations,...

Read more »

Twenty-One Years in the Boston Stock Market by Joseph Gregory Martin

PREFATORY REMARKS In the present work the compiler has aimed to furnish a full and reliable history of the several stocks in the Boston...

Read more »

The Stock Market Barometer : A Study of Its Forecast Value Based on Charles H. Dow’s Theory of the Price Movement

CYCLES AND STOCK MARKET RECORDS AN English economist whose unaffected humanity always made him remarkably readable, the late William Stanley Jevons, propounded the theory...

Read more »