The
Jamestown Banking Company,
one of the old and solid financial institutions of Mercer county, was
organized July 21, 1874, with a capital stock of $50,000. Its original
officers were as follows: Dr.
William Gibson, president; James
McMaster, vice president, and W.
W. Davis, cashier. By the death of Dr. Gibson, Mr. McMaster succeeded
to the presidency, and remained at the head of the bank’s affairs until
his death in 1897. The deceased thus added another strong claim to the
fatherhood of Jamestown, upon whose homestead the main portion of the
town was laid out and in the furtherance of whose interests he had
always been foremost. In the meantime William
A. McMaster, the son, had entered the bank, of which he
became cashier in 1885, and when his father died, twelve years later,
he was the only legitimate successor to the presidency. Under the able
guidance of both father and son, the Jamestown Banking Company has
successfully weathered all financial crises, national and local, and
has long since been classed as a most substantial and progressive
institution.
Twentieth
Century History of Mercer County,
1909, pages 228 - 229
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