City of Glasgow Bank


Date(s) of creation: 1839-1892
Level: Sub-collection
Format: Archive           

collection SOAS Archive
id PP_MS_1.CGB
recordtype archive
scb_item_location Archive & Special Collections
item_location Archive & Special Collections
scb_loan_type Reference only
callnumber PP MS 1/CGB
callnumber_txt PP MS 1/CGB
callnumber-sort PP MS 1/CGB
prefix_number CGB
title City of Glasgow Bank
scb_date_creation 1839-1892
scb_level Sub-collection
level_sort 7/Collection/Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Collection/Sub-Sub-Sub-Collection/Series/Sub-Series/Sub-Sub-Series/File
scb_extent 14 boxes
format Archive
scb_admin_history In 1857 the City of Glasgow Bank experienced its first crash. Financial difficulties forced the Bank to close on 11 November, with a deficiency of £77,577. Business resumed on 31 December. Mackinnon served as Director of the City of Glasgow Bank from 1858, during which time he worked to extricate the bank from its earlier difficulties. In 1870, finding he could no longer approve the policy of the other directors, he resigned his seat on the Board.On 2 October 1878, the directors were once more forced to close the doors and the Bank collapsed precipitating one of the most serious crises in modern Scottish financial history. On audit, the estimated balance of loss, including the Bank's capital was £6,200,000. It transpired that balance sheets had been falsified over a number of years. The Bank had been a major lender to the Racine & Mississippi Railroad (later Western Union) and when the collapse occurred, the Railroad owed over one million pounds. Hundreds of Glasgow firms folded as a result of the crash, and many shareholders faced bankruptcy, as liability was unlimited. The directors were tried for fraud at the High Court in Edinburgh in January 1879.Following the crash in 1878, the Bank's liquidators brought a claim against Mackinnon in the Court of Session for about £400,000, in connection with advice he was said to have given on American railroad securities. After protracted litigation, Mackinnon was completely exonerated by the Court when it was demonstrated that the course taken by the Bank's directors was contrary to his express advice.
scb_access_status Open
language English
language_search English
scb_finding_aids Handlist available
hierarchy_top_id_raw PP MS 1
hierarchy_sequence PP_MS_1.00CGB