Great photo from the Monarch Club! I have to get up there...
For those of you interested, I just posted 100+ photos of renovations and new construction across the city on this thread: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...02019&page=290
The thread in general contains hundreds of pages of real estate developments covering over a decade. Lots to be excited about in the city nowadays!
The guardian Building once had a major bank inside it.
I have a $20 bill printed in 1929 from the Guardian National Bank of Detroit.
Anyway,. it's the bank that started the Great Depression. It supposedly held the reserves of 300 smaller banks,.. and when it fell, it took them with it.
Last edited by Bigdd; September-28-19 at 11:27 PM.
Nice image of local national bank currency.The guardian Building once had a major bank inside it.
I have a $20 bill printed in 1929 from the Guardian National Bank of Detroit.
Anyway,. it's the bank that started the Great Depression. It supposedly held the reserves of 300 smaller banks,.. and when it fell, it took them with it.
The Union National Trust Bank is the bank that built the Guardian Building, and there were several banking mergers that took place in the late 1920s that produced the Guardian National Bank of Detroit.
Saying that this bank started the Great Depression... not sure I would agree with that. It started on Wall Street. The panic on Wall Street caused many banks nationwide to go under, which precipitated the Great Depression.
Last edited by Gistok; September-29-19 at 11:29 PM.
The rumored failure of Guardian [[and First National Bank of Detroit) led to the wave of bank holidays first in Michigan and then 36 other states in February and March 1933. Eventually, the new Roosevelt administration declared a federal bank holiday before reopening in late March. Guardian and First National were forced to merge to form National Bank of Detroit.
This was three years into the Depression, and things had slowed down a lot by then. Detroit may have had over 400,000 unemployed. The link has many more details.
Great pics from everyone, thanks, as a long time Detroit resident it makes one feel so good to see the city turning around the way it is, we’ve come along way, And have a long way to go still but I really think we are finally on the right track together.
This Ferry Street house was sold by Midtown Detroit to Nancy Tellem who "intends to transform the 1887 Queen Anne home into a business accelerator and co-working space for local creatives and media-focused entrepreneurs" [[Crain's Detroit).
https://www.crainsdetroit.com/voices...forms-historic
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