State Bank of New South Wales

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State Bank of New South Wales
FormerlyRural Bank of New South Wales
IndustryFinancial services
PredecessorGovernment Savings Bank of New South Wales
Founded1 July 1933 in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Defunct1994
SuccessorsColonial First State
Commonwealth Bank
HeadquartersMartin Place
Area served
New South Wales

The State Bank of New South Wales, (from 1933 until 1982 known as the Rural Bank of New South Wales), was a bank that was owned by the Government of New South Wales. It existed from 1933 until 1994, when it was taken over by the Colonial State Bank and then the Commonwealth Bank in 2000.

History of operations[]

Founding[]

Its predecessor was the Government Savings Bank of New South Wales, which failed and later merged with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in 1931.[1] The bank started in 1933 as the Rural Bank of NSW, which was a bank that primarily lent to and dealt with farmers. In 1982, the bank's name was changed to the State Bank of NSW and so was its mandate, to that of a standard commercial bank, although it had been operating in this way for some years. It did, however, keep its famous slogan 'We do more for you personally'.

The bank was 'corporatised' in 1990, under the State Owned Corporations Act 1989 (NSW) and the State Bank (Corporatisation) Act 1989 (NSW). On 14 May 1990, the existing State Bank was dissolved, and all of its assets and business undertaking were vested in an incorporated State Bank, limited by shares.[2]

Acquisitions[]

In 1994, the bank was sold to Colonial, a financial services company. The bank then changed its name to Colonial State Bank in 1996. In 2000, it too was taken over, this time by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

Similar named corporation[]

This bank should not be confused with the Bank of New South Wales, which was founded as Australia's first bank, operating from 1817 and the precursor of what became the Westpac Banking Corporation in 1982.

Chairmen[]

  • William O’Malley Wood, June 1933 – April 1934[3]
  • Sir Clarence McKerihan, April 1934 – 1961[4]

Former bank buildings[]

References[]

  1. ^ Polden, Kenneth (1972). "The Collapse of the Government Savings Bank of New South Wales, 1931". Australian Economic History Review. 12: 52–70. doi:10.1111/aehr.121004.
  2. ^ Commissioner of Taxation v Bank of Western Australia Ltd; Commissioner of Taxation v State Bank of New South Wales (1995)
  3. ^ Frank Cain, 'Wood, William Henry O’Malley (1856–1941)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/wood-william-henry-omalley-13255/text6475, published first in hardcopy 2005, accessed online 3 September 2015.
  4. ^ Melanie Oppenheimer, 'McKerihan, Sir Clarence Roy (1896–1969)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/mckerihan-sir-clarence-roy-10991/text19541, published first in hardcopy 2000, accessed online 3 September 2015.

External links[]

Media related to State Bank of New South Wales at Wikimedia Commons

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