Chronology of Events Leading to

Bank Crisis of 1932-1933

 

 

April 6, 1917               United States Congress declares war on Germany, and the U.S.A. enters World War I.

 

November 11, 1918    Germany calls for an armistice, or an end to the fighting.

 

August 2, 1923           President Warren G. Harding dies after suffering a heart attack.  V.P. Calvin Coolidge is sworn in the next day.

 

November 6, 1928      Herbert Hoover is elected President of the United States.

 

October 24, 1929        ÒBlack ThursdayÓ the Stock Market plummets.  Stockholders lose $3 billion. 

 

October 29, 1929        ÒBlack TuesdayÓ the Stock Market crashes completely.  People begin to panic and the cost per share drops to new record lows. 

 

January 18, 1932         First National Bank of Champaign closes its doors due to a run by panicked investors.

 

January 19, 1932         Urbana Mayor, Reginald C. Harmon, issues a proclamation that declares a bank holiday from January 19 - 23.  During the bank holiday, citizens are educated and urged to sign a petition of faith in the Urbana banks.

 

March 4, 1933             Illinois Governor, Henry Horner, declares a bank holiday for the entire state of Illinois effective until March 7, 1933.  The proclamation also limits withdrawals from banks to five percent of total deposits for 10 days.  Franklin Delano Roosevelt is inaugurated to his first term as President of the U.S.A.  One of F.D.R.Õs first acts is to declare a nation-wide bank holiday.

 

March 7, 1933             The Bank Emergency Committee of the Urbana Association of Commerce issues the first set of ÒUrbana MoneyÓ for sale.  The money is backed dollar for dollar, and thus not based on credit.

 

April 1, 1933               ÒUrbana MoneyÓ can be traded in for currency at either of the two Urbana banks, Busey and First National.  The crisis was averted and economic conditions improve in central Illinois.