Federal Reserve Act of 1913
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SEC. 2. As soon as practicable, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Agriculture and the Comptroller of the Currency, acting as “The Reserve Bank Organization Committee,” shall designate not less than eight nor more than twelve cities to be known as Federal reserve cities, and shall divide the continental United States, excluding Alaska, into districts, each district to contain only one of such Federal reserve cities. The determination of said organization committee shall not be subject to review except by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System when organized: Provided, That the districts shall be apportioned with due regard to the convenience and customary course of business and shall not necessarily be coterminous with any State or States. The districts thus created may be readjusted and new districts may from time to time be created by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, not to exceed twelve in all. Such districts shall be known as Federal reserve districts and may be designated by number. When the State of Alaska or Hawaii is hereafter admitted to the Union the Federal Reserve districts shall be readjusted by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in such manner as to include such State. Every national bank in any State shall, upon commencing business or within ninety days after admission into the Union of the State in which it is located, become a member bank of the Federal Reserve System by subscribing and paying for stock in the Federal Reserve bank of its district in accordance with the provisions of this Act and shall thereupon be an insured bank under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and failure to do so shall subject such bank to the penalty provided by the sixth paragraph of this section … .
Contents
- The U.S. Banking Industry: Historical Overview
- Proposition for the Bank of North America
- Charter for the Bank of New York
- George Washington: Letter to Alexander Hamilton on the First National Bank
- Alexander Hamilton: Letter to Washington on the First National Bank
- Act to Incorporate the Subscribers to the Bank of the United States
- McCulloch v. Maryland
- D. Boyd: Letter to William Hayes
- Andrew Jackson: Veto Message Regarding the Second Bank of the United States
- National Bank Act of 1863
- Bylaws of the Freedman’s Saving’s and Trust Company
- Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner: The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today
- Formation of the American Bankers’s Association
- Maggie L. Walker: Speech at the 34th Annual Session of the Right Worthy Grand Council of Virginia
- Bankruptcy Catalogue of Stocks, Bonds, and Lands of the Estate of Jay Cooke & Co.
- “The Great Cleveland Panic of 1893”
- Wall Street and the Panic of 1907
- “Morgan! Who Saved the Day!”
- Nelson W. Aldrich: Plan for Banking Legislation
- Federal Reserve Act of 1913
- Agreement Regarding the Distribution of the Dawes Annuities
- Herbert Hoover: Campaign Speech
- Franklin D. Roosevelt: Fireside Chat on the Banking Crisis
- : Banking Act of 1933
- Annual Report of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation for 1939
- Gardner Ackley: Testimony before the Joint Economic Committee
- Barbara Rudolph: “The Savings and Loan Crisis: Finally the Bill Has Come Due”
- Charles A. Bowsher: The Budgetary Treatment of the Proposed Resolution Funding Corporation (REFCORP)
- Donald L. Kohn: “The Federal Reserve’s Policy Actions during the Financial Crisis”
- Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
- Marc Labonte: “The Federal Reserve’s Response to COVID-19: Policy Issues”