William Berney: Difference between revisions

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After the formation of the [[National Bank of Birmingham]], Berney was hired as a bookkeeper and became bank-president [[Charles Linn]]'s protégé. He was promoted to cashier in [[1875]] and was, the same year, elected to serve on the [[Birmingham Board of Aldermen]] during the administration of [[William H. Morris]]. After Linn's death in [[1882]], Berney was elected president of the National Bank of Birmingham, succeeding his mentor.
After the formation of the [[National Bank of Birmingham]], Berney was hired as a bookkeeper and became bank-president [[Charles Linn]]'s protégé. He was promoted to cashier in [[1875]] and was, the same year, elected to serve on the [[Birmingham Board of Aldermen]] during the administration of [[William H. Morris]]. After Linn's death in [[1882]], Berney was elected president of the National Bank of Birmingham, succeeding his mentor.


Three years later he resigned from the National Bank of Birmingham to found his own [[Berney National Bank|Central Bank of Birmingham]], which was soon reorganized as Berney National Bank.
Three years later he resigned from the National Bank of Birmingham to found his own [[Berney National Bank|Central Bank of Birmingham]], which was soon reorganized as Berney National Bank. In [[1887]] he and his brother [[Chollet Berney|Chollet]] founded the [[Berney Bank of Bessemer]], housed in the [[Berney Brothers Block]].


Berney later returned to Montgomery and was vice-president of the Bank of Montgomery, president of the Fourth National Bank, and, in [[1899]], president of the American National Bank. He was widowed after the birth of his third child, and took a second wife, the former Fiorella Robertson of Montgomery, in [[1902]].
Berney later returned to Montgomery and was vice-president of the Bank of Montgomery, president of the Fourth National Bank, and, in [[1899]], president of the American National Bank. He was widowed after the birth of his third child, and took a second wife, the former Fiorella Robertson of Montgomery, in [[1902]].

Revision as of 14:04, 17 October 2010

William Berney in 1887
A check drawn on the Berney National Bank signed by Berney

William Berney (born May 27, 1846 in Montgomery – died ) was the founder of the Berney National Bank.

Berney was born in Montgomery, the fourth of eleven children born to James and Jane Elizabeth Saffold Berney. His father was a noted physician and he was educated in Montomery and Baltimore before entering the Confederate Army in 1864 at Dalton, Georgia. He served with Hallonquist's Reserve Regiment as an ordnance sergeant through the end of the war, participating in battle at Dalton, Resaca, Atlanta, Jonesboro and other sites.

After the war he was appointed deputy collector of internal revenue for the 2nd District of Alabama. Before long he took a position as cashier for the Lehman, Durr & Company cotton commission house. He married the former Lizzie J. Taylor in Montgomery on April 29, 1868 and then worked for the South & North Alabama Railroad for a year before resigning to try his hand at farming.

After the formation of the National Bank of Birmingham, Berney was hired as a bookkeeper and became bank-president Charles Linn's protégé. He was promoted to cashier in 1875 and was, the same year, elected to serve on the Birmingham Board of Aldermen during the administration of William H. Morris. After Linn's death in 1882, Berney was elected president of the National Bank of Birmingham, succeeding his mentor.

Three years later he resigned from the National Bank of Birmingham to found his own Central Bank of Birmingham, which was soon reorganized as Berney National Bank. In 1887 he and his brother Chollet founded the Berney Bank of Bessemer, housed in the Berney Brothers Block.

Berney later returned to Montgomery and was vice-president of the Bank of Montgomery, president of the Fourth National Bank, and, in 1899, president of the American National Bank. He was widowed after the birth of his third child, and took a second wife, the former Fiorella Robertson of Montgomery, in 1902.

References

  • Dubose, John Witherspoon (1887) Jefferson County and Birmingham, Alabama: Historical and Biographical Birmingham: Teeple & Smith, Publishers; Caldwell Printing Works.
  • Memorial Record of Alabama,” Volume 2 (1893) Madison, Wisconsin: Brant & Fuller. pp. 248-249
  • Owen, Thomas McAdory and Marie Bankhead Owen (1921) History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography. 4 volumes. Chicago, Illinois: S. J. Clarke Publishing Co.
  • Kilpatrick, Andrew (1996) A Legacy of Leadership: The History of AmSouth Bank. Birmingham: AmSouth Bank.