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First National Bank of Mankato

First National Bank of Mankato
FirstNationalBankMankato.jpg
First National Bank of Mankato is located in Minnesota
First National Bank of Mankato
First National Bank of Mankato is located in the US
First National Bank of Mankato
Location 229 S. Front St., Mankato, Minnesota
Coordinates 44°09′59.9″N 94°00′13.7″W / 44.166639°N 94.003806°W / 44.166639; -94.003806Coordinates: 44°09′59.9″N 94°00′13.7″W / 44.166639°N 94.003806°W / 44.166639; -94.003806
Area less than one acre
Built 1913
Architect Ellerbe & Round
Architectural style Prairie School
MPS Blue Earth County MRA (AD)
NRHP reference # 74001004
Added to NRHP July 30, 1974

The First National Bank of Mankato, also known as the Old First National Bank of Mankato and located at 229 South Front Street in Mankato, Minnesota, United States, is a fine example of Prairie School architecture in a commercial building, relating rural life to the development of downtown Mankato as a regional center of commerce and finance. The recently restored exterior is now part of the Mankato Civic Center, the Verizon Wireless Center.

Mankato was settled by Whites beginning in 1852, on land previously occupied by the indigenous Sisseton (“Lake Village”) Dakota Sioux until they were forced to cede it under the Treaty of Traverse des Sioux of 1851. Experiencing rapid growth, Mankato sprouted quarries, industries, stores, hotels, and other commercial concerns. "Perhaps most crucial to these businesses, and to the farmers in Blue Earth County, were Mankato’s banks."

The First National Bank of Mankato was one of the three competing financial institutions in the early 20th Century, along with the Citizens’ National Bank and the Mankato State Bank (earlier Mankato National Bank). First National had already been the target of the famous aborted robbery attempt by Jesse James and the James-Younger Gang in 1876, which immediately preceded their defeat at Northfield.

The building eventually built by Ellerbe and Round for the First National Bank involves a likely case of stolen designs. Looking for a new building, First National officials approached Carl K. Bennett of Owatonna, Minnesota, who connected them with the famous Minneapolis-based architectural firm of Purcell and Elmslie in 1912. According to several accounts, Purcell and Elmslie drew extensive sketches for the proposed building which they left with the bank officials. Later informed by mail that the bank would not be using them, they requested that the sketches be returned. The sketches were, but only after a delay of many weeks, during which time the bank hired Ellerbe and Round to be their architects.


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