Financial History Issue 130 (Summer 2019) | Page 16

Black-owned banks began to crop up in the early 20th century. Most eventu- ally merged or failed, as did most White- owned banks formed in that era, but during their existence they helped Black families to finance their businesses, educa- tions, homes and consumer durable pur- chases. According to Andrew F. Brimmer, a distinguished African American econo- mist and member of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors from 1966 until 1974, Black-owned banks faced higher costs than other banks. Higher costs reduced their profitability and increased their fra- gility, but also partially explained why incumbents had often charged Black bor- rowers higher rates. In the 1960s, several brokerages and an investment bank owned by African Amer- icans appeared on Wall Street. Before that, only a few African Americans had appeared in the nation’s financial capital and they bore racialized nicknames like the Dark Prince (Jeremiah Hamilton) and the Black Wolf (H.R. George). In 1970, a young financial journalist named Myron Kandel (Board member of the Museum of American Finance) helped Daniels & Bell to raise sufficient capital to join the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Most Black investment banks and brokerages, like H.L. Wright & Company, failed or were acquired by White-owned firms, but not before providing valuable services to cli- ents and stirring incumbents to hire more African American brokers and establish branches in places like Harlem. About the same time, female brokers began to appear and a few, like Muriel Siebert, even bought seats on the NYSE. Urged on by legendary corporate gadfly Wilma Soss, female investors long out- numbered their male counterparts, though they owned fewer shares than men did, on average. Nevertheless, in the second half of the 20th century women proved a potent economic force, and incumbents increasingly catered to them. Women had been bank borrowers and stockholders since the late 18th century, Mary Roebling, pictured here in 1980, was the first woman to serve as president of a major US bank and one of the few women to achieve a top management position in banking in the 20th century. but not until the late 19th century did a few begin to take leadership positions in a handful of small institutions. In the early 20th century, many led special women’s departments established by large com- mercial banks finally eager to attract their deposits away from building and loans, mutual savings banks and credit unions. Some of those women were able to lever- age that experience into general supervi- sory roles and eventually a few, like Mary Vail Andress and Mary Roebling, made it into top management. The situation was similar in insurance. Top female financial executives, like Deanna Mulligan, the CEO of Guardian Life Insurance Company of America since 2011, remain too few. While the Women’s Bank soon faltered, female-led brokerages and investment funds have thrived. Wall Street’s super masculine culture, which at its nadir led to misogynist practices like those of the infa- mous “Boom Boom” room, created strong incentives for female financiers to strike off on their own. Important examples include Garzarelli Capital, the eponymous vehicle of NYU Ph.D. and 1987 stock mar- ket crash predictor Elaine Garzarelli, and 14    FINANCIAL HISTORY  |  Summer 2019  | www.MoAF.org Amy Domini’s widely emulated Social Equity Fund. Today, Sallie Krawcheck’s Ellevest invests with women’s longer lives and lower incomes in mind. Historians continue to unearth fasci- nating examples of financial self-help pio- neers, especially individuals like Minnie Geddings Cox, who lived at the intersec- tion of race, class and gender. Born to former slaves in Mississippi in 1869, Cox graduated from Nashville’s Fisk Univer- sity before opening the Delta Penny Sav- ings Bank and the Mississippi Beneficial Life Insurance Company early in the 20th century. American Indian and poor White finan- ciers, however, remain conspicuously absent from these new narratives, but for different reasons. Only recently have scholars begun to explore in earnest the history of poor Americans of Euroameri- can descent who lurk in historical sources, uncounted but in plain view, under scores of derogatory nicknames. Physically, poor Whites can easily “pass” as members of the middle or upper classes, but their language, behaviors and clothes often give them away. For readers who doubt that poor Whites faced significant discrimination, consider the following, which was uttered in Indianapolis in 1956 about poor White emigrants from southern Appalachia: These people are creating terrible problems in our cities. They can’t or won’t hold a job, they flout the law constantly and neglect their children, they drink too much and their moral standards would shame an alley cat. To this day, poor Whites are often shunted into their own “ghettos,” com- posed of substandard houses, euphemisti- cally called “mobile homes” and arranged in tightly-packed “trailer parks,” ineligible for standard mortgages and subject to the whims of predatory landlords. But the discrimination they face pales in comparison to that inflicted upon Ameri- can Indians. Enslaved, murdered, forced