Home Bank of Canada

Home Bank of Canada
IndustryBank
PredecessorToronto Savings Bank/Home Savings and Loan (1854-1903)
FoundedJuly 10, 1903
DefunctAugust 18, 1923
Headquarters,

The Home Bank of Canada was a Canadian bank that was incorporated July 10, 1903, in Toronto[1] but did not receive a Treasury Board certificate to operate as a chartered bank until the next year.[2]

It succeeded the earlier Toronto Savings Bank, which had been founded in 1854 by Bishop Armand-François-Marie de Charbonnel and the local chapter of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul[3] and later Home Savings and Loans in 1871. The failure of Home Bank on August 18, 1923, was the subject of a Canadian Royal Commission initiated by Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1924.[4]

Founded with the support of the Roman Catholic Church, James Mason and Henry Pellatt represented a benign board of directors including E.G. Gooderham, Claude Macdonnell and three other directors from Winnipeg, Manitoba, affiliated with the United Grain Growers.

  1. ^ "Gazette". www.newspapers.com. 11 Jul 1903. p. 6. To incorporate the Home Bank of Canada
  2. ^ "Gazette". www.newspapers.com. 14 Nov 1904. p. 7.
  3. ^ "Historicist: Toronto's Catholic Beer Baron". 14 September 2013. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  4. ^ Harrison Andrew McKeown (1924). Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into and Report upon the Affairs of the Home Bank of Canada. Ottawa, Ontario: King's Printer. LCCN 29001277.