Also published
in the Boston Fed's 2004
Annual Report
1910 | 1920 | 1930 | 1940 | 1950 | 1960 | 1970 | 1980 | 1990 | 2000
1910s
December
23, 1913 President
Woodrow Wilson signs the Federal Reserve Act “to provide
for the establishment of Federal reserve banks, to
furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting
commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision
of banking in the United States, and for other purposes.”
November 16, 1914 The Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston opens for business, serving
the six New England states. Bankers, businesspeople,
politicians, and educators had united to recommend
that the organizing committee establish a Reserve Bank
to serve the New England region.
• The Bank is housed in two rooms below street level
in the Converse Building at 101 Milk Street and is
staffed by three officers and 14 clerks. 66 percent
of all commercial banks in the District are member
banks. Alfred Aiken, previously president of Worcester
National Bank, is named Governor (now President)
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
• Discount-window lending is the primary tool used
to accommodate seasonal swings in the demand for
currency and credit.
↑ top 1920s
1920 The Bank begins construction
of a building at 30 Pearl Street, which opens in 1922.
• Early in the 1920s, most Federal Reserve officials
regard open market purchases of securities primarily
as a source of revenue rather than as a tool for
controlling money and credit. Each regional Bank
makes its own purchases of Treasury securities and
bankers’ acceptances.
1923 The Federal Reserve Bank
of Boston opens an office in Havana, Cuba, to provide
cable services for transferring funds, but closes it
in 1927.
1929 Eddie McCarthy starts
work at the Bank as a messenger, earning $600 per year.
He will work for the Bank for almost 70 years, becoming
the Bank’s “eyes and ears” on the financial markets.
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1930s
1932 The Glass-Steagall Act
of 1932 permits Reserve Banks to make loans to member
banks on any security the Reserve Banks consider satisfactory,
and in unusual circumstances even to make loans to
nonbank borrowers; later, companies such as Raytheon
and Anderson Little will take out loans from the Boston
Fed.
1933 The Glass-Steagall Act
of 1933 places significant restrictions on the ability
of banks to engage in investment banking.
1935 The Banking Act of 1935
restructures the Federal Reserve System, introducing
the basic structure that exists today. The Treasury
Secretary and Comptroller of the Currency no longer
serve on the Board.
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1940s
As
deficit financing of World War II expands, the Federal
Reserve becomes
a more active purchaser of Treasury debt.
1950s
The
Federal Reserve and the banking industry develop and implement magnetic ink character recognition
(MICR) encoding, allowing automated check processing.
• Open market operations become the primary tool
for carrying out monetary policy, with discount rate
and reserve requirement changes used as occasional
supplements.
• Under Research Director George Ellis, the Bank
studies the loss of textile and shoe-manufacturing
jobs in New England, and begins to promote the idea
that the region should specialize in high-value-added
industries that tap its educational and intellectual
resources.
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1960s
1961 George Ellis is named
President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
1968 Frank Morris succeeds
George Ellis as President of the Boston Fed.
• The Reserve Banks initiate the book-entry securities
system.
1969 Bank President Frank
Morris joins the preeminent Boston business group, “The
Vault.” The Bank begins planning for a new building,
eventually choosing a site that held deteriorating
warehouses, many of them abandoned. Construction on
this site extends Boston’s financial district and leads
to revitalization of the South Station area.
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1970s
The
Bank elects its first minority Director, Kenneth Guscott,
who serves on the Board from 1974 until 1979, and its
first female Director, Carol Goldberg, who serves from
1978 until 1982.
1970 The Federal Reserve formally
adopts monetary targets.
• Amendments to the Bank Holding Company Act bring
one-bank holding companies under federal supervision,
ushering in the modern era of bank-holding-company
supervision and regulation. For the Federal Reserve,
the exclusive federal regulator of bank holding companies,
this means significantly expanded responsibilities.
1972 The Boston Fed establishes
regional check processing centers (RCPCs) in Windsor
Locks, CT, and Lewiston, ME.
1976 At the request of the
state of Massachusetts, which is in a fiscal crisis,
the Bank uses its expertise to examine the state budget
and the administration’s plans to balance it. Bank
researchers and executives travel to New York City
to brief and reassure wary bond dealers
on the state’s efforts to put its fiscal house in order.
1977 The Community Reinvestment
Act encourages depository institutions to help meet
the credit needs of their communities.
• Bank staff move into the new building at 600 Atlantic
Avenue.
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1980s
1980 The Depository Institutions
Deregulation and Monetary Control Act requires all
depository institutions to hold reserves and the Reserve
Banks to price and offer their services to all depository
institutions. The Act also applies uniform reserve
requirements to all depository institutions and extends
access to the discount window, among other provisions.
• The Boston Fed begins exploring the feasibility
of applying image technology to check processing.
1987 On October 19, the Dow
Jones industrial average falls 508 points, or 22.6
percent. The Federal Reserve reassures markets that
liquidity is available.
1989 Frank Morris retires;
Dick Syron becomes President of the Boston Fed.
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1990s
The
late 1980s to early 1990s are a period of substantial
challenge to the
Bank, given the severely distressed condition of depository
institutions in New England and the region’s depressed
economy. The region incurs a significant number of
bank failures, and the Bank’s banking supervision,
discount window, and financial services functions are
challenged to ensure the maintenance of essential services
and facilitate the orderly resolution of failed institutions.
1992 The Bank publishes a
groundbreaking statistical study that documents the
role that race played in home mortgage approvals in
Boston’s neighborhoods, leading to reforms.
1994 The Federal Reserve Board
implements same-day settlement rules to require paying
banks to accept checks presented by 8:00 a.m. without
requiring payment of presentment fees and to pay for
those checks in same-day final settlement.
1994 Cathy Minehan replaces
Dick Syron as President, becoming the first female
President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
• President Minehan continues the Bank’s active
involvement with the Boston Public Schools and the
Boston Private Industry Council’s workforce readiness
efforts, begun under Frank Morris.
• As an experiment, the FOMC begins announcing policy
decisions on the day they are made. This begins a
period of increasing transparency.
• The Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching
Efficiency Act permits interstate banking. Well before
Riegle-Neal, New England was at the cusp of the interstate
banking movement with the creation of regional compacts
that allowed reciprocal mergers and acquisitions
across state lines.
1999 The Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act permits banks, securities firms, and insurance
companies to affiliate within a new “financial holding
company” structure, and expands the list of nonbanking
financial activities permitted to banks. The Federal
Reserve is given the challenge of serving as the umbrella
supervisor of the new holding companies. The Act also
establishes sweeping consumer privacy protections.
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2000s
2003 The New England Economic
Adventure opens at the Boston Fed. The Adventure
features interactive exhibits and activities that
use New England’s
history to teach about economic growth and rising
living standards.
• Faced with declining check volume, the Reserve
Banks implement a process to better match national
infrastructure with volumes. Thirteen offices discontinue
check processing, while two others expand.
2004 The U. S. Treasury chooses
the Boston Fed to build and maintain the systems and
networks for the Treasury’s Internet payments platform
(IPP) initiative, which will allow government agencies
to electronically procure and pay for goods and services.
• The decision is made to move Boston check services
to Windsor Locks, Connecticut, in early 2006.
Find out more about the Boston Fed's history:
A Brief History of the
Boston Fed
The Presidents of the Boston
Fed, 1914-present |