Old First National Bank of Prineville

Old First National Bank of Prineville and Foster and Hyde Store

Photograph of a one-story, stone commercial building on a city street corner

The First National Bank building in 2007. The Foster and Hyde Store is barely visible at the left edge of the photo.
Locator map
Location of Prineville and the First National Bank and Foster and Hyde buildings in Oregon
Location Bank: 247 N. Main Street
Store: 243 N. Main Street
Prineville, Oregon
Coordinates 44°18′10″N 120°50′51″W / 44.302727°N 120.847407°W / 44.302727; -120.847407Coordinates: 44°18′10″N 120°50′51″W / 44.302727°N 120.847407°W / 44.302727; -120.847407
Area Less than 1 acre (0.40 ha)[1]
Built Bank: 1905
Store: Before 1900[1]
Architectural style Bank: American Renaissance
Store: Italianate[1]
NRHP Reference # 85003035
Added to NRHP December 2, 1985

The Old First National Bank of Prineville is a historic commercial building in Prineville, Oregon, United States.

History

The First National Bank was originally organized in 1887 as the first bank in Central Oregon, and erected its first building at a prominent downtown intersection in 1888. The present building on the site, the bank's second, was built in 1905 of locally-quarried stone. Its dignified American Renaissance architecture reflects the growth and prosperity of the banking company, and by extension that of Prineville and Crook County. It was also the first of three prominent buildings[lower-alpha 1] whose use of native basalt from the same quarry lends a distinctive feel to central Prineville.[1]

The First National Bank of Prineville merged with the First National Bank of Portland in 1941, and moved to new quarters in Prineville in 1953. That same year, the historic bank building was joined with the adjacent Foster and Hyde Store building through removal of a common interior wall and converted to retail space.[1] The two buildings were jointly listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. The other two basalt buildings are the Crook County Bank Building (1910) and the Crook County Courthouse (1909).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.