By Roscoe Barnes III
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Aug 8, 2025 | 3:02 PM
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Aug 8, 2025 | 3:02 PM
NATCHEZ, Miss. -- The former site of Bluff City Savings
Bank, the only Black-owned bank in Natchez, now has a historical marker that honors
the history of the bank, which operated from 1906 to 1913 at 119 N. Union St.
Mayor Dan Gibson on Friday presented the marker on behalf
of the City of Natchez to Eric Berry, who co-owns the Natchez Manor Bed and
Breakfast, 600 Franklin St., with his family. Gibson said the marker will be
mounted at a later date on the side of the Natchez Manor building.
The historical site is now part of the city’s Self-Guided
African American History tour, which has a total of 30 sites. The marker was a
joint project of the city and NAPAC museum with assistance from Visit Natchez.
The bank’s original building, which no longer exists, was
located on the north side of the three-story building on North Union that once
served as a fire station. Today, that space is occupied by the rear addition to
the Natchez Manor, facing North Union.
Berry, a former NFL football player, said he was
surprised and very pleased to learn about his building’s connection to the
Bluff City Savings Bank.
“I feel like I’m a part of history and upholding the
history, legacy, and heritage of Natchez,” he said. “When I got the notice that
this was the first Black bank in the city, it was a pleasant surprise to me. I’ve
been doing research all over the country and all over the Southeast. Discovering
this history has been liberating. I’m excited to be part of it.”
Gibson said the story of the bank is a significant piece of
Natchez’s history. He noted Dr. John Bowman Banks, the city’s first Black physician,
played an important role in the founding of the bank. “Dr. Banks obviously was
a pillar of our community and indeed a trail blazer,” Gibson said. “It was his
vision to create this bank.”
The history of Dr. Banks is regularly shared at the Dr.
John Bowman Banks Museum, which is owned and operated by Rose Hill Missionary
Baptist Church. Representatives of the museum attended Friday’s presentation to
show their support for the new marker. The representatives included Dora
Hawkins, Thelma Newsome, and Jacquelyn Williams.
Bluff City Savings Bank was founded by a group of
prominent Black men with backgrounds in medicine, business, and education. In
addition to Dr. Banks and Dr. Dumas, the co-founders included Professor J.R.
Ross, Professor George Washington Brumfield, Professor Samuel H. Owens, and
Walton Barland.
The bank’s opening occurred at a critical time for Blacks,
who were living under Jim Crow. It was one of nine Black-owned banks in
Mississippi.
“Bluff City became an important source of small,
short-term loans,” wrote Shennette Garrett-Scott in the publication, “’All the
Other Devils this Side of Hades’: Black Banks and the Mississippi Banking Law
of 1914” (Cambridge University Press, Jan. 12, 2022). “Farmers, for example,
could get $40 or $50 using their mule, livestock, and farm equipment as
collateral.”
Page Ogden, a retired banking professional, described
Bluff City as a “fairly loaned up bank as reflected in the ratio of its loan
deposits in their statement of condition.” He said it was a small bank that most
likely focused on loans for houses and other consumer type loans. “It was all
about the business of supplying the local needs in the black population,” he
said.
The bank closed in 1913. In the January 1914 issue of The
Crisis, the magazine reported:
“Bluff City Savings Bank, of Natchez, Miss., a colored
enterprise, has been closed. The bank is not insolvent, but the failure of a
white bank in the same town caused a run upon the colored bank, and it was
closed until the property in which the money was invested could be converted
into cash.”
Ogden said the fear in 1913 was understandable given the
times. “In those days, there was no FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation),” he said. “Mississippi was primarily a rural state and there was
a lot of suspicion of banks to begin with. Scares were common.”
Mimi Miller, executive director emerita of Historic
Natchez Foundation, said the bank “went into receivership and Dr. Dumas acted
as the receiver to make sure that investors got back their money and that loan
defaults were properly executed, and the properties resold.”
Note: An article on the bank titled, “This History is
Important: Remembering the Bluff City Savings Bank,” appeared in the July/Aug
2023 issue of Natchez Magazine.
See more at this link: https://listenupyall.com/2025/08/08/natchez-honors-history-of-bluff-city-savings-bank/
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