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1 9 5 4 OPERATIONS
OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS
A HE TOTAL VOLUME of work handled by the Fed­
eral Reserve Bank of St. Louis again increased in 1954. In
the accompanying table showing the volume of selected
operations at the St. Louis office of this bank and its
three branches, 11 of the 17 items are larger than in 1953.
Furthermore, only three of the six categories showing
some slackening in activity were in the areas where sizable
numbers of items are normally handled each year.
As usual, the dollar volume of work done in 1954
reached striking proportions. Over $58 billion worth of
checks were cleared, almost $38 billion in funds were
transferred at the St. Louis office of this bank and
its branches, over $10 billion of United States securities
were issued, exchanged and redeemed, approximately $1.5
billion worth of advances (including renewals) were
granted banks, and over $1 billion in currency and coin
were processed. Dollar volume was down from last year
in a number of cases, reflecting among other things the
lessened business activity generally.
While the figures in the table give a rough idea of the
size and scope of operations during the year, there are
numerous activities not represented there and several
interesting developments that deserve further comment.
Operational Activities
Check collection operations continued as the largest
single function of the bank in terms of number of em­
ployees and volume of work handled. Productivity was
increased, a factor being the addition of more floor space
in improved quarters. A continued gain in use of the
check routing symbol program was also experienced.
About 92 per cent of the checks drawn on Eighth Dis­
trict banks bore the routing symbol at the end of the year,
ranking the district in sixth place among the 12 Federal
Reserve districts in this respect.
In the Money Department, a change in the method of
sorting fit Federal Reserve Notes (those in condition for
re-issuance) accounted for the slight relative drop in
volume during 1954. Up to July 19, the law forbade a
Reserve bank putting into circulation in its district any
notes ftut its own. Consequently, the fit notes of all
other Reserve banks received by it had to be sorted out
and returned to the banks of issue. With a change in the
law, the Reserve banks were given permission to pay out
notes of other banks and in late July, discontinued the
Page 20




practice of returning fit notes to the banks of issue. In­
stead, they began paying such notes out in their respec­
tive districts. In the past, this bank had consistently
received from other Reserve banks more of its own fit
notes—in number and in dollar volume—than it had sent

COMBINED VOLUME OF OPERATIONS
AT THE ST. LOUIS BANK AND THE LOUISVILLE, MEMPHIS
AND LITTLE ROCK BRANCHES IN 1954 AND 1953
Number of Pieces Handled
Checks ( T o t a l ) ....................................
City Checks .................................
Country Checks .........................
Checks on this B a n k ..................
Government Cheeks ..................
Postal Money Orders (cards). .
Currency ..............................................
C o i n ........................................................
Transfer of Funds .........................
Non-cash C o lle c tio n s.......................
U. S. Government Interest
Coupons ........................................
Discounts and A d v a n c e s .............

1954

1 953

1 8 4 ,4 0 2 ,0 0 0
2 5 ,3 0 4 ,0 0 0
9 8 ,9 6 3 ,0 0 0
182,000
4 3 ,0 5 7 ,0 0 0
1 6 ,8 9 6 ,0 0 0
2 1 5 ,1 9 8 ,0 0 0
365,974,00.0
120,000
4 7 0 ,0 0 0

18 2 ,9 5 4 ,0 0 0
24 ,6 8 9 ,0 0 0
9 7 ,8 1 1 ,0 0 0
174,000
4 3 ,2 3 9 ,0 0 0
1 7 ,041,000
2 2 3 ,6 4 0 ,0 0 0
3 2 9 ,9 4 1 ,0 0 0
115,000
4 2 9 ,0 0 0

6 7 3 ,0 0 0
612

7 2 3 ,0 0 0
1,388

Safekeeping o f Securities:
Securities Received and
Released ....................................

173,000

163,000

Coupons Detached ....................

2 9 6 ,0 0 0

29 7 ,0 0 0

Fiscal Agency O perations:
U. S. Savings Bonds Issued,
Exchanged, and Redeemed

7 ,0 9 7 ,0 0 0

6 ,4 5 0 ,0 0 0

Other Government Issues . . . .

3 0 9 ,0 0 0

2 4 8 ,0 0 0

W ithheld Tax Depository
Receipts Processed ...............

5 3 1 ,0 0 0

5 1 4 ,0 0 0

Treasury Tax and Loan
Account Transactions ..........

1 40,000

131,000

$ 5 8 ,5 2 7 ,8 0 4 ,0 0 0
3 4 ,1 1 1 ,5 4 0 ,0 0 0
1 4 ,3 1 6 ,6 6 3 ,0 0 0
2 ,8 2 7 ,0 5 4 ,0 0 0
6 ,9 8 6 ,4 7 9 ,0 0 0
2 8 6 ,0 6 8 ,0 0 0
1 ,2 8 4 ,3 3 5 ,0 0 0
3 2 ,2 5 0 ,0 0 0
3 7 ,9 9 2 ,6 9 9 ,0 0 0
3 4 1 ,6 8 5 ,0 0 0
1 ,4 7 8 ,3 4 0 ,0 0 0

$ 6 0 ,6 9 7 ,0 4 5 ,0 0 0
3 7 ,7 2 8 ,4 5 7 ,0 0 0
1 4 ,0 6 2 ,5 4 6 ,0 0 0
2 ,3 9 2 ,9 5 3 ,0 0 0
6 ,2 2 2 ,2 2 5 ,0 0 0
2 9 0 ,8 3 4 ,0 0 0
1 ,3 7 3 ,1 0 7 ,0 0 0
2 9 ,4 1 6 ,0 0 0
3 9 ,7 9 2 ,0 3 7 ,0 0 0
3 6 8 ,7 9 7 ,0 0 0
5 ,7 9 2 ,3 8 5 ,0 0 0

2 6 ,7 7 2 ,0 0 0

2 5 ,1 0 2 ,0 0 0

Dollar Volume
Checks Handled (T o tal)...............
City Checks .................................
Country Checks .........................
Checks on this B a n k ..................
Government Checks ..................
Postal Money Orders ...............
Currency ..............................................
Coin .....................................................
Transfer of Funds .........................
Non-cash Collections ....................
Discounts and A d v a n ce s...............
Safekeeping o f Securities:
Coupons Detached ....................
Fiscal Agency O perations:
U. S. Savings Bonds Issued,
Exchanged, and Reedemed

8 0 9 ,6 4 4 ,0 0 0

6 5 1 ,2 4 3 ,0 0 0

Other Government Issues . . . .

9 ,8 2 7 ,6 3 6 ,0 0 0

8 ,0 3 8 ,1 3 2 ,0 0 0

Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand except for the number of
discounts and advances.

back to the other eleven Reserve banks. Thus, with the
discontinuance of the practice of returning fit notes to
banks of issue, St. Louis began to show a reduction in the
total volume of currency received from banks and a com­
pensating increase in the volume of new currency put
into circulation. Another activity not shown by the table is
the wrapping of coin, which involved about 163 million
pieces.
The handling of deposits of post office funds received
from postmasters was undertaken by this bank on May 1.
These deposits consist of currency, some coin, paid money
orders, checks and redeemed United States Savings
Stamps. By the end of the year, over 4,000 postmasters
were forwarding remittances to this bank for processing.
During the period, this bank received 252,780 remittances
aggregating $181,766,000.
Noncash collections, consisting of such items as drafts,
promissory notes, stocks, bonds and coupons, increased in
1954 except for the number of United States Government
interest coupons handled.
During 1954 the discount rate was lowered in two
steps (February and April) from 2 per cent to 1/2 per
cent. However, since member banks’ reserve positions
generally were much easier and other methods of adjust­
ing reserve positions were available, there was a very
sharp drop in the aggregate amount and number of
advances to member banks from 1953. There were no
applications for industrial loan financing under Section
13b of the Federal Reserve Act in either 1953 or 1954.
Safekeeping of securities was provided by this bank for
476 of the 490 member and 514 of the 969 nonmember
banks in the Eighth Federal Reserve District during 1954.
Use of these facilities by nonmember banks is limited to
the holding of savings bonds or of securities pledged either
as collateral for the Treasury Tax and Loan Account or to
secure deposits of public funds.
Fiscal operations constituted in 1954, as usual, the
second largest related group of services of this bank from
the standpoint of number of employees required. The
bulk of the work of Fiscal Agency Department continued

PIECES HANDLED— 1954 ,
M i ! l i ons

Millions

1954




1953

CHECKS

1954

1953

CURRENCY
a COIN

to be the handling of Public D ebt securities, with United
States Savings Bonds requiring the largest proportion or
employees’ time. In addition, the department continued
the verification and destruction of unfit United States Sil­
ver Certificates, handled subscriptions for new security
offerings for the Commodity Credit Corporation and the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and served as an in­
termediary in the collection of funds, particularly with re­
gard to Federal Taxes.
Central Tabulating Department, a newly formed de­
partment, began operations on May 1, 1954. The first
task of this department was to tabulate deposit tickets
covering deposits of surplus funds by Postmasters in cer­
tain areas of the Eighth District. Also, the machine
processing of records on securities held in safekeeping
was taken over by this new department. The next major
job given the department was the integration of a tabulat­
ing installation to help Fiscal Agency Department process
Federal taxes and savings bonds for the United States
Treasury. In addition, various statistical analyses for use
of the Research Department were prepared. During its
eight months of operation, the work of this department
has already involved the handling of millions of items.
A large part of the work of the Accounting Department
during the year dealt directly with member banks. At
the close of the year there were 490 member banks main­
taining reserve accounts and 37 nonmember banks carry­
ing accounts for settlement of check clearings with this
bank. Throughout the year banks were furnished with
daily transcript of entries that arose from collection and
clearing of checks, noncash collections, transfers of funds,
money shipments and receipts and other deposits and
withdrawals of bank funds. The Accounting Department
also recorded all internal expenses and income and kept
track of transactions with other Federal Reserve Banks.
During the course of the year, under established policy,
the Examination Department made examinations of State
member banks in the district.
The Auditing Department made the customary internal
audits of operations of this bank and its branches during
1954. In addition, the annual examination of the Federal

1953 (Selected Activities)
Millions

Thousands

8 r

500 r

1954
1953
BONDS

1954
1953
SAFEKEEPING

Page 21

DESIGNATIONS AND APPOINTMENTS ANNOUNCED IN DECEMBER

By the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

M. M oss A l e x a n d e r , President
Missouri Portland Cement Co.
St. Louis, Missouri

Mr.

M r . C a f f e y R o bertso n ,

President

Caffey Robertson Co.
Memphis, Tennessee

Redesignated Chairman of the Board and Federal
Reserve Agent for the year 1955.
Redesignated Deputy Chairman of the Board for the
year 1955.
Reappointed Class C director for a three-year term
beginning January 1, 1955.

M r . J o seph H . M oore

Charleston, Missouri

Little Rock Branch

R. N ic h o l s
Des Arc, Arkansas

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

A. H o w a r d S t e b b i n s , J r ., President
Stebbins and Roberts, Inc.
Little Rock, Arkansas

Appointed director for the unexpired portion of a term
ending December 31, 1955.

M r . Sh u f o r d

Mr.

Louisville Branch
M r . P ier r e B. M c B rid e , President
Porcelain Metals Corporation
Louisville, Kentucky

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

Memphis Branch

A. E. H o h e n b e r g , President
Hohenberg Bros. Company
Memphis, Tennessee

Mr.

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

By the Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Little Rock Branch

H. C. M c K i n n e y , J r ., President
The First National Bank of El Dorado
El Dorado, Arkansas

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

E. C. B e n t o n , President
Fordyce Bank and Trust Company
Fordyce, Arkansas

Appointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

Mr.

Mr.

Louisville Branch

C. M i n o r , President
The Farmers National Bank of Danville
Danville, Kentucky

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

W. S c o t t M c I n t o s h , President
State Bank of Hardingsburg
Hardinsburg, Indiana

Appointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

Mr. M.

Mr.

Page 22




Memphis Branch
M r . J ohn A. M c C a l l , President

The First National Bank of Lexington
Lexington, Tennessee
M r . W m . B. P o l l a r d , President

National Bank of Commerce in Memphis
Memphis, Tennessee

Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.
Reappointed director for a three-year term beginning
January 1, 1955.

Member of Federal Advisory Council
M r . W. W. C a m p b e l l , Chairman of the Board

National Bank of Eastern Arkansas
Forrest City, Arkansas

Reserve Bank of St. Louis and its branches was made in
December by the Chief Federal Reserve Examiner and
his staff for the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System.
The general efficiency of operations throughout the
year was aided by improvement in work scheduling and
equipment and thorough maintenance of all property.
Security measures also continued to be emphasized. New
office space and floor plans that helped streamline opera­
tions were put into effect at St. Louis for Check Collec­
tion Department, Accounting Department, and the Sav­
ings Bond Division of Fiscal Agency Department.
Developments at Branches
While the general activities of the branches are com­
bined with parallel activities at the St. Louis office in this
report, several branch developments not covered in the
over-all picture deserve special note. At the Louisville
Branch, a new site was acquired and preliminary plan­
ning for a new building was begun. At Memphis, a
major space realignment of departments was carried out
and a new cafeteria was established. At Little Rock, the
interior of the branch building was redecorated.
Other Activities
Besides the contacts maintained with banks in the
Eighth District in carrying out actual banking operations,
the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis continued to keep
in touch with the financial and business community
through other visits, conferences and meetings. Over
1,400 bank visits were made during the year. Over 350
meetings were attended and bank personnel directly par­
ticipated in more than half of these. Programs in which
the bank took part included a number of talks on busi­
ness and banking, over 80 presentations of an educa­
tional lecture on banking and the money supply, and 15




Reappointed member of the Federal Advisory Council
to represent the Eighth Federal Reserve District for
the year 1955.

conferences on agricultural credit. Many of the meetings
were jointly sponsored with other groups such as bank­
er’s associations and colleges.
A seminar in central banking for Eighth District college
and university specialists in these subjects was conducted
at the St. Louis office in February. Over 3,000 visitors
toured the bank’s premises, at either St. Louis or one of
the branches, and the bank was host to a number of spe­
cial guests and international visitors. Films on the work
of the Federal Reserve Bank and the System were made
available for showing to numerous groups during the year.
Research continued during the year on a wide variety
of problems of interest to the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis and the System as a whole. The department
continued its regular data collection throughout the year
and published certain results of its analyses and interpre­
tations of the data in the Monthly Review. Also, a num­
ber of unpublished special studies were completed and
new projects begun in 1954 in the fields of central bank­
ing and the Eighth District economy.
Total employment at the St. Louis and branch offices
at the end of 1954 was 1,209 compared with 1,288 at the
end of 1953. There was about the same relative reduc­
tion at all offices, accounted for in part by increased
efficiency as a lower turnover was experienced. A total
of 31 employees entered the 10-year club during the year
and 9 entered their twenty-sixth year of service. Nine
employees retired upon attainment of age 65.
Designations and appointments in December by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and
the Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis are shown above and on page 22.
There were also the following additional official ap­
pointments during 1954: Victor M. Longstreet was
appointed Vice President and designated Manager of the
Louisville Branch, replacing Charles A. Schacht, who
Page 23

retired; Fred Burton was appointed Vice President and
designated Manager of the Little Rock Branch, replacing
Clarence M. Stewart, who retired; Donald L. Henry was
appointed Assistant Manager of Louisville Branch.
Earnings
Total current earnings of the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis were $18,352,000 during 1954, compared with
$25,448,000 in 1953. The decline was attributable to a
reduction in this bank’s holdings of securities in the Sys­

tem Open Market Account, a lessened volume of loans to
member banks and a lower average yield on both securi­
ties and loans. Also, despite lower net expenses, net
earnings before payments to the United States Treasury
were substantially below 1953. Out of net earnings,
$10,381,000 was paid to the United States Treasury as
interest on Federal Reserve notes, $568,000 was paid to
member banks as dividends and $1,154,000 was trans­
ferred to surplus.

DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS
February 1, 1955

Directors

Officers

M. Moss Alexander, Chairman

Delos C. Johns, President
Frederick L. Deming, First Vice President

Caffey Robertson, Deputy Chairman
S. J. Beauchamp, Jr.
Phil E. Chappell
J. E. Etherton

William E. Peterson, Vice President
Howard H. Weigel, Vice President and Secretary
Joseph C. Wotawa, Vice President
Dale M. Lewis, Vice President
G. O. Hollocher, Assistant Vice President
Earl R. Billen, Assistant Vice President
John J. Christ, Assistant Vice President
Willis L. Johns, Assistant Vice President
Stephen Koptis, Assistant Vice President
Woodrow W. Gilmore, Assistant Vice President
John J. Hofer, Assistant Vice President
William J. Abbott, Jr., Director of Research
George E. Kroner, Chief Examiner
Orville O. Wyrick, Assistant Chief Examiner
Gerald T. Dunne, Counsel and Assistant Secretary
George W. Hirshman, General Auditor

William A. McDonnell
Joseph H. Moore
Louis Ruthenburg

Leo J. Wieck

LITTLE ROCK BRANCH

Shuford R. Nichols, Chairman H. C. McKinney, Jr.
A. Howard Stebbins, Jr.
Donald Barger
E. C. Benton
Harvey C. Couch, Jr.

Fred Burton, Vice President and Manager
M. L. Bennett, Assistant Manager
Clifford Wood, Assistant Manager
W. J. Bryan, Assistant Manager

LOUISVILLE BRANCH

Smith Broadbent, Jr. Chairman W. Scott McIntosh
M. C. Minor
David F. Cocks
Magnus J. Kreisle
Noel Rush
Pierre B. McBride

Victor M. Longstreet, Vice President and Manager
L. K. Arthur, Assistant Manager
L. S. Moore, Assistant Manager
Donald L. Henry, Assistant Manager

MEMPHIS BRANCH

Henry Banks, Chairman
A. E. Hohenberg
John A. McCall
William B. Pollard
Page 24



Ben L. Ross
John D. Williams
John K. Wilson

Darryl R. Francis, Vice President and Manager
C. E. Martin, Assistant Manager
S. K. Belcher, Assistant Manager
H. C. Anderson, Assistant Manager