First American National Bank
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- For other banks with a similar name, see First Bank.
First American National Bank was a subsidiary of First American National Corporation, a financial institution based in Nashville, Tennessee that served the states of Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Kentucky, and Virginia. It was headquartered in the First American Center in downtown Nashville.
Its name and logo disappeared in December 2000 when it was acquired by AmSouth Bank, an institution based in Birmingham, Alabama that was slightly smaller in size. First American was sold after a series of unprofitable mergers, including one with Jackson, Mississippi-based Deposit Guaranty Bank that proved to be a hurdle the corporation could not clear financially.
First American's demise ended Nashville's storied history as a strong financial center. It, along with Third National Bank (now a part of SunTrust) and Commerce Union Bank (now a part of Bank of America), was once involved in a tight three-way battle for market share that ultimately helped all three banks expand well beyond their respective bounds. When the resources of the three could no longer stand the rapid expansion and numerous acquisitions, they all succumbed and merged with other banks. FANB, the largest of these three banks, was the only one to fold itself into a smaller institution. As of 2005, Nashville is still home to several local banks, but most do not exist outside of Davidson County.
Until 2005, AmSouth Bank continued First American's former tradition of having the highest market share in Nashville, however it was surpassed by SunTrust after its acquisition of Memphis-based National Commerce Financial. In 2006, however, Amsouth reclaimed the the distinction of largest market share in metropolitan Nashville. AmSouth itself is in the process of merging with Regions Financial. When complete, the new bank will retain Nashville's largest market share [1] in addition to Amsouth's CEO, Dowd Ritter.
There are several regional banks around the United States now named "First American Bank," including one in Alabama. They are not affiliated with the former First American National Bank or AmSouth Bancorporation.