Bank of British West Africa

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Bank of British West Africa was a British Overseas Bank that was important in introducing modern banking into the countries that emerged from the UK's West African colonies. In 1957 it changed its name to Bank of West Africa.

[edit] History

  • 1891 Elder Dempster shipping magnate Alfred Lewis Jones (born in Carmarthen, Wales in 1845) and George William Neville ( born at Richmond, near London in 1852), the local agent of Elder Dempster & Co. of Liverpool, attempted to develop a banking operation along the Guinea coast.
  • 1892 African Banking Corporation acquired Elder Dempster’s banking operations in Lagos, Nigeria. Within a year they wish to close it down. Instead, they sold the operation to A.L. Jones and Elder Dempster.
  • 1893 Elder Dempster helped form Bank of British West Africa (BBWA) which tookover the ex-ABC operation in Lagos. Eventually, BBWA established branches in Liverpool, London, and Manchester.
  • 1894 Elder Dempster Co, were appointed agents in Freetown, Sierra Leone and Bathurst, The Gambia for BBWA. BBWA also tookover ABC's Tangier branch.
  • 1896 BBWA established a branch in Accra, Ghana. As the only bank in the country at the time, it played a unique role in the economy, acting as the Central Bank and dominating commercial banking in Ghana.
  • 1898 BBWA established a branch in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
  • 1902 BBWA established a branch in Bathurst, The Gambia.
  • In about 1910 BBWA established a branch in Tenerife, in the Canary Isles.
  • 1912 BBWA tookover the activities of Bank of Nigeria, which local merchants had established in 1899 or 1902 to create a competitor to BBWA).
  • 1915 BBWA established a branch in Douala, The Cameroons, following the Anglo-French invasion.
  • 1916 BBWA closed its branch in Douala following Douala’s transfer to French administration, but opened an agency in New York.
  • 1918 BBWA opened a branch in Alexandria, Egypt.
  • 1919 Lloyds Bank and three other banks became shareholders in BBWA.
  • 1912 BBWA re-opened a branch in Douala, French Cameroons, and in Cairo.
  • 1923 Standard Bank of South Africa tookover BBWA’s New York agency. Lloyds Bank acquired Cox & Co, which had branches in Egypt, but was itself a shareholder in BBWA. To avoid competing with itself, Lloyds had BBWA transfer its Egyptian business to Lloyds Bank. In 1926 Lloyds transferred its operations in Egypt to the National Bank of Egypt.
  • Between 1930 and 1940 BBWA closed most of its branches it had established in Morocco, the Canary Islands and Fernando Po.
  • In 1937 or so, BBWA established a branch in Hamburg, Germany.
  • 1953 BBWA lost its central banking functions in Ghana. The Ghanaian government established the Bank of the Gold Coast to combine commercial banking activities and central banking functions.
  • In 1954 or so BBWA closed its Hamburg branch, which presumably had been in abeyance during World War II and reopened thereafter.
  • 1957 Bank of British West Africa changed its name to Bank of West Africa (BWA).
  • 1963 BWA closed its branch in Tangier.
  • 1965 Standard Bank of South Africa acquired BWA. Now Standard Bank of West Africa acquired the Liberian and Nigerian branches of Chase Manhattan Bank in return for Chase taking a 15% stake in Standard Bank of South Africa, a stake that it sold in the late 1970s. BWA still operated one branch each in the French and British Cameroon Mandates, and in Morocco.
  • 1969 SBWA spun-off Standard Bank of Ghana, Standard Bank of Sierra Leone, and Standard Bank Nigeria Ltd., which went on to have separate histories.
  • Between 1969 and 1974, Standard Bank also closed the branches (Douala and Victoria) in Cameroon that it inherited from BWA.
  • By 1974 SBWA had only two branches, both in The Gambia, and in 1978, SBWA transferred these two branches to Standard Bank Gambia Ltd.

[edit] Sources

Baster, A.S.J. 1926/1977. The Imperial Banks. (New York: Arno Press reprint).

Fry, Richard. 1976. Bankers in West Africa : the story of the Bank of British West Africa Limited. (London: Hutchinson).