Black-owned Adelphi Bank opens in King-Lincoln Bronzeville: 5 things to know
The Black-owned Adelphi Bank held its ribbon cutting and opening ceremony in Columbus on Monday in the King-Lincoln Bronzeville area. Here's five things to know about the institution.
Who came up with Adelphi Bank?
Franklin County Commissioner Kevin Boyce is the bank's vice chair and CEO Jordan Miller retired as the central Ohio market leader of Cincinnati-based Fifth Third Bank in 2019. Emergency room physician Kamran Haydar is also one of its founders.
Boyce previously said the idea for starting a Black-owned bank came from a discussion on racial inequities in the wealth gap after being pepper sprayed at a George Floyd protest Downtown.
More: Black-owned Adelphi Bank arises in Columbus neighborhood out of George Floyd protests
Other founders of the bank include former Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman; Crabbe Brown & James Managing Partner Larry James; Squire Patton Boggs Senior Partner Alex Shumate; OhioHealth President of the OhioHealth Foundation and Senior Vice President Karen Morrison; former Ohio State Controller and Columbus-Franklin County Finance Authority board member Greta Russell; and Melissa Ingwersen, retired Columbus market leader for KeyBank.
Why is such a bank needed?
Federal Reserve data show that average Black and Hispanic households earn about half as much as the average white household and own only about 15% to 20% as much net wealth. The percentage of Black and Hispanic households without a bank account is much higher than white households.
Black-owned banks becoming rare
Boyce said there were at one point more than 100 Black-owned banks across the country. That number has dropped as banks have consolidated. Today, there are 145 minority-owned banks and just 20 of them Black-owned, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. data.
Adelphi Bank is the lone Black-owned bank in Ohio.
Huntington, others back Adelphi Bank
The new venture has many investors, including Huntington, whose CEO Steve Steinour said, "It’s important as a community that we embrace them and do everything we can to help them succeed."
The bank raised roughly $25 million from about 75 investors, including Huntington and Newark-based Park National Bank. Fifth Third is also an investor in Adelphi along with Ohio's other big bank, Cleveland-based KeyBank, and the Nationwide Foundation, the charitable arm of one the state's biggest insurers, Nationwide.
Adelphi name has local history
Adelphi is the Greek word for brothers.
The bank, at 800 E. Long St., is just a stone's throw from the former Adelphi Loan & Savings Co., the first Black-owned bank in Columbus. It was formed in 1921.
The bank is part of a $25 million development by Columbus-based Borror and Kingsley & Co. of Cincinnati known as Adelphi Quarter. The original Adelphi Loan & Savings was incorporated into the new building.
This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: 5 things to know about Columbus' first Black-owned bank