Federal Bank of Australia


The Federal Bank of Australia was established in Melbourne in 1881, and opened for business in April, 1882. Initially successful, the company expanded to New South Wales by absorbing the Sydney and Country Bank Limited in 1882. Banknotes were issued at branches in Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide. The headquarters was in a modest building on the corner of Elizabeth and Collins Street in Melbourne.
The managing director was James Munro, a politician, who had been Premier of Victoria in 1890-1892, who was also a businessman and President on the Federal Building Society, established about the same time. Both institutions principally invested in speculative land companies, which boomed in the 1880s as the economy expanded and property prices climbed to a frenzied peak in about 1890. The boom was followed by a crash as property prices declined, which led to the collapse of building societies burdened by unsustainable debts, and the uncertainty soon spread to banks. A run by depositors in late 1892 forced the Federal to close their doors 'temporarily' on 30 January 1893.
The doors never reopened, and the Federal was to become the first bank, as opposed to building society, to fail as part of the Australian banking crisis of 1893. A provisional liquidator was appointed on the 3 February 1893. The extent of the banks debts, especially to English banks, was soon revealed. James Munro, already in debt, had resigned as Premier in early 1892, and left for the UK, but returned voluntarily, where he was declared bankrupt in February 1893, with personal debts of ₤97,000, and his companies owing over ₤600,000.