10-J: The History of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
In 1913 Congress created the Federal Reserve to bring financial stability to the nation after a number of banking panics, with a mix of regional banks and a central bank board. Congressmen Robert L. Owen and Carter Glass helped pass the Federal Reserve Act with the help of compromises led by President Woodrow Wilson. The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City was begun in 1914, led by Jo Zach Miller, Jr., along with local bankers such as William T. Kemper. With the bank rapidly growing, about 1920 a new 21 story building was built at 9th and Grand that at one time held the offices of the Bureau of Investigation and President Harry S. Truman.
More Like This

The Bubble
2018

Zeitgeist: The Movie
2007

The City of Dried Fountains

Fiat Empire
2006

The Ascent of Money
2008

The Money Masters
1996

We Were Famous, You Don't Remember: The Embarrassment
2023

The Bigger Bubble

Locked Up in America - Solitary Nation and Prison State
2014

Alice Waters and Her Delicious Revolution
2003

Democracy on Trial
2024

Tour Eerie Erie
2002