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Merchants National Bank, Winona

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Minnesota Historical Society Press
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Merchants National Bank, Winona

Merchants National Bank, Winona, May 12, 2017. Photograph by Wikimedia Commons user McGhiever. CC BY-SA 4.0

There was a time, before ATMs and the Internet, when monetary transactions required a visit to the bank. But even in that bygone era, it was the rare financial institution that offered patrons an awe-inspiring architectural experience along with check-writing privileges. The Merchants National Bank in Winona, designed in 1911-1912 by the Minneapolis firm of Purcell, Feick and Elmslie, was one such edifice.

It was in small Midwestern towns in the early twentieth century that conventional wisdom about bank architecture was handsomely challenged. Until then, America's civic institutions looked to European antecedents for architectural models. As a result, neoclassical columns and pediments not only predominated but also served as billboards proclaiming the security and gravitas of these establishments. The Merchants National Bank departed from this tradition by taking its inspiration from native sources—the uniquely American architecture of Louis Sullivan and the Prairie School tenets of Frank Lloyd Wright. It was Sullivan who four years earlier and 100 miles away, in Owatonna, first demonstrated how successful the marriage of American style and banking needs could be.

The Winona bank was unusual for its time and place. In the prosperous river town where Victorian commercial blocks prevailed, the bank's cube-like geometry was arrestingly different. Botanically inspired (and decidedly nonclassical) terra cotta ornamentation crept across its façades. Stained glass, generally reserved for religious structures, was used liberally in expansive windows and a sky lit ceiling, transforming daylight into a multi-hued glow.

Yet the building was also firmly rooted in the Minnesota landscape. Earthy brick and terra cotta referenced the town's history of brick manufacturing. Large wall murals, depicting river scenes and the Wisconsin bluffs, spoke of the natural beauty that first lured settlers to the area. In its singularity and sense of place, the remarkable American-bred structure evoked a sense of pride among Winonans and Minnesotans alike that neither time nor the Internet has rendered obsolete.

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© Minnesota Historical Society
  • Bibliography

Balsley, Eugene, and Edward C. Ward, directors. This is Our Town. Videocassette. Winona, MN: Winona County Historical Society, 1993.

Brown, Susan. An Annotated Checklist of Purcell and Elmslie Buildings in Minnesota. Minneapolis: University Gallery, University of Minnesota, [1977].

Conforti, Michael, ed. Minnesota 1900: Art and Life on the Upper Mississippi, 1890–1915. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1994.

Gebhard, David, and Tom Martinson. A Guide to the Architecture of Minnesota. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1977.

———. Purcell & Elmslie: Prairie Progressive Architects. Layton, UT: Gibbs Smith, 2006.

Merchants National Bank: Preserving our Past since 1875, Providing our Future. Winona, MN: Merchants National Bank, [1970].

The Minneapolis Institute of Art. Unified Vision: The Architecture and Design of the Prairie School. Merchants National Bank.
http://www.artsmia.org/unified-vision/architectural-tour/merchants-1.cfm

The Minnesota Historical Society's National Register Properties. Merchants National Bank.
http://nrhp.mnhs.org/NRDetails.cfm?NPSNum=74001045

Nord, Mary Ann. The National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota: A Guide. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2003.

The Work of Purcell and Elmslie, Architects. Park Forest, IL: Prairie School Press, 1965.

Zabel, Craig Robert. "The Prairie School Banks of Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan and Purcell and Elmslie." PhD Diss., University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 1984.

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Turning Point

In 1911–1912, noted Minnesota architectural firm Purcell, Feick and Elmslie designs a unique building for the Merchants National Bank in Winona.

Chronology

1912

The Purcell, Feick and Elmslie-designed Merchants National Bank opens in Winona.

1969

The bank draws up plans to demolish the building to build a larger one but decides to expand the existing building instead.

1970

The architectural firm of Dykins and Handford completes the expansion of the original building to the north and east.

1974

Merchants National Bank is named to the National Register of Historic Places.