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John Finley McRae

John Finley McRae

Male 1896 - 1982  (86 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Finley McRaeJohn Finley McRae was born on 20 Jun 1896 in Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA (son of George Washington McRae and Fannie Wilkes); died on 5 Nov 1982 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Race: White
    • Social Security Number: 419-03-5145
    • Residence: 1920, Mobile Ward 1, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 22; Marital Status: Single; Relation to Head of House: Son
    • Occupation: 1930; Vice Pres
    • Residence: 1930, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 34; Marital Status: Single; Relation to Head of House: Son

    Notes:

    Alabama Business Hall of Fame
    BANKER, CIVIC LEADER
    MERCHANT’S NATIONAL BANK

    John Finley McRae began his remarkable career at the age of eighteen on the lowest rung of the professional ladder of the smallest bank in Mobile. When he retired fifty-four years later, he was chairman of the board of that same bank, and the institution itself Merchants National had become one of the most prestigious financial organizations in the state. The young man and the young bank, it could be said, matured side by side, and together they became two of the most valuable assets of the port city of Mobile.

    Born in Montgomery shortly before the turn of the· century, Finley McRae was the son of a Baptist minister, the Reverend George W. McRae, who, in 1907, moved his family to Mobile. There young McRae attended public schools and graduated from Barton Academy in 1913. He then enrolled in Birmingham’s Howard College, but after three semesters, because of his parents’ illness and the depletion of his financial resources, he returned home to find a job.

    In February 1915, he accepted a position as runner and stenographer with Merchants Bank of Mobile, then in its thirteenth year of operation. Mr. Ernest F. Ladd, who was made president of the bank that same year, saw much promise in his young employee and encouraged him to learn the banking business. McRae had ideas along those lines himself, and during the next three years, he worked in all departments of the bank and rose to the position of auditor. With the advent of World War I, however, McRae left to join the army. When the war ended, he returned to the bank, and by 1919 he was an assistant cashier.

    As the bank grew during the next decade, so did the contributions of Finley McRae. Guided by his friend and mentor Ernest Ladd, McRae began to take a leading hand in the bank‘s affairs. Recognizing the importance of the Port of Mobile to the community and to the bank, McRae organized a foreign department. He traveled throughout the southeast and midwest in search of trade business, learned to speak Spanish so that he might communicate better with his South American business associates, and succeeded in establishing a department that was for many years the only fully-organized Foreign Department in a bank between New Orleans and Baltimore.

    By 1929, Merchants Bank of Mobile had become Merchants National Bank, with a brand new eighteen-story building, and Finley McRae had become vice president. Under Ernest Ladd’s leadership, Merchants National survived the difficult depression years and emerged larger and stronger than before. Between 1930 and 1940, deposits rose from $12 million to $40 million, and during those same years, McRae’s role in the bank’s affairs expanded at a similar rate. In 1935 he became a director; in 1937, executive vice president; and in 1941, when Ernest Ladd died unexpectedly, Finley McRae succeeded him as president.

    Not long after he assumed office, the new president made a compact with the official staff: If they would never refer to him as “boss,” he, in turn, would never fail them in courtesy. That belief in a congenial, cooperative working environment became the hallmark of McRae’s tenure as chief executive, and under his guidance Merchants National became known not only as an important financial institution but as a pleasant place to work and to do business as well.

    Believing that money was important only insofar as it contributed to human happiness, McRae, as president, used the bank’s resources to better the lives of as many people as he could. During World War II, when a significant portion of the bank’s staff left to join the war effort, Merchants National supplemented their military pay so that they could maintain their incomes at pre-induction levels. Recognizing the important role the oil industry could play in improving the region’s economy, McRae and his staff began financing oil production in Louisiana and Mississippi in the late 1940s. As a consequence, Merchants National’s Petroleum Department was well established and ready to serve Mobile when oil was discovered at nearby Citronelle in 1955.

    During the almost quarter of a century of Finley McRae’s presidency, Merchants National continued to expand. It was improved services, however, and not expansion in and of itself that McRae sought, for the true worth of a bank, he often said, was measured by its usefulness rather than by its size. To improve its usefulness to the community, then, Merchants National entered the branch banking field in 1955, when a law permitting branch banking in Mobile County was passed, and that same year the bank also began enlarging and renovating its downtown quarters. Perhaps the most significant step toward improving services came in 1959, however, when Merchants National became the first bank in Alabama, and among the first in the South, to install electronic data processing equipment. The move enabled the bank to introduce “no passbook savings” to Mobile and to improve many of its other customer services.

    Finley McRae’s reputation as a respected banker with a broad knowledge of financial affairs prompted many business and industrial corporations to call upon his services as a director. In that capacity, he served some of the largest corporations in Alabama, including Waterman Steamship Corporation, American Liberty Insurance Company of Birmingham, Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company, Alabama Dry Dock and Shipbuilding Company, Southern Industries Corporation, International Paper Company, Alabama Power Company, and United Gas Corporation. McRae also served in important advisory and directional capacities in the Federal Reserve System and represented the southeastern states on the Federal Advisory Council.

    Known throughout his life for his “genius at getting things done” and for his energetic support of the community, McRae became a central figure in the civic life of Mobile. He helped found and served for many years as a trustee of the United Fund of Mobile; he was a founding director of the Southern Research Institute, a non-profit corporation devoted to scientific research; he served on the board of trustees of the Mobile Infirmary for several decades during which the institution became one of the largest and best-equipped hospitals in the South; and from 1955 to 1957, he served as chairman of the Rhodes Scholarship Selection Committee for the State of Alabama.

    An avid sports fan, McRae was a founding director of the Mobile Touch down Club, which developed a county-wide athletic program for Mobile’s youth. He was also chairman of the board of trustees of the Ernest F. Ladd Memorial Stadium Corporation, president of the Mobile Arts and Sports Association, and president of the Senior Bowl Association. (Without McRae, noted the Mobile Press-Register, “there would be no Ladd Stadium and no Senior Bowl.”)

    McRae’s many contributions to the region were publicly acknowledged in 1955, when the Chamber of Commerce named him Mobilian of the Year, and again in 1963 when Spring Hill College awarded him an honorary doctorate. Finley McRae, said the college’s trustees, is a “most exemplary” citizen, a man whose “free-reined energy, breadth of vision, integrity of character, and dedication to Christian ethical ideals … led him to a position of respect and responsibility unique in this region . . . His service on behalf of his fellow citizens has been generous. His faith in the future of this region is firm.” And, the trustees concluded, as did the people of Mobile, that every citizen in the port city “is better off because of his presence in our midst.”

    https://abhof.culverhouse.ua.edu/member/john-finley-mcrae/

    Died:
    Age at Death: 86

    John married Lucile Thompson in 1934 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA. Lucile was born on 8 Aug 1903; died on 12 Dec 2004; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Living
    2. Mary Duncan McRae was born on 9 Mar 1938 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; died on 12 Dec 2002 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.
    3. Cynthia Jean McRae was born on 7 Apr 1941 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; died on 21 Jan 2021 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Washington McRae was born on 4 Nov 1868 in Barbour, Alabama, USA; died on 30 Nov 1954 in Spring Hill, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Race: White
    • Occupation: Lawyer
    • Residence: 1920, Mobile Ward 1, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 51; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Head
    • Residence: 1930, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 61; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Head

    George married Fannie Wilkes in 1894. Fannie (daughter of Jesse Usher Wilkes and Cynthia Myers) was born on 7 Mar 1873 in Alabama, USA; died on 9 May 1953 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Fannie Wilkes was born on 7 Mar 1873 in Alabama, USA (daughter of Jesse Usher Wilkes and Cynthia Myers); died on 9 May 1953 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Race: White
    • Name: Fannie Wilkes McRae
    • Residence: 1880, Mitchells, Pike, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1920, Mobile Ward 1, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 46; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife
    • Residence: 1930, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; Age: 56; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife

    Children:
    1. 1. John Finley McRae was born on 20 Jun 1896 in Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA; died on 5 Nov 1982 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.
    2. George Thompson McRae was born on 6 Jul 1898 in Alabama, USA; died on 24 Jul 1982 in Brevard, Florida, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.
    3. Gossette Wilkes McRae was born on 26 Feb 1904 in Alabama, USA; died in Sep 1983 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Jesse Usher Wilkes was born on 9 Jul 1827 in Marlboro, South Carolina, USA (son of Elias Wilkes and Hanna Usher); died on 8 Feb 1881 in Pike, Alabama, USA; was buried in Chapel Hill Cemetery, Pike, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1850, Division 23, Barbour, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1860, Beat 11, Barbour, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1870, Beat 12, Pike, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1880, Mitchells, Pike, Alabama, USA

    Jesse married Cynthia Myers on 16 Mar 1869 in Pike, Alabama, USA. Cynthia was born on 3 Jan 1848 in Clayton, Barbour, Alabama, USA; died on 8 Aug 1934 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Cynthia Myers was born on 3 Jan 1848 in Clayton, Barbour, Alabama, USA; died on 8 Aug 1934 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Cinthy Wilkes
    • Residence: 1870, Beat 12, Pike, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1880, Mitchells, Pike, Alabama, USA

    Children:
    1. Anna Wilkes was born in 1869 in Alabama, USA.
    2. James Washington Wilkes was born in 1871 in Barbour, Alabama, USA.
    3. John Daniel Wilkes was born in 1875 in Alabama, USA.
    4. Emma Wilkes was born in 1877 in Alabama, USA.
    5. Alice Wilkes was born in 1880 in Alabama, USA.
    6. 3. Fannie Wilkes was born on 7 Mar 1873 in Alabama, USA; died on 9 May 1953 in Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA; was buried in Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Mobile, Alabama, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Elias Wilkes was born on 9 Feb 1782 in Robeson, North Carolina, USA (son of Isaac Wilkes and Tabitha Elizabeth Branch); died on 23 Apr 1853 in Barbour, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1 Jun 1840, Barbour, Alabama, USA
    • Residence: 1850, Division 23, Barbour, Alabama, USA

    Elias married Hanna Usher in 1806 in Houston, Georgia, USA. Hanna (daughter of Thomas Usher and Ann Lnu) was born in 1786 in Richmond, North Carolina, USA; died before 1857 in Barbour, Alabama, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Hanna Usher was born in 1786 in Richmond, North Carolina, USA (daughter of Thomas Usher and Ann Lnu); died before 1857 in Barbour, Alabama, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Hannah Wilkes
    • Residence: 1850, Division 23, Barbour, Alabama, USA

    Children:
    1. Mary Susan Wilkes was born on 30 Dec 1807 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 10 Apr 1893 in Coffee, Alabama, USA; was buried in Victoria Baptist Church Cemetery, Coffee, Alabama, USA.
    2. Rev Thomas Usher Wilkes was born on 25 Jan 1809 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 12 Aug 1865 in Arkansas, USA; was buried in Trenton Cemetery, Phillips, Arkansas, USA.
    3. Elisha Usher Wilkes was born on 23 Jan 1811 in Cheraw, Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 11 Jan 1876 in Pike, Alabama, USA; was buried in Pea River Cemetery.
    4. William Usher Wilkes was born on 10 Aug 1812 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 3 Mar 1885 in Louisville, Barbour, Alabama, USA; was buried in Ephesus Cemetery, Barbour, Alabama, USA.
    5. Katherine "Katie" Wilkes was born on 3 Mar 1814 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA.
    6. Sarah Wilkes was born on 25 Jul 1816 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 30 Jun 1850 in Barbour, Alabama, USA.
    7. Elizabeth "Betty" Wilkes was born on 4 Mar 1818 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died about 1860 in Pike, Alabama, USA.
    8. John Usher Wilkes was born on 17 Apr 1823 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 6 Aug 1893 in Pike, Alabama, USA.
    9. Reverend Elias Washington Usher Wilkes was born on 26 Mar 1822 in Marlboro, South Carolina, USA; died on 23 Nov 1894 in Cullman, Alabama, USA; was buried in Fort Williams Cemetery, Sylacauga, Talladega, Alabama, USA.
    10. Reverend Isaac Usher Wilkes was born on 28 Aug 1824 in Chesterfield, South Carolina, USA; died on 10 May 1886 in Montgomery, Alabama, USA.
    11. 6. Jesse Usher Wilkes was born on 9 Jul 1827 in Marlboro, South Carolina, USA; died on 8 Feb 1881 in Pike, Alabama, USA; was buried in Chapel Hill Cemetery, Pike, Alabama, USA.
    12. James Usher Wilkes was born on 5 Apr 1830 in Marlboro, South Carolina, USA; died on 3 Jul 1913 in Ozark, Dale, Alabama, USA; was buried in Chalkhead Cemetery, Dale, Alabama, USA.