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Subject: Bio of T. A. Black
Date: Mon, 21 Feb 2005 14:56:46 EST


NORTHWESTERN
IOWA
ITS HISTORY AND TRADITION
VOLUME III
1804-1926

T. A. Black

Thomas A. Black, pioneer resident of Sioux City, civic leader, banker,
prominent in the commercial development of Sioux City, and president of the Sioux
City Grain Exchange and the Sioux City Terminal Grain Corporation, was
seventy-two years of age when called to his final rest on the 31st of August, 1926.
The career of Mr. Black, who lived in Sioux City for thirty-seven years,
was conspicuous for his quick rise to a position of leadership in banking and
commercial circles of northwestern Iowa, Minnesota and adjoining states. His
birth occurred in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 29th of September, 1853,
his parents being James and Esther (Service) Black, the former a native of
County Antrim, Ireland, while the latter was born in Cazenovia, New York, where
their marriage was celebrated in 1852. James Black came to the United
States in 1848, locating in Philadelphia, where he established a grocery business
under the style of "James Black, Wholesale and Retail Grocer." He was
successful in this enterprise and remained identified with it until his death, which
occurred in 1865.

Thomas A. Black, who was twelve years of age when his father died, had
attended the public schools of Philadelphia up to that time, when the mother
removed with her three children to her native town of Cazenovia. There Mr. Black
was reared to manhood on his grandfather's farm. After completing the common
school course he taught one winter term in the home district school and
subsequently attended Cazenovia Seminary for one year. In 1873 he became a clerk
in the banking house of E. S. Card & Company at Cazenovia, where he remained
until 1878, when he resigned and started west. He first located at Webster
City, Iowa, where he became a member of the firm of Kimball & Black, retail
druggists, but shortly afterwards retired from that partnership and entered
the First National Bank of Webster City as a clerk. In May, 1882, he went to
Pipestone, Minnesota, and organized the Pipestone County Bank in association
with Ex-Governor William Larrabee and other Iowa citizens. Mr. Black was made
president of that institution and continued its executive head until 1890.
During that period he also assisted in the organization of the State Bank of
Slayton, Minnesota, and the State Bank of Jasper, Minnesota, and, in
association with E. W. Davies, of Pipestone, laid out and platted th town of Jasper,
opening and developing the noted quarries of that place. In 1890 he came to
Sioux City to accept the position of cashier of the Sioux National Bank, in
which official capacity he remained until 1896. Later he was made cashier of
the Farmers Loan & Trust Company and in 1900 became vice president of the
Security National Bank and a director of the Woodbury County Savings Bank. In
1920, at the solicitation of a number of Sioux City's leading business men, who
were desirous of establishing a grain market here on a scale commensurate
with the city's location and the importance of its live stock market, Mr. Black
organized the Yerminal Grain Corporation, of which he was elected president
and of which he remained at the head to the time of his death. When he passed
away, he was serving for the second term as president of the Sioux City
Grain Exchange. He was also a director and a former president of the Sioux City
Chamber of Commerce and a leading spirit in many of the city's most
effective civic bodies. He was a director of the Sioux City Stock Yards Company, a
director of the Live Stock Fair Association, a director of the Fidelity
Investment Company and a director of the Sioux City Society of Fine Arts. In 1915
he was a member of the Iowa commission to the Pan-American Exposition at San
Francisco, and he was a member of the executive committee of the Mississippi
Valley Association, the object of which is the development of the waterways
of the Mississippi valley.

On May 12, 1880, at Benton Harbor, Michigan, Mr. Black was married to Miss
Georgia Bass, a daughter of Colonel S. S. Bass, of Fort Wayne, Indiana. To
this union were born two children, namely: Janey, who is the wife of W. F.
Grandy, a well known insurance and real estate man of Sioux City; and Thomas
Bass, who was for some years secretary of the Fidelity Investment Company of
Sioux City and is now a member of the Black & Cornell Mortgage and Loan Company
of 208 South LaSalle street, Chicago, Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Grandy are
the parents of two children, W. F. Grandy, Jr., and Louise Grandy, both of
Sioux City.

Fraternally Mr. Black was a member of the Sioux City Lodge, No. 112, of the
Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. He was president of the Knife and
Fork Club, one of whose aims is to bring into Sioux City some five or six of
the big men of the country. He also belonged to the Rotary Club, to the Sioux
City Country Club and to the Riverside Boat Club. Persistent and
indomitable energy, supplemented by the application of mental qualifications of a high
order to the affairs of business, constituted the keynotes to his success and
he stood in the front rank of those who conserve the city's interests.
Personally he was a man of pleasing address, easily approached, and was eminently
public spirited, giving his support to every enterprise or measure having for
its object the betterment of the community along material, civic or moral
lines.


Debbie Clough Gerischer


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