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History > Where History Happened > Businesses

BUSINESSES: INSURANCE CO. & BANK

Joshua Peirce's predicament was not unusual in the raw Sandy Spring of 1841: Lightning had incinerated his Brighton barn, and he was uninsured because of the cost and difficulty of obtaining farm coverage. But his loss sparked something positive--the incorporation in 1848 of an insurance company in Sandy Spring, the county's first. From it grew today's Montgomery Mutual Insurance Company, the hugely successful business now overflowing its attractive colonial quarters on Meeting House Road.

The early farmers faced another financial need: a safe place for their savings and for borrowing at a time when the Civil War had left the economy in shambles. Two decades after establishing the insurance company 26 local farmers incorporated the Savings Institution of Sandy Spring, another first in the county. On opening day, April 13, 1868, 44 depositors opened accounts totaling $383. Conservative, unfazed by the Depression that closed most banks, always keenly attuned to community needs, the Savings Institution prospered and metamorphosed across the decades into today's Sandy Spring National Bank. Probably no other commercial institution has enjoyed so close a partnership with the community it serves.

Insurance Company in 1857
Sandy Spring's fledgling financial institutions nestled side-by-side in this simple building before the turn of the century. The Insurance Company built the basic structure in the heart of the village in 1857, setting an example of fire protection with flame-resistant masonry walls and rooftop lightning rods. Growing fast, it added a wing in 1878, with room to house the decade-old Savings Institution. Sandy Springers set their timepieces by the clock above the door.
Harewood, home of Edward Stabler, served as the Insurance Company's unofficial headquarters
Joshua Piece
Unadorned Harewood, home of Edward Stabler, served as the Insurance Company's unofficial headquarters during the first decade. During Edward Stabler's 53-years as postmaster it also was the Sandy Spring Post Office, with mail slots standing between dining room and kitchen, and patrons entering from the back porch. The burning of Joshua Peirce's barn in 1841 led to the formation of the Insurance Company, of which he became a director. In 1822 he and wife Hannah reached Riverton from Philadelphia in a large farm wagon "after a tedious and fatiguing journey over a long and ruff road."
Stately new home office for the Insurance Company opened its doors on Meeting House Road in 1977
Caleb Stabler, brother of Insurance Company president Edward Stabler, served as a director and general agent
A stately new Home Office for the Insurance Company opened its doors on Meeting House Road in 1977. It is modeled after the renowned Wren building of William & Mary College in Williamsburg. To keep pace with growth, a new wing doubled its size in 1991. Caleb Stabler, brother of Insurance Company president Edward Stabler, served as a director and general agent, traveling the state by horse and buggy. An early company record shows his recipe for axle grease: "10 lbs. Lard Oil, 5 lbs. Bees-wax, 1 lb. Resin." Farmer Stabler pioneered the use of fertilizers to reclaim exhausted farmland, operated a lime kiln on the Patuxent, championed construction of the Colesville turnpike (today's New Hampshire Avenue), and served as first president of the Savings Institution.
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Bank This solid brick structure, shown in 1909, rose in 1895 as the first permanent home of the Savings Institution. Until then open only on Mondays from 3 pm to 4 pm, the bank extended its hours--from 2 pm to 4 pm Mondays and Thursdays. In 1929 the building was modified with today's pleasing classical portico, columns, dormers, and stylish palladian windows.
A. Douglas Farquhar joined Montgomery Mutual as clerk in 1905 and rose to president in 1947. He also served as a bank director. A World War I pilot, Farquhar founded American Legion Post 68 in Sandy Spring in 1919 and was a founder and first chief of the Fire Department in 1924. He and wife Helen Nesbitt were the third of six Farquhar generations to live at The Cedars. A. Douglas Farquhar joined Montogomery Mutual as a clerk in 1905 and rose to be president in 1947
1909 through the heart of Sandy Spring Village Charles G. Porter, a successful Ashton businessman, was elected a director of the insurance company in 1881.
Looking east in 1909 through the heart of Sandy Spring village, the columned portico of the Insurance Company stands at right. Farther right is the 1888 library, which later also housed the Woman's Exchange, purveyor of "beautiful and useful articles manufactured by neighborhood talent." The Sandy Spring Store is at left. Charles G. Porter, a successful Ashton businessman, was elected a director of the Insurance Company in 1881, a choice that "gave general satisfaction," according to the Annals. He also served as president of the Savings Institution 1884-1905. Directors often served with both institutions.
Bank Board in 1943 Members of the 1943 Bank Board gather in the old Sandy Spring headquarters. Standing, from left: G. Rust Canby, Robert Miller ,Jr., Thomas Hyde IV, William John Thomas III, Francis Thomas, A. Douglas Farquhar, Harwood Owings, and Stanley P. Stabler; seated: Dr. George Cook, Tarleton Brooke, William F. Prettyman, Frederic L. Thomas, Josiah Jones, Francis Miller, P. Garland Ligon, and Clarence B. Hurrey.
Sandy Spring National Bank today Today's Sandy Spring National Bank, heir of the Savings Institution and First National Bank, makes its headquarters in the Willard H. Derrick Building in Olney. Derrick joined the bank in 1952, rose to become President and Chairman, and presided over an era of unprecedented expansion and growth.
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