Bank of Danzig
{{short description|Central bank of the Free City of Danzig}}
The Bank of Danzig ({{langx|de|Bank von Danzig}}) was the central bank of the Free City of Danzig, established in 1924 and liquidated in the aftermath of the Danzig crisis in 1939.
Overview
File:Bank of Danzig former building.JPG
In the immediate aftermath of World War I, a currency union was planned to complement the customs union between Danzig and the nascent Polish state. The Polish National Loan Bank, Poland's temporary central bank, opened a branch to that effect in the city-state, while the latter's monetary needs were still served by the local branch of the Reichsbank. Because of hyperinflation in both Germany and Poland, however, that project failed to come fruition and it was abandoned in September 1923.{{cite web |title=The mark, the lech and the zloty, or how Poland's currency was born |url=https://polishhistory.pl/the-mark-the-lech-and-the-zloty-or-how-polands-currency-was-born/ |author=Andrzej Zawistowski |website=Polish History |year=2024}}
The Bank of Danzig was created under the conditions of the stabilization loan coordinated by the Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations in 1923–1024, based on the successful precedent of Austria a year earlier. It was established on {{date|1924/02/05}} with a capital of 7.5 million guilders, after the Reichsbank had ceased operations in the Free City on {{date|1923/12/31}}. Its investors were private businesspeople and companies, including a consortium of Polish banks.{{citation |title=The League Loans |author=Margaret G. Myers |journal=Political Science Quarterly |volume=60 |date=December 1945 |issue=4 |pages=492–526 |doi=10.2307/2144667 |jstor=2144667 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2144667|url-access=subscription }}{{rp|516}} It soon started operations on {{date|1924/03/17}}. It issued the Danzig gulden, which replaced the Reichsmark which had been devalued by hyperinflation.
The bank's first Governor was Konrad Meissner, then Walter Bredow, then {{ill|Carl-Anton Schaefer|de}} from 1933.{{citation |author=Carl Jacob Burckhardt |title=My Danzig Mission 1937-1939 |publisher=Callwey |location=Munich |year=1960 }}{{rp|176}} The chairman of the supervisory board was {{ill|Carl William Klawitter|de}}, and after the latter's death in 1929, {{ill|Ernst Plagemann|de}}.
After the annexation of Danzig by the German Reich, the Reichsmark was introduced in Danzig and the Bank of Danzig was liquidated. The bank's gold holdings, which served as currency cover, were mainly stored at the Bank of England in London. With the Nazi invasion of Poland, these assets were confiscated by the British government and in 1976 handed over to Poland, which had annexed Danzig in 1945.{{cite web |website=Der Spiegel |title=Danziger Gold |date={{date|1976/08/29}} |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/danziger-gold-a-944dd1c9-0002-0001-0000-000041147089?context=issue }} The bank's building again served as a branch of the Reichsbank from 1939 to 1945, when it was badly damaged by wartime bombing. After 1945 it has been used by the National Bank of Poland.