Preston Delano
Preston Delano (banker, businessman, investment counselor) | ||||||||||
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Born | 1886-04-02 Phoenix, Michigan | |||||||||
Died | 1961-08-31 (Age 75) Washington D.C. | |||||||||
Nationality | American | |||||||||
Comptroller of the Currency 1938-53, to "charter, regulate, and supervise all national banks".
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Preston Delano was a United States Comptroller of the Currency from October, 1938 to 1953.[1] He inherited this Office from an Acting Comptroller of the Currency from April 1938 to September 1938 named Marshall R. Diggs.
Preston Delano held office for 14 years, the longest term of any Comptroller. Delano was a businessman, investment counselor, and served as governor of the Home Loan Bank Board when appointed Comptroller by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
He was responsible for preserving and stabilizing the national banks during the Second World War, which vastly increased the volume of money needed for war expenditures, subsequently causing government debt to rise substantially. Delano entered retirement after his resignation.
Delano was a "distant cousin" of President Roosevelt,[2] and part of the extended Delano family.