Scott Valley Bank
Scott Valley Bank
Address:
530 Main St.,
Weaverville, CA 96093
Phone:(530) 623-2732
Fax:(530) 623-4721
Scott Valley Bank corporate culture is a reflection of our core values, high performance standards, and our view to the future. Our culture provides the base on which we build lasting customer relationships, thereby reaching our goals while assisting you in meeting yours.
While our business has changed as the banking industry has changed, we have remained adamant about maintaining the type of banking relationship with our customers that Scott Valley Bank has always provided – one based on the principles of community banking and focused on honesty, integrity, and building trust. We are dedicated to providing our traditional personalized service, supported by powerful technological solutions to your business needs.
We take pride in our ability to meet the diverse needs of the markets we serve - from the small business environment of our rural and agricultural markets to the corporate environment of urban areas.
In the end, though, we believe that banking will always be a "people business" and that our success comes from the quality and caliber of people who work for you at Scott Valley Bank - people who take pride in providing customer-centered banking.
We invite you to experience Scott Valley Bank and the type of banking that you and your business deserve.
Scott Valley Bank, now a twelve-branch operation with assets totaling more than $400 million, began as a small, independent venture during the gold rush of the 1850s.
Prior to the 1860s, there were no incorporated, general commercial banks in California; the first banks were private banking houses. In 1858, Adam Baker Carlock began trading and accumulating gold dust from local miners around Scott Valley, Quartz Valley, and at Scott Bar in Siskiyou County.
Carlock, who first came to California in 1852 at age nineteen, was industrious and ambitious. He started up a partnership and worked as a packer in and out of Trinity County. Later he built a store in Deadwood, Siskiyou County, then entered the merchandise business in Fort Jones. In 1863, Adam Baker Carlock married Elizabeth “Lizzie†Markey. Together they had four children, although only Nellie grew to adulthood.
©2010 Scott Valley Bank. All rights reserved
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