& constructed by Alfonso Pardiñas, located in
San Mateo, California. • His San Mateo estate, "Seven Oaks", purchased in the early 1900s, was located at 20 El Cerrito Avenue, San Mateo, and is now part of the
National Register of Historic Places. • The large plaza of the
Bank of America Building, at
California Street and Kearny, in downtown
San Francisco, is named for and in honor of Giannini. • A.P. Giannini Middle School, which opened in the
Sunset District of
San Francisco in 1954, is named after him also. Other places and groups named after Giannini include
The Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics and the building that houses the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, at the
University of California, Berkeley. •
Tony Martin was cast as Giannini in the 1962 episode "The Unshakeable Man" of the
syndicated anthology series Death Valley Days, hosted by
Stanley Andrews. The episode is a dramatization of the establishment of the Bank of America. The story line focuses on Giannini saving his bank from the impact of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and turning it into the largest financial institution in the world. The episode also starred
Parley Baer as Crowder. • There is a 1963
mosaic mural designed by
Louis Macouillard and constructed by Alfonso Pardiñas, that illustrates the story of A.P. Giannini's life. Located in front of a
mid-century modern style Bank of America branch (formerly a Bank of Italy location) at 300 S. El Camino Real in
San Mateo, California. • In 1963, he was inducted into the
Hall of Great Westerners of the
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. • The
U.S. Postal Service honored Giannini's contributions to American banking by issuing a 21¢
postage stamp bearing his portrait, in 1973. A ceremony to mark the occasion was held near his former home, in San Mateo. •
Time magazine named Giannini one of the "builders and titans" of the 20th century. He was the only banker named to the
Time 100, a list of the most important people of that century, as assembled by the magazine. •
Walter Huston's bank president in
Frank Capra's 1932 film
American Madness was based largely on Giannini. • The Italian-American banker played by
Edward G. Robinson in
House of Strangers (1949), was also loosely based on Giannini. •
American Banker magazine recognized him as one of the five most influential bankers of the 20th century. • In 2004, the
Italian government honored Giannini with an exhibition and ceremony in its
Parliament, to mark the centennial of his founding of the Bank of Italy. The exhibition was the result of the collaboration of the Ministry of Finance, the
Smithsonian Institution, Italian Professor Guido Crapanzano and Peter F. De Nicola, an American collector of Giannini memorabilia. • In 2010, Giannini was inducted into the
California Hall of Fame. • A documentary film on Giannini's life,
A Little Fellow: The Legacy of A.P. Giannini, was first shown at the
Cinequest film festival in San Jose, California on March 14, 2025. == References ==