First National Bank was founded in
Mercer County, Pennsylvania, in 1864 under the name The First National Bank of West Greenville and operated out of the house of then bank president, Samuel P. Johnston, in
Greenville, Pennsylvania. The bank dropped "West" from its name in the 1880s after the town did the same. The bank remained a fixture in Mercer County through
World War I, the
Great Depression and
World War II. In 1946, bank assets totaled approximately $2million and the bank was still housed in one office. Across the next three decades, the bank continued to grow, and in 1974, FNB Corporation was established as a financial services
holding company for a growing family of business entities which included the bank, under the name The First National Bank of Mercer County and with an asset size of $120million, and
Regency Finance Company. Along with completing the acquisition of ten branch offices from First National Bank of Pennsylvania in July 1992, First National Bank of Mercer County acquired the name and formally changed its name to the current First National Bank of Pennsylvania. Around this time, the First National Bank of Western Pennsylvania in nearby
New Castle changed its name to First Western Bank to avoid confusion; that bank is now part of
Huntington Bancshares after several other mergers. As of 2003, the company had grown to assets of $4.6billion with more than 125 banking offices and began trading common shares on the
New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol FNB. Today, it is included in Standard & Poor's MidCap 400 Index with the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) Regional Banks Sub-Industry Index. Current
chief executive officer Vincent J. Delie, Jr., joined the bank in 2005 as president of the
Pittsburgh Region. Since then, the company has shown tremendous growth, both organically and through a series of major mergers. As of 2017, FNB is the second-largest bank based in Pennsylvania, measured by assets. FNB announced its
Clicks-to-Bricks strategy in 2016. In 2021, FNB launched its eStore
digital banking platform. In 2024, the platform expanded with the Common app which is used for applying for multiple products and/or services at once. ==Facilities==