The Bank in Winterthur was founded in 1862 in
Winterthur, Switzerland with an initial share capital of 5 million CHF. The bank, which was established by a group of local businessmen, operated primarily as a commercial bank, providing financing for a range of companies and projects. The bank would be involved in funding the
Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works, the Hotel
Baur au Lac in Zurich and many other companies. to form Schweizerische Bankgesellschaft (Union Bank of Switzerland) In the mid-1880s, The Bank in Winterthur experienced financial difficulties. The bank's involvement in the financing of the ill-fated private
Schweizerische Nationalbahn (
Swiss National Railway) resulted in the loss of one-fifth of the bank's capital reserves in 1887. The
Union Bank of Switzerland was formed in 1912 when the Bank in Winterthur merged with the Toggenburger Bank. The combined bank had total assets of 202 million CHF and a total shareholders' equity of 46 million CHF. This combination was part of a larger trend toward concentration in the banking sector in Switzerland at the time. Through the next few years, the bank would begin to shift its operations to Zurich from its historical headquarters in the cities of
Winterthur and
St. Gallen, Switzerland. In 1917, UBS completed construction of a new headquarters in Zurich on
Bahnhofstrasse, considered to be the
Wall Street of Switzerland. The new bank used different names in its three core languages: German, French and English. In German, the bank was Schweizerische Bankgesellschaft and was known by the initials SBG. The original English name for the combined bank was the Swiss Banking Association, but it was later changed to Union Bank of Switzerland in 1921 to mirror the French form of the name: Union de Banques Suisses. The bank's logo, introduced in 1966, would later reflect both the German SBG and the English and French name UBS. ==References==