, Queensland circa 1890 Established in 1817 in Macquarie Place,
Sydney premises leased from
Mary Reibey, the Bank of New South Wales (BNSW) was the first bank in Australia. It was established under the economic regime of
Governor Lachlan Macquarie (responsible for transitioning the penal settlement of Sydney into a capitalist economy). At the time, the colony of Sydney had not been supplied with currency, instead barter and promissory notes was the payment method of choice. Governor Macquarie himself used cattle and rum as payment for the construction of
Sydney Hospital and
the road from Sydney to
Liverpool. The suggestion of establishing a bank was raised in March 1810; but it wasn't until November 1816 that a meeting was held to discuss the real possibility of such a proposal. In February 1817 seven directors of the bank were elected:
D'Arcy Wentworth,
John Harris, Robert Jenkins,
Thomas Wylde,
Alexander Riley,
William Redfern and
John Thomas Campbell. Campbell was elected the bank's first president and
Edward Smith Hall as its first cashier and secretary. During the 19th and early 20th century, the Bank opened branches throughout Australia and New Zealand and in the 20th century in Oceania. This included at
Moreton Bay (
Brisbane) in 1850, then in
Victoria (1851), New Zealand (1861),
South Australia (1877),
Western Australia (1883),
Fiji (1901),
Papua (now part of
Papua New Guinea) (1910) and
Tasmania (1910). Besides expanding its branch network, the bank also expanded by acquiring other banks: • 1927: BNSW acquired the
Western Australian Bank, which had been established in 1841 or 1842. • 1931: BNSW acquired the
Australian Bank of Commerce, which had branches in both
New South Wales and
Queensland. • 1942: BNSW suspended operations in Papua after the
Japanese Army captured many of the towns in which it had branches and agencies, and bombed
Port Moresby. It resumed operations in 1946. • 1946: BNSW resumed operations in Papua. • 1957: BNSW purchased a 40% shareholding in
Australian Guarantee Corporation and over the years progressively increased its interest to a majority stake of 76% and then acquired all remaining shares in 1988. • 1968: BNSW joined
Databank Systems consortium in New Zealand to provide joint data processing services. Around this time the bank started going 'on line' with the use of their computer nicknamed "Fabicus", the letters standing for "First Australian Banking Institution Computer Used in Sydney". Fabicus had been in use since 1958 in the processing of some records. With advanced programming, The use of this computer changed the whole concept of banking as it had been done in years previously with its combination of hand-written and machined records. Branches slowly became attached to the data processing centre and other banks slowly joined the ranks of computer-generated reports, records, and expansion. • 1970: BNSW established a branch on
Tarawa in
Kiribati, which also took over the government savings bank. BNSW was publicly listed on the
Australian Securities Exchange on 18 July 1970. • 1973: BNSW became the corporate sponsor of the Rescue Helicopter service started by
Surf Life Saving Australia. The service is known today as the
Westpac Life Saver Rescue Helicopter Service • 1974: BNSW participated in a joint venture to establish the Bank of Tonga. • 1975: BNSW incorporated its local business in
Papua New Guinea as Bank of New South Wales (PNG). • 1977: BNSW formed the Pacific Commercial Bank in
Samoa as a joint venture with the
Bank of Hawaii, buying into Pacific Savings and Loan Company, in which the Bank of Hawaii had had an ownership interest since 1971. • 1981: BNSW merged with the
Commercial Bank of Australia. The
Parliament of New South Wales passed the
Bank of New South Wales (Change of Name) Act 1982 on 4 May 1982, changing the name of BNSW to Westpac. The new brand incorporates the "W" motif, which had been the logo of BNSW. ==Executive leadership==