Santander Bank, N.A., was founded on October 8, 1902 as Sovereign Bank, a
savings and loan in
Wyomissing, Pennsylvania. The company's earliest customers were largely textile workers. Sovereign expanded rapidly during the
savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and 1990s, acquiring numerous other banks. In 2000, Sovereign bought 278 New England branches from the newly merged
FleetBoston Financial, becoming the third-largest retail bank in the
Boston area. This transaction was driven by a requirement from bank regulators that
Fleet Bank and
BankBoston divest 306 branches as a condition for merger. Forty-five years before the founding of Sovereign Bank, its future parent was founded as Banco Santander on 15 May 1857, with the approval of Queen
Isabel II of Spain. The bank grew and in the 1920s started to build a network of branches. In 1942 it opened in Madrid. In 1934 Emilio Botín Sanz de Sautuola y López became director, and in 1950, chairman. He expanded the bank throughout Spain, and in 1957 it was Spain's seventh-largest bank. In 1976 it acquired First National Bank of Puerto Rico, and in 1982 Banco Español-Chile. In 1986, Emilio's oldest son,
Emilio Botin-Sanz de Sautuola y García de los Ríos, succeeded him. In the late 1980s he acquired CC-Bank in Germany and a stake was in Banco de Comercio e Industria in Portugal. In 1989, the "Supercuenta Santander" was launched. Sovereign bought the naming rights to
Mercer County's new arena in 1999 in support of newly acquired Trenton Savings Bank (formerly TSFS) and other New Jersey branches for a ten-year term. In following years, the bank also named the
Sovereign Center arena and Sovereign Performing Arts Center in
Reading, Pennsylvania, and
Sovereign Bank Stadium in
York, Pennsylvania. In June 2006, Banco Santander purchased almost 20% of Sovereign Bank for $2.4 billion. As Banco Santander owned 25% of Sovereign, it had the right to buy the bank for $40 per share for one year beginning in the middle of 2008. On 1 June 2006, Sovereign Bank purchased Independence Community Bank Corp. of
Brooklyn, New York, for $3.6 billion in cash. Sovereign completed the transition process of Independence and S.I. Bank & Trust customers on 9 September 2006. Sovereign financed this merger through its partial sale to Spain's
Banco Santander Central Hispano. On 13 October 2008, Banco Santander purchased the remainder of Sovereign for $1.9 billion. In late September 2011, the bank announced that it would officially change its name to "Santander" as part of its parent company's goal to create a global brand. The rebranding was completed on 17 October 2013. In March 2015, Scott Powell was appointed head of U.S. business at Santander, and CEO of Santander Holdings USA, replacing Roman Blanco. Powell left his role as CEO in December 2019. He was replaced by Timothy Wennes. In May 2024, Santander Bank notified its customers of unauthorized access to Snowflake, a third-party database system. Santander's statement stated that hackers successfully accessed data of 30 million customers of Santander Chile, Spain and Uruguay, as well as all current and some former Santander employees. In February 2025, Christiana Riley was announced to be succeeding Tim Wennes as CEO of Santander US. This action comes as part of a broader restructuration of the bank, which includes eliminating regional divisions and shifting to five global units. Riley, who had joined Santander in 2023, will now be leading the U.S. operations as the bank expands in areas like corporate banking and digital banking. The restructuring will also see changes in other markets, including a new CEO for Banco Santander Chile. ==References==