The bank was incorporated in London on 15 October 1862 as
Standard Bank of British South Africa. It was formed by a group of South African businessmen led by
John Paterson. When
gold was discovered on the
Witwatersrand, the bank expanded northwards and on 11 October 1886 the bank started doing business in a tent at
Ferreira's Camp (later to be called
Johannesburg), thus becoming the first bank to open a branch on the Witwatersrand gold fields. It opened a second Johannesburg branch on 1 November 1901 along Eloff Street. From the 1890s through the 1910s the bank opened offices across Africa, although some of them were unsustainable and subsequently had to be closed. In 1912 it opened a branch in
New York City. In 1920 it bought out the
African Banking Corporation. By the mid-1950s, Standard Bank had around 600 offices in Africa. In 1962, the bank was renamed Standard Bank Limited, and a subsidiary was registered in South Africa under the parent bank's previous name,
Standard Bank of South Africa. In 1965, Standard Bank merged with the
Bank of West Africa expanding its operations into
Cameroon,
Gambia,
Ghana,
Nigeria, and
Sierra Leone. ==Merger==