Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Federal Reserve Seal
Headquarters
Headquarters2200 N. Pearl St.
Dallas, Texas, USA
EstablishedMay 18, 1914 (1914-05-18)
PresidentLorie K. Logan
Central bank of
Eleventh District
Preceded byRobert Steven Kaplan
Websitewww.DallasFed.org
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas is one of 12 regional banks that make up the Federal Reserve System

The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas covers the Eleventh Federal Reserve District of the United States, which includes Texas, northern Louisiana and southern New Mexico, a district sometimes referred to as the Oil Patch.[1] The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas is one of 12 regional Reserve Banks that, along with the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., make up the U.S. central bank. The Dallas Fed is the only one where all external branches reside in the same state (although the region itself includes northern Louisiana as well as southern New Mexico). The Dallas Fed has branch offices in El Paso, Houston, and San Antonio. The Dallas bank is located at 2200 Pearl St. in the Uptown neighborhood of Oak Lawn, just north of downtown Dallas and the Dallas Arts District. Prior to 1992, the bank was located at 400 S. Akard Street, in the Government District in Downtown Dallas. The older Dallas Fed building, which opened in 1921, was built in the Beaux-arts style, with large limestone structure with massive carved eagles and additional significant detailing; it is a City of Dallas Designated Landmark structure. The current Dallas Fed building, opened in September 1992, was designed by three architectural firms: Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, New York; Sikes Jennings Kelly & Brewer, Houston; and John S. Chase, FAIA, Dallas and Houston, Dallas-based Austin Commercial Inc. served as project manager and general contractor.

  1. ^ Tracy Alloway (June 20, 2016). "A Quick Trip to the Oil Patch Shows Energy-Related Losses Rising". Bloomberg Markets.

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