All information about North Shore Bank in Green Bay, WI
Address: | 1819 Main St, Green Bay, WI 54302-3918 |
Phone: | (920) 468-3330 |
With 47 offices throughout eastern Wisconsin and northern Illinois, North Shore Bank and our 500+ employees remain committed to our customers by providing personalized service both in-person and from anywhere in the world through its online and mobile banking technology. It's been that way for 90 years.
The North Shore Building & Loan Association was started in 1923 by a group of local teachers in the backroom of Perkins Hardware Store on what is now Capitol Drive in Shorewood, WI. Today, North Shore Bank (the name was changed in 1989) has assets of over $1.7 billion.
As North Shore Building & Loan Association, we began our operations with $22,000 in assets and started building our branch network in the seventies, opening our first branch office in Milwaukee in 1972.
Growth continued with mergers and the acquisition of multiple banks throughout eastern Wisconsin, including the Racine and Green Bay areas. By the bank's 75th anniversary in 1998, North Shore Bank had 33 locations.
Since then, expansion continued with the opening of our initial Kenosha branch, acquisition of offices in the Fox Valley, Union Grove and Metro Milwaukee areas, and the opening of two offices in Ozaukee County.
In the spring of 2004 the bank opened the first full-service bank branch inside El Rey Nana's Market Mexican Grocery Store. The branch inside the south-side Milwaukee store is the first bank branch to be located in a metro Milwaukee ethnic supermarket and is part of North Shore Bank's ongoing effort to improve access to banking opportunities and provide bilingual assistance, and services for the area's Latino residents.
The bank expanded its reach across state lines with the purchase of Illinois State Bank in 2005. Then, with the acquisition of Maritime Savings Bank in 2010, North Shore added offices that serve customers in Cudahy, Muskego, and New Berlin.
In 2013 North Shore Bank extended its presence in Kenosha after doing business with a single office for 14 years when it assumed the deposits and acquired selected assets of Bank of Kenosha following its closure by bank regulators and subsequent receivership by the FDIC.