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  1. P. W. Huntington formed P. W. Huntington & Company in 1866, operating on the northwest corner of High and Broad Streets; the site now houses the regional headquarters for rival U.S. Bancorp. Huntington built its first five-story building in 1878, on the intersection's southwest corner.

  2. P.W. Huntington was an Ohio banker and businessman starting the predecessor of the Huntington National Bank in Columbus in 1866. P.W. ran the bank until 1918 when he handed down control to his three “Banking Sons” who ran the bank until 1958.

  3. Ebenezer Huntington (December 26, 1754 – June 17, 1834) was an officer in the Continental Army and is depicted as one of the officers of General Washington's Army in John Trumbull's Surrender of Lord Cornwallis. He served as a United States Representative from Connecticut after the war.

  4. Collis Potter Huntington (October 22, 1821 – August 13, 1900) [2] was an American industrialist and railway magnate.

  5. May 23, 2018 · Huntington Bancshares Incorporated is a regional bank holding company in the Midwest, operating principally through The Huntington National Bank. Based in Columbus, Ohio, with around $36 billion in assets in early 2007, Huntington operates more than 380 branches and nearly 1,000 ATMs in Ohio, Michigan, West Virginia, Indiana, and Kentucky.

  6. P.W. Huntington was a capitalist and banker in Columbus, Ohio, who retired as head of the Huntington National Bank in 1911. He was born in Connecticut in 1836 and died in 1918, and is buried in Green Lawn Cemetery.

  7. Mar 2, 2012 · P.W., as he was called, wound up in Columbus in 1853 through the suggestion of a friend, although it is not clear why the suggestion was made. What is clear is that Huntington was the son of a...