Sherman Dreiseszun

One Kansas City Place

Sherman W. Dreiseszun (1922 December 2, 2007) was a banker and real estate developer who built Kansas City's two tallest buildings as well as several shopping malls throughout the Midwest.

Early life

Dreiseszun was the son of Polish immigrants. He was born at 1734 Prospect Avenue in the 18th and Vine Jazz District of Kansas City, Missouri .

He served in World War II as a crewmember on B-17 planes.[1]

In 1946 he and nephew Frank Morgan (four years his junior)[2] formed a partnership Vic-Gene Manufacturing Inc. to sell women's wear to Kansas City, Missouri-area stores.[3]

Shopping malls and banking empire

In the 1960s it branched into building shopping malls opening the French Market in Overland Park, Kansas. In 1964 they took over a struggling effort to build the East Hills Mall in St. Joseph, Missouri[4] They operated under the name of MD Management.

In 1967 they opened Metcalf South Shopping Center which was the first large indoor mall in the Kansas City area. They would also establish a banking network Mission Bank in Mission, Kansas, Metro North State Bank in Kansas City, Missouri, Valley View State Bank in Overland Park Industrial State Bank in Kansas City, Kansas and Security Bank of Kansas City as well as Merchants Bank in Kansas City. The banks would finance their expansion.

Some of the projects would be done in conjunction with Copaken, White & Blitt.

Rebuilding the Kansas City skyline

In addition to building suburban shopping centers they made their mark with the construction of Kansas City's two tallest buildings—the Town Pavilion in 1986 and One Kansas City Place in 1987. The buildings changed the landscape of downtown Kansas City where the Kansas City Power and Light Building had stood as the tallest since 1931. One Kansas City Place is twenty one feet taller than the Gateway Arch.

In 1985 and 1991 he and Morgan were listed on the Forbes list of richest Americans with more than $500 million in assets. [5][6]

Collapse

Their empire took big hits in the early 1990s when their banks faltered in the Savings and loan crisis. They were charged with bid rigging for leasing its office space. Morgan died in 1993 proclaiming his innocence. The FDIC prohibited Dreiseszun from being involved with the banks.[7]

In 1996 he pled guilty to misdemeanor charges and paid a $375,000 fine and would regain control of many of his banks via the Valley View Financial Group.[8][9]

He was resident for life at Kehilath Israel Synagogue in Overland Park and was active with Jewish philanthropies.[10]

Shopping malls

References

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