THE NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL OF BANKING IS ONE OF THE OLDEST BANKING SCHOOLS IN THE NATION. FOUNDED IN 1953 THE SCHOOL WAS DEVELOPED TO OFFER A PROGRAM ON CURRENT ISSUES IN BANKING DESIGNED FOR BOTH JUNIOR AND SENIOR OFFICERS OF COMMERCIAL BANKS IN VERMONT AND NEW HAMPSHIRE AND WAS SPONSORED BY THE BANKING ASSOCIATIONS OF THE TWO STATES. IN THE MID 1960'S MAINE JOINED THE SCHOOL, THE NAME WAS CHANGED TO THE NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL AND ROTATING THE LOCATION BETWEEN THE THREE STATES CEASED IN 1984 WHEN THE KELLOGG CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION (THE NEW ENGLAND CENTER) AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE IN DURHAM WAS CHOSEN AS ITS LOCATION. RESPONDING TO THE CHANGING NEEDS OF BANKERS, THE SCHOOL SHIFTED ITS EMPHASIS TO A PROGRAM IN GENERAL BANKING GEARED TO SUPERVISORS AND JUNIOR OFFICERS AND IS CONSIDERED A STEPPING STONE TO THE STONIER GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BANKING.
Reported officers (all unpaid)
No paid executives reported in 2024. NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL OF BANKING reported 12 unpaid officers and board members on its 990.
Revenue and expenses over time
NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL OF BANKING reported revenue and expenses across 2 filing years.
What Arts, Culture & Humanities executives earn
NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL OF BANKING reported no executive compensation in its latest filing. For context, the highest-paid executive at a comparable arts, culture & humanities organization nationwide earns a median of $58,598.
These are arts, culture & humanities sector-wide figures, not this organization's reported pay. Based on 4,819 organizations across 4,819 filings (2021 – 2023).
See full Arts, Culture & Humanities compensation data →Compare any role, sector, or revenue band
Build your own benchmark from millions of reported positions.