[1] Joseph W. McIntosh, appointed Comptroller by President Calvin Coolidge, was a banker who had served with distinction in World War I.
The passage of the McFadden Act in 1927 brought major changes to the national banking system.
National bank charters became perpetual unless terminated by voluntary liquidation or receivership.
McIntosh became a banker and businessman after his term as Comptroller.
This biography of a person who has held a non-elected position in the federal government of the United States is a stub.