MainStreet Bancshares Opens Middleburg Branch to Support Hunt Country Families, Farms and Businesses
- MainStreet Bancshares opened a MainStreet Bank branch at 10 North Pendleton Street, Middleburg, entering Hunt Country.
- MainStreet staffs the branch with local bankers, emphasizing relationship-focused service and deep Middleburg ties.
- Nasdaq-listed MainStreet pairs local branches with omnichannel banking and 55,000+ free ATMs to support regional growth.
MainStreet plants a Middleburg branch in Hunt Country
MainStreet Bancshares opens a new MainStreet Bank branch at 10 North Pendleton Street in Middleburg, Va., marking the company's formal entry into Virginia’s Hunt Country and reinforcing a community-first growth strategy. Chairman and CEO Jeff W. Dick says the move targets a legacy market where the bank can supply “financial horsepower” to support local families, farms and small businesses while respecting the area’s preservation-minded character. The announcement frames the expansion as long-term community building rather than quick footprint growth.
Local bankers with ties to the town lead the new location, underscoring the bank’s emphasis on personalized service. Bank President Abdul Hersiburane highlights a seasoned team — business banker Devon Porter, commercial lender Blair Horne and branch manager Leslie Cabral — who bring deep local connections and relationship-focused banking to Middleburg. Porter and Cabral, both raised in the community, are positioned to cultivate ties with longstanding and new customers alike; the branch even introduces a community-visible touchpoint in Lucy, the branch’s Welsh Corgi, to reinforce neighborhood engagement.
MainStreet pairs that community-facing model with an omnichannel platform to serve the broader region. The Middleburg opening extends the bank’s physical network to seven branches across Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C., while customers retain access to a fully integrated online and mobile banking system and more than 55,000 free ATMs. The company presents this blend of local bankers and digital capabilities as a way to “build roots” in Hunt Country, offering local commercial lending and business banking expertise supported by the capital and visibility of a Nasdaq-listed parent.
Targeted support for equestrian and preservation communities
The bank pitches its presence as particularly relevant to Middleburg’s equestrian community, agricultural operations and small businesses, using imagery of a marathon “best enjoyed on horseback” to signal patient, relationship-driven support. The move aims to provide tailored lending and deposit services to preservation-minded residents and family-run enterprises that characterize Hunt Country.
Corporate platform underpins regional service and expansion
MainStreet emphasizes that its Nasdaq listing and corporate infrastructure give it capacity to back continued expansion and investment in the region. Executives say the combination of local branch staff, digital services and a broad ATM network allows the bank to serve customers regionally while maintaining a neighborhood banking focus.