Thank you, Archie, and good morning, everyone. Slides four, five, and six provide a summary of our most recent financial results. The second quarter was really strong, highlighted by exceptional earnings, a flat net interest margin, record fee income, and solid balance sheet growth. Our net interest margin remains very strong at 4.10%, this was unchanged from the linked quarter due to increases in both loan and investment yields, offsetting the pressure on deposit costs. We were pleased that the increase in deposit cost moderated in comparison to prior quarters, and we expect this trend to hold. However, we expect slight margin contraction in the near-term. Total loans grew 11% on an annualized basis, which exceeded our expectations. Loan growth was broad-based with larger increases in C&I, Summit and Agile. Average deposit balances increased $350 million, or 10.6% on an annualized basis and included a seasonal increase in public funds. Overall, the deposit mix continues to shift to higher-cost deposits, however, we maintain 22% of our total balances and non-interest-bearing accounts and are strategically focused on maintaining deposit balances. Turning to the income statement, second quarter fee income was the highest in the Company's history. Foreign exchange and leasing had solid quarters and wealth management had their best revenue quarter ever. Non-interest expenses increased slightly from the linked quarter due to higher variable compensation. However, we are starting to recognize the impact from our efficiency efforts and expect to see further benefits in the coming periods. Our ACL coverage increased 7 basis points during the quarter to 1.36% of total loans. This resulted in $16.4 million of provision expense during the period, which was driven by loan growth and slight credit migration. Overall, asset quality trends were mixed with significantly lower net charge-offs and an increase in classified assets. Annualized net charge-offs declined 23 basis points during the period and NPAs as a percentage of assets were relatively flat at 35 basis points. From a capital standpoint, our regulatory ratios are in excess of both internal and regulatory targets. Tangible book value increased $0.44 or 3.5%, while our tangible common equity ratio was flat during the period. Additionally, our Board of Directors elected to increase our common dividend during the period. We have always been focused on delivering value to our shareholders and this step is further proof of that commitment. Slide seven reconciles our GAAP earnings to adjusted earnings, highlighting items that we believe are important to understanding our quarterly performance. Adjusted net income was $61.7 million or $0.65 per share for the quarter. Adjusted earnings exclude the impact of our efficiency initiative as well as acquisition, severance and branch consolidation costs. As depicted on slide eight, these adjusted earnings equate to a return on average assets of 1.4%, a return on average tangible common equity of 21%, and pre-tax pre-provision ROA of 210 basis points. Turning to slide nine and 10. Net interest margin was unchanged from the linked quarter at 4.1%. Loan yields increased 10 basis points during the period and the yield on the investment portfolio increased 22 basis points. The increase in investment yields was driven by higher reinvestment rates, as well as the full quarter benefit from the portfolio repositioning we executed in the first quarter. Funding costs increased 13 basis points during the period, which was significantly lower than in prior periods. Our cost of deposits increased 14 basis points compared to the linked quarter. However, as you can see on the bottom right chart, that pace of growth declined significantly by the end of the quarter. Slide 11 details the betas utilized in our net interest income modeling. The increase in deposit costs has moved our current beta of 2 percentage points to 45%, which matches our internal modeling. Going forward, we expect deposit cost increases to be a function of mix. Slide 12 outlines our various sources of liquidity and borrowing capacity, we continue to believe we have the flexibility required to manage the balance sheet through the expected economic environment. Slide 14 illustrates our current loan mix and balance changes compared to the linked quarter. As I mentioned before, loan balances increased 11% on an annualized basis with growth in almost every portfolio. As you can see on the right, the largest areas of growth for the quarter were in C&I, Summit, and Agile. We expect Agile's growth to moderate in the coming periods as historically the second quarter is the strongest quarter for originations. Slide 15 provides detail on our loan concentration by industry. We believe our loan portfolio remain sufficiently diversified to provide protection from deterioration in any particular industry. Slide 16 provides detail on our office portfolio. Similar to last quarter, about 4% of our total loan book is concentrated in office space and the overall portfolio performance metrics remain strong. No office relationships were downgraded to classified during the quarter and our total non-accrual balance for this portfolio remains approximately $17 million. Slide 17 shows our deposit mix as well as the progression of average deposits from the linked quarter. In total, average deposit balances increased $350 million during the quarter, driven primarily by a seasonal increase in public funds as well as increases in retail CDs, money market accounts, and broker deposits. These increases offset modest declines in noninterest-bearing deposits and savings accounts. Similar to recent quarters, this was expected as the current interest rate environment has driven customers to higher-cost deposit products. Slide 18 illustrates trends in our average personal, business and public fund deposits as well as a comparison of our borrowing capacity to our uninsured deposits. On the bottom right of the slide, you can see our adjusted uninsured deposits were $3.2 billion. This equates to 23% of our total deposits. We remain comfortable with this concentration and believe our borrowing capacity provides sufficient flexibility to respond to any event that would stress our larger deposit balances. Slide 19 highlights our noninterest income for the quarter. Total fee income increased to $62 million during the quarter, which was the highest quarter in the history of the Company. Bannockburn and Summit both had solid quarters and wealth management posted its best revenue quarter ever. Additionally, mortgage, Bankcard and deposit service charge income increased from first quarter levels. Non-interest expense for the quarter is outlined on slide 20. Core expenses increased a modest $1.4 million during the period. This was driven by an increase in variable compensation tied to fee income, the full quarter impact from Agile and annual salary adjustments. We have also started to recognize some of the expected benefit from our ongoing efficiency initiative. Turning now to slides 21 and 22, our ACL model resulted in a total allowance, which includes both funded and unfunded reserves of $173 million and $16.4 million of total provision expense during the period. This resulted in an ACL that was 1.36% of total loans, which was a 7 basis point increase from the first quarter. Provision expense was driven by loan growth and credit migration. Net charge-offs declined 23 basis points to 15 basis points and our NPAs to total assets held steady at 35 basis points. In other credit trends, classified asset balances increased to 1.07% of total assets, primarily due to the downgrade of four relationships. These downgrades were not concentrated in any loan or collateral type. Our ACL coverage increased and we continue to believe we have modeled conservatively to build a reserve that reflects the losses we expect from our portfolio. We anticipate our ACL coverage will remain relatively flat or increase slightly in future periods as our model responds to changes in the macroeconomic environment. Finally, as shown on slides 23, 24, and 25, regulatory capital ratios remain in excess of regulatory minimums and internal targets. During the second quarter, tangible book value per share increased 3.5% and the TCE ratio was flat due to balance sheet growth. Absent the impact from AOCI, the TCE ratio would have been 9.13% compared to 7.23% as reported. Slide 24 demonstrates that our capital ratios would remain in excess of regulatory targets, including the unrealized losses in the securities portfolio. Our total shareholder return remains strong with 36% of our earnings returned to our shareholders during the period through the common dividend. As I mentioned earlier, we were very pleased that the Board elected to increase the common dividend, demonstrating our commitment to provide an attractive return to our shareholders. We will continue to evaluate various capital actions as the year progresses. I'll now turn it back over to Archie for some comments on our outlook. Archie?