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Situated
originally at 43 Charing Cross (which is later redesignated 16 Whitehall by
Westminster City Council), steeped in history and home to the bank accounts
of many a rich and famous client, Whitehall Cocks Biddulph Branch truly is a
gem. With the famous Whitehall theatre next door, who knows what manner of
stars, old and new, might have been served at the counter of Whitehall
Branch? In a moment you can read with
pride the history of one of Martins Bank’s oldest and most prestigious
branches, but firth we will give you an idea of just how close to the pomp
and ceremony of our Capital City the Branch is. |
In Service: 1759 to 8 June 1992 Image © Barclays Ref 0030-3191 |
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Below left, on the 1930. Frith® postcard, you can see the branch in relation to Trafalgar
Square. Next door is the world famous
Whitehall Theatre, where Brian Rix staged his celebrated series of five
long-running comic plays that came to be known as the “Whitehall
Farces”. There seems to us to be
nothing more grand than being able to cash your cheques in the shadow of
Nelson’s Column! 2022 saw the Platinum
Jubilee of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth the Second, and we were delighted to
discover in Barclays Group Archives’ collections, this wonderful image
(right) of the events of 2 June 1953, with Her Majesty passing Whitehall
Branch in the Gold State Coach, pulled by eight magnificant greys. The image is from a painting of the
occasion, which Martins Bank used on its Christmas card for 1953. |
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Image Martins Bank Archive Collections -
© Frith Ref L1305018 under licence |
Image © Barclays Ref 2044-0001 |
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Against
the background of such history, we must now consider that in the twenty-first
century this wonderful building serves an altogether different type of
clientele in its new role as a wine bar...
For our main feature we wind events back to 1966, to celebrate the
history of this most distinguished of Martins’ Branches with an article published
by Martins Bank Magazine following some internal restructuring of the
building. Look out later too, for a
rare glimpse of the staff of Messrs Cocks Biddulph Branch in 1915. oliver cromwell's pay
chest, the leather fire buckets of 1759, and an array of firearms for the
defence of earlier generations of bankers are some of the historic items
skilfully incorporated in the refurbishing of Cocks Biddulph branch at 16
Whitehall. Some of the office's earlier outlines remain but the wall through
which in 1883 a hole was made to give access to a clerks' room in the
premises in Spring Gardens at the back, later to provide the partners' room,
has been replaced by a glass screen. In the banking hall the
gloomy green tiles have gone from the walls and the high ceiling is partly
concealed by modern strip lighting. On
the first floor ultra-modern management rooms have replaced the former board
room and the partners' flat. Cocks
Biddulph branch has gone attractively modern, but the visitor may wonder what
Francis Biddulph or James Cocks would say if they saw the office today, 209
years after they established the business. 'Comely young wenches, forsooth'
might, after their initial surprise, be their reaction to the ladies who now
comprise two-fifths of the staff. After that they would probably become lost
in reverie; they might even wish to call upon their successors to join them
in a closer look at the building, the business and the staff.
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Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections And then they might really surprise us, even though we know full well how disconcertingly history manages to repeat itself, for they would certainly tell us that 'hard core' lending is no modern problem. |
Cocks Biddulph Branch
before alteration (1) Image:
Martins Bank Archive Collections
Cocks Biddulph Branch
before alteration (2) Image: Martins Bank Archive Collections |
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In 1841 the partners faced this same
problem and decreed that future advances be 'only for short periods, in no case
exceeding six months'. Looking further into the branch they would be pleased
to see that the account opened in 1763 for Brasenose College is still there,
no longer handwritten but mechanised, and that the names of many people they
knew as dukes, admirals, judges and bishops are still represented by the
present generation on the books of a business which has become largely
commercial in nature. Seeing the messenger's flat on the top floor they might
be reminded of the faithful caretaker whose manifold duties earned him a
pension of £1
a week in 1859 after 48 years' service, and whose successor was dismissed for
drunkenness. The partners would find that no staff
member now sleeps on the premises, certainly not during the day for the
office is much too busy, but in 1823 the clerk who 'slept in' was paid an
extra £10
per year. They later had to stamp on a tendency for this to develop into a
means of boosting overtime by stipulating one clerk and by announcing an 11 p.m. curfew, since
roistering in the city until 12.30 a.m. defeated the object of the scheme.Would
the partners also recall how in 1829 the debit balance of Errors in Cash
reached the 'enormous sum of £18.10s. 4d.' and was therefore deducted from the “Christmas
Money”? And how the staff were later expressly warned against touting among
customers to increase this Christmas Money? Thereafter cash errors had to be
'adjusted between the parties concerned', which no doubt put a stop to
carefree cashiering. The partners would probably confirm that the close family ties
between the Martins and the Biddulphs played a big part in facilitating the
absorption of Cocks Biddulph & Company by the Bank of Liverpool and
Martins in 1919, when the pattern of banking was changing and the personal
bonds between employer and employee had already weakened. They might like to
remind us that even in 1871 there existed in London a floating population of
young workers. 'Many resigned after a short period of service' wrote one
partner, adding such comments as 'Might have been a good clerk had he been
amenable to authority', and 'Civil and willing but incompetent'. There is
something familiar there. But did some of these partners of old tend to get
out of touch with their staffs? Did they ever try, as the Cocks Biddulph branch
management does today, to run a training scheme within their office and to
switch people and jobs, not just from necessity but to keep up interest when,
as in every large office, much of the work must be routine Did they try to keep all their people in the
picture, to explain, to take them into their confidence whenever possible and
let them see that someone was interested in them? |
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Part of the new layout
where space is made to exhibit the treasures of Cocks Biddulph |
Oliver Cromwell’s Pay Chest |
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Perhaps they did. It would be uncharitable to assume that they did not for they are not here to answer back. Perhaps they would say that things were different, but one might then point out that even today Mr Machell and Mr Butterworth are to some extent cut off in their first-floor offices yet they still know what is happening below and how important it is that those on the ground floor should also know what is happening above. Things were indeed different then. When the business opened in 1757 Trafalgar Square was an open meadow but now the traffic in Whitehall never stops. It seems to increase daily and although it responds to the automated traffic lights it still needs the flexible, understanding, sympathetic hand of a policeman to control it on occasions. Much the same can be said of Cocks Biddulph branch where, despite the modern look, the modern rush and the modern machines, one does not have to look far to find a touch of understanding and humour which keeps the day's work moving. |
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Flashback… Cocks Biddulph &
Company staff June 1915 Back row (left to right): A
O D J Best H Montague (housekeeper) A B Trewinnard A Smith S
Smith A Henderson Smith H Knightley Second row: F F A Coles F E
Swift E L Arney S N Home Foreground: F England E E P
Humphreys |
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