The village of Coniston has plenty
of charm, and much to interest the visitor, with many places to eat, and
small but quaint gift shops. The
inside of the Branch is extremely compact, with room only for a counter and a small office. Fortunately space is provided one floor
DOWN for a small staff and storage area. Coniston will continue to be an
important office beyond the merger with Barclays and into the twenty-first
century, as it continued to go to extremes to be helpful to every new
generation of customer and tourist until the axe finally fell on Friday 7
December 2018. Whilst zooming-in to
an exterior shot of the building we found, ostentatiously fixed to the
wall, this advert for Hellens of Coniston, who promise the local motorist
all manner of service including reboring and sleeving, cellulose spraying
tyre and battery service, welding and wing and body repairs! Lucky the bank
is at hand to provide the ready cash for those nasty repair bills…
|
Thanks to the amazing
foresight of the Sankey Family collection of glass plate photographs of
Lancashire and the Furness Peninsula, we are delighted to be able to bring
you (above, left) this rare image of Coniston branch in its days as an
office of the Bank of Liverpool. As the Bank of Liverpool amalgamated with
Martin’s Private Bank in 1918, this particular photograph can be dated to
1918 or earlier.
|