The North Eastern Banking Company opens its
branch at Amble in 1873, and more than one hundred and forty years later,
Barclays closed the doors for last time in November 2017. Amble branch
featured as another of the “A’s and B’s in Northumberland” – a collection
of branches in the county that are visited by Martins Bank Magazine in the
Autumn of 1965.
This appears to have been a very quick visit, as
there is only an image of the staff, and a very “short and sweet” piece of
writing as the only evidence that a visit to Amble Branch was made at all! Amble might have a modest number
of staff, but they are tasked with running FOUR sub Branches – at Acklington RAF Station, Acklington Auction
Mart, Red Row, and Warkworth.
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In Service: 9 April 1873 until Friday 3 November 2017
Image: Martins Bank Archive Collections
© 1930 Dr J Waters
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As the merger with Barclays
approaches many of Martins Bank’s tiniest and oldest sub branches will face
closure…
There
is a lot of space around everything in Northumberland, and this was
noticeable as we gradually followed the coast road northwards to the
ancient port of Amble. Though not
quite out of the coalfields, the air of a seaside country town pervades
Amble, where farming features in a business which can boast a bit of
everything. There is a bronze age burial ground on Amble’s Golf Course, a
Roman settlement at Gloster Hill, and the Norman Ruins of nearby Warkworth
castle: from here onwards we were to become increasingly conscious of
castles…
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Image: © Martins Bank Archive
Collections
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We are indebted to David Kennedy, who
got in touch to tell us about his Grandfather, also David Kennedy (pictured
below), who was manager at Amble from 1913 to 1938. He
has found for us this lovely image from 1930, which shows the branch,
complete with “Bill Stickers” and some local workmen who also have a ladder
The image is believed to have been taken by the local GP, and is from a
photo print. David told us:
“I'm
attaching a scan of a photo print of Martins Bank in Amble, thought to date
from about 1930. The husband of my father's older sister reproduced it
1986, apparently from a print by a Dr Waters.
I'm
not sure who he was, but think he may have been the family's GP in
Warkworth. According to my aunt the bill sticker on the small ladder was a Mr.
Coulson; the men on the big ladder Jack Young and? George Beattie,
presumably local workmen.
You may be
interested to know that my grandfather, David Kennedy, was manager of Amble
branch from, I think 1913 until he retired in, I think, 1938. He lived
"over the shop" with my grandmother, and my father and his five
siblings were all born there as far as I know. I also remember my father
saying that in an idle moment or two with his penknife he bored a
hole through one of the stone windowsills of the flat they lived in
above the bank. I wonder if it is still there… After
retirement, my Grandfather moved to nearby Warkworth where he had had a
house built.”
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Image: Martins Bank Archive Collections
© 1930 Dr J Waters
Image © Barclays Ref 0030-0041
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