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The fifty-seventh annual report of the Halifax Commercial
Banking Co. Ltd., for the year ended 30 June 1893, lists this office at
Mytholmroyd as one of its branches. A branch is established at nearby
Luddendenfoot in 1915, and so begins a somewhat strange relationship:
Connected by the same road name, and never seemlingly separated officially by
the Bank, Martins Bank’s branches at Mytholmroyd and Luddendenfoot have taken
it in turns to play the parts of main branch and sub branch down the
years. It seems the two are
inseparable. On one occasion the
staffs of the two branches are photographed together as one! |
In Service: 1893 until 31 March 1993 Taking
centre stage in this lovely old photograph, Mytholmroyd branch is seen here (and in close
up below) in around 1926 as a branch of the Bank of Liverpool and Martins. Image © Steve Gee
Collection |
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However, not even two separate visits from Martins Bank
Magazine can unravel this tale of togetherness in deepest Yorkshire… |
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Images © Barclays Ref
0030/1951 X Green and
pleasant land… Our journeys hitherto
have taken us to well-known places, many of them famous beauty spots, fashionable
resorts, holiday centres, spas, county towns and so on. This time, for a
change, we elected to visit places which, while well enough known in the
North of England, are nothing but names to colleagues who are unfamiliar with
Lancashire and Yorkshire. These places are not large and one does not find in
all of them representation from every one of the Big Five banks. But our
branches in them are doing a good and necessary job, sometimes under trying
conditions, and if the places selected cannot be classed in themselves as
beauty spots at least they are within a mile or two of lovely country and one
does not have to look far for loveliness anywhere, though in some places it
is not thrust upon one's notice and one has to keep a sharp lookout for it. |
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X We saw the first two
branches of our choice under perfect conditions, on a lovely autumn day of mellow
sunshine lighting up the fading glory of summer on the trees. The visit was
made on September 23rd and we had to go by train right through to Halifax and
then use the bus as the express trains from Liverpool do not stop at either
Mytholmroyd or Luddendenfoot. As we left the station at Halifax we noticed
the buildings of Mackintosh's Toffee Works and respectfully doffed our hat in
their direction because of Lord Mackintosh who is a member of our London
Board. We lunched in Halifax
with Mr. and Mrs. Hand and learned some unexpected pieces of information
about the places we were to visit. Mytholmroyd possesses what is said to be
the largest fowl producing concern in the country. It is also the
headquarters for the manufacture of a well-known make of blanket and as may
be expected it is much concerned with farming. Mr. S. Hand has had a somewhat catholic banking career. He commenced
his service with the District Bank in January, 1914, and after service during
the First World War with the Royal Fusiliers and the Loyal North Lancashire
Regiment in France, Belgium, Salonica, Egypt and Palestine decided to change
banks and entered Lloyds and National Provincial Foreign Bank in Paris,
remaining there for three years. At that time this bank maintained a staff in Paris of about 500, half
of them French. With that post-war restlessness which affected so many young
men he tired of Paris and succeeded in obtaining a post with the Equitable
Bank in Halifax, which became part of Martins Bank in 1927. He remained there
until 1940 when he was appointed Manager of the two branches. On reaching Mytholmroyd it was hard to
realise that five weeks before, in the height of ' summer,' the main street
had been a raging torrent and our branch was over a foot deep in water. In 1946 the water reached nearly to the top
of the counter in an even worse flood. |
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Standing on
the bridge and looking at the River Calder flowing sluggishly over its
shallow bed many feet below the level of the houses it was hard to realise
that in times of excessive rainfall it can rise with startling suddenness and
maroon the whole place. The floods may subside in 48 hours and then the
houses have to be pumped out and the slime, sand and dirt removed. No wonder
the insurance companies will not touch a property in Mytholmroyd, but what a
disaster such a visitation can prove. On one occasion a local butcher had his
shop, house and effects swept away, putting him out of business. Yet the
place seems high and flooding the last thing one would expect. After a flood,
cheque books have to be reclaimed, stationery scrapped, furniture dried so
that drawers will open once more, carpets cleaned, and all the time business
carried on as usual. Mr. E. P. Green, who is normally in charge at
Luddendenfoot, was looking after Mytholmroyd when we arrived. His service has
been at Halifax, Sowerby Bridge, Huddersfield and Brighouse before going to
the twin branches in 1948. During the war he served with the R.A.F. in Italy.
Mr. L. M. Hunt is another R.A.F. type, but only a National Service one. His
previous experience has been at Bradford, Pudsey, Brighouse and Halifax. Miss
J. M. Sunderland is a native of Mytholmroyd and if her mother thought
working in a bank would be a nice clean job, she must have had a shock when
she heard about the floods. She started work in 1935 in King Cross and
Halifax branches, returning to her native place last November. A quick look
around the little town and then it was time to catch the bus back to Halifax
and the train home after a very pleasant day. |
This picture was taken from our branch one day this summer when the River Calder overflowed and flooded the main street. |
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We emerged into the narrow Burnley Road, and set off
for Mytholmroyd two miles away! Much
as we regret having to confuse readers in this matter of road names, we
invite their sympathy for the postal authorities who long ago gave up in
despair at this apparent local obsession with Burnley road. It carries gaily
on eastward through Fooit – sorry, Luddendenfoot – as far as Halifax, but the
numbering of business premises has become a sheer impossibility and if you
doubt this, please refer to your Branch Address Book. Mytholmroyd and
Luddendenfoot have taken turns at being the parent office since the Halifax
Commercial Bank opened Mytholmroyd in 1914.
This office was attractively modernised six years ago, and is bright
and clean despite the tendency of the Calder to flood it occasionally. One cannot blame the Calder, it does its
best against overwhelming odds, but the valley here is narrow, and water in a
hurry is wicked stuff. Again we found
a smiling young staff, willing to have a go even on flood defences if
necessary, and in Mr N L Jackson a manager who has adapted himself happily
from large town business to the local concerns of day-old chicks, die-casting
and corduroy. His sub branch at
‘Fooit’ in a quaint but serviceable building is overshadowed by high long and
narrow terraced houses from which in Autumn one may pick blackberries off the
hill at the back through the second storey windows… A Norfolk Connection? If the merger of Martins and Barclays had not taken
place, neither would a certain degree of confusion and a strange connection
between Mytholmroyd, and the Norfolk coastal village of Heacham. In December 1969 Martins Bank Mytholmroyd
becomes a branch of Barclays Bank with a sorting code of 20-58-55. This is sufficiently similar to Barclays
Bank Heacham’s own sort code of 20-38-55 that for around fifteen years
after the merger, cheques and paying in slips are regularly mis-sorted by the
central clearing, resulting in extra work for the two branches concerned, and
delays for their customers – a bonus if you had written a cheque perhaps,
because sometimes it could take longer to come out of your account, but not
so good if your wages went adrift for an extra day or two! |
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