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Two pints of milk and a
dozen eggs please, farmer… Glenwood - a fairly typical
name for a house in Westmorland, more often than not the sort of name that conjures
up a small guest house or a farm. In this case it is Martins Bank’s
sub-Branch at Brough which opens for business for only two and a half hours
each week, as an extension of the service offered by Kirkby Stephen branch. Having acquired the branches
of Messrs Wakefield Crewdson, the Kendal Bank in 1893, the Bank of Liverpool
wastes no time adding to the network of small branches and agencies throught
Westmorland. The Summer of 1936 sees a one
hour per week extention to the opening hours at Brough sub-Branch, which is
communicated to customers through local newspaper advertising (right). In the
smaller branch photograph (far right), the outside of the building has been
brightened by the addition of flowers, but the sign that tells everyone that
the days of Martins Bank are over, can also be seen to the left of the door.
Glenwood does make it through the merger, but after seventy-five years, its
banking days are over by the Spring of 1972. |
In Service: 1897 until 28 April 1972 Branch
Images © Barclays Ref: 0030/0447 |
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1936 Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections Advertisement Restored
by Martins Bank Archive |
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