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The
expansion of Martins Bank’s Midland District continues apace, and the result
in Rugby is this handsome branch which is up and running in 1953. Rugby survives until 1989, a standalone
branch during its life under Martins, with no sub branches. Martins Bank Magazine visits the branch in
1957, and it keen to start with a list of all the things that you would at
that time associate with the town of Rugby.
Thankfully the visit does include a detailed look at the staff, the
branch and the town… RUGBY School, Rugby football, Rugby wireless station, Rugby as
a railway centre—
we can truthfully say that prior to our visit to our Rugby branch on the
first day of Spring, our previous knowledge of the place was summed up in the
opening line of this paragraph. We did
not know, for example, that the Post Office transmitter at Rugby is the only
one in Great Britain capable of talking to submerged submarines, wherever
they may be throughout the world. |
In Service: Wednesday 1
July 1953 until 17 November 1989 Image © Barclays Ref:
0030-2480 |
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Neither did we know about the cattle market,
the largest in the Midlands. The traveller
who passes through Rugby station on his way to London sees only the
industrial end of the town, the British Thomson-Houston works and those of
the English Electric Company. The cultural glory of the place—the famous school, is at the other end,
partly visible from the square in which our branch stands. The photograph of the staff
was taken on the edge of the famous field on which, in 1823, William Webb
Ellis, in the words of a commemorative tablet on a nearby wall " with a
fine disregard for the rules of football as played in his time, first took
the ball in his arms and ran with it, thus originating the distinctive
feature of the Rugby game." We went into
the school chapel with its beautiful stained glass, and noted with interest
the arrangement of the pews, whereby one half of the congregation faces the
other. We paused with interest at the memorial tablets to Lewis Carroll,
to Rupert Brooke and to Bishop David, a former headmaster of the school and
Bishop of Liverpool for many years.
Here, too, are memorials to Dr. Temple, one of the three headmasters
who became Archbishops of Canterbury; to Arthur Hugh Clough and to the famous
Dr. Thomas Arnold and to his son, Matthew Arnold, the poet. Whatever may be
the future of schools such as this it would be hard to deny that were they to
disappear something infinitely precious would be lost to the educational
system of the country, and the nation as a whole would, culturally, be
poorer. It is inevitable that the
life of a school of 700 boys should in various ways dominate the life of the
town. On parents' day and speech day, for example, hotel accommodation for
miles around is difficult to obtain, and it is obvious that to some extent
the school must provide part of the livelihood of the tradesmen of the town.
What with industry on the one hand and culture on the other Rugby is a
prosperous town. On our way from the school
to our branch we passed the house in which Rupert Brooke was born. |
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Images © Barclays Ref:
0030-2480 Behind the busy shopping streets Rugby is
a town of quiet ways and the atmosphere of learning is everywhere noticeable. Against this background we opened the new branch in 1953,
appointing as its Manager Mr. Harold W. Lawson. His previous experience had
been at various Liverpool branches— Liverpool City Office, Tuebrook, Smithdown, West Derby and
Woolton, with a spell in H.M. Forces from 1941 to 1946. He was appointed
Clerk-in-Charge at Booker Avenue in 1947. Mrs. Lawson used to be in
the Bank, and they met whilst serving at West Derby branch. They have settled
down at Rugby with their daughter, still at school, most happily and are
enjoying every minute of their time spent in building up the new branch. Mr. G. A. Radcliffe, second-in-command, comes from the
Manchester District and has served in Manchester itself and at Ashton and
Oldham. He, too, finds life in Rugby pleasant and the work congenial. Mr. E. J. Blunsom entered the Bank at Coventry in 1954
and the transfer to Rugby is his first. The young lady is Miss S. D. Beavis,
a local girl who has only been in the Bank since February. We were very pleased to be able to entertain Mr. and Mrs.
Lawson to lunch and later on in the day to have tea at their pleasant home in
an attractive village a short distance outside the town. Truly the labour of
some of us is performed in pleasant places! |
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