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From rags to (third) Reichs? We love
the many “firsts” for which Martins Bank has been responsible, whether it is
the computerisation of accounts, a Head Office outside London, or a cash
machine that uses plastic cards and four digit PINs. Having two drive-in branches, a
cross-channel bank and a door to door by car banking service on Lindisfarne
all add to Martins’ long list of proud achievements. But to say that Adolf Hitler might have been
responsible for the Bank opening a Branch in Leamington Spa? Surely not!
The Bank sets up shop in this peaceful Midlands setting towards the
end of 1951, and advertisements are taken out in the local press to announce
the arrival of the new office. Sadly
we do not have any exterior images of the branch, but there are two interiors
on this page from the Barclays collection of Martins Bank Branch
Photographs. So what of the connection
with the perpetrator of the Second World War? Martins Bank Magazine, on a
visit to Leamington Spa in 1954, explains more about this somewhat tasteless
and extremely tenuous link with the third Reich, and Mr Hitler’s part in
Martins Bank’s expansion plans…. |
In Service: 5 November 1951 until 11 December 1970 Image © Barclays Ref 0030-1560 |
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Advertisements re-mastered by Martins Bank Archive 4 June
2018 Images © Martins Bank Archive Collections |
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It would
not be a complete exaggeration to say that the late Adolf Hitler paved the
way for the entry of Martins Bank into Leamington Spa. At any
rate, the solitary stick of bombs which fell like a whiplash across the
magnificent Parade, surely one of the finest streets to be found in any
provincial town, carved a space in the building line into which our new
branch was built so effectively, in such complete architectural harmony with
the buildings on either side, that the new edifice is now scheduled as one of
the architecturally notable buildings of the town.The character of this fine
old town has gradually changed. It
began with the destruction of the Centre of Coventry in the first saturation
air attack of the Second World War. Bombed out industries found a new home in
Leamington, which is only nine miles away, and some of them stayed and
prospered, especially a big aircraft factory employing several thousands of
workpeople. As a result the popularity of the place as a Spa began to
decline and although the Pump Room, with its impressive facade and lovely
flower beds, still bears witness to the presence of those healing waters
which in another age brought the old and the
ailing to seek relief and, incidentally brought prosperity to the place, the
emphasis nowadays is less on its reputation as a watering place and more on
heavy industry. |
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Image © Barclays Ref 0030-1560 |
Very sharp indeed is the contrast between the Spa and the older
portion of the town. From the beautiful Parade one crosses the bridge over
the River Leam and is immediately conscious of the change. Here are
nondescript buildings in ordinary streets, characterless by comparison. Our branch is excellently placed on this impressive main
street, nearly opposite the Town Hall and quite close to the Pump Room. Two minutes away from the rear of the premises and one is in the
excellently laid out Pump Room Gardens, while the same distance from our front door on the
other side of the street is the famous Jephson Park, full of beautiful flower
beds, a lake from which burst forth fountains, and an island on which the
band plays on a summer evening. The gardens are floodlit during the Season
and attract thousands of visitors from the surrounding towns, a phenomenon
which many of the inhabitants regard with very mixed feelings. |
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Incidentally, Leamington stages an annual flower show which many
people consider to be second only to those of Southport and Shrewsbury. Standing in this sylvan setting it is hard to realise
that the main street is only a few yards away. This part of the town, the Spa
part, is dignified by the presence of many stately Georgian houses, a
handsome legacy of a more gracious age. Quite
apart from the undoubted merit of the exterior of our premises the branch
itself is handsomely appointed, with plenty of space, plenty of room for
expansion and an air of prosperity which gives confidence immediately upon
entering. Although the branch at Leamington
Spa is Mr. Eric S. Sexton's first managership, he is no stranger to the
responsibilities of running a branch. During the long illness of the manager
at Clubmoor in the early part of the last war, he took charge of this busy
Liverpool suburban branch until he joined the Royal Air Force in 1941. |
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It was at Clubmoor where we first met
him and had the pleasure of working with him and we have always admired his zest
for work, the merry twinkle in his eye and his many fine qualities. His previous service includes varying
periods spent at Liverpool City Office, where he started his career in 1926,
West Derby, Aintree, South John Street, Inspection Department and Leicester.
He was appointed Manager at Leamington Spa in 1951 when the branch was
opened. During the war he served
with R.A.F. Intelligence in India and attained the rank of Flight Lieutenant.
He is now one of the leading lights in the small-bore rifle shooting club in
Leamington. His second man is Mr. E. J. F. Crawford,
whose previous service has been spent entirely on Merseyside, apart from the
war years when he served with the gunners in Ceylon, India and Burma. The other two members of the staff are "
locals." A. Arkell, a bright and promising young man, whom we did not
have the pleasure of meeting, and Miss J. M. Butler, an attractive young lady
who has been at the branch since the beginning, though the ring she displays
on the third finger of her left hand suggests that she does not regard
herself as a permanency. The photograph was
taken in the Pump Room Gardens behind the branch and was the concluding
ceremony of a short but very happy visit on Thursday, 8TH
July. |
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