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The Bank of Liverpool and Martins opens a Branch at Doncaster in June
1927, one month before the first of two mergers that will create the modern
day Martins Bank. In July the Bank
takes on the Branches of the Halifax Equitable Bank, and by the end of
December the Branches of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank will also have
been subsumed, creating a Northern “superbank”. The fine old building at
Baxtergate, Doncatser, is shown in its
full glory (here and below), in these evocative images, and there is also a timely reminder of just how
much our buildings change! |
In Service: 2 June 1927 until 15 February 1974 Image © Barclays Ref
0030-0837 |
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By the time
of the 1969 merger with Barclays, Doncaster is a stand alone full Branch
operated over the full six day banking week.
There are no visits to Doncaster by Martins Bank Magazine, but we do
have the following write-up for the retirement of Mr E Bellhouse from the end
of March 1965… on 31 march
50 friends and colleagues attended an informal cocktail party given by
Elliott Bellhouse, Pro Manager at Doncaster, to mark his retirement. At a
brief ceremony at the branch beforehand Mr A. J. Talbot, the Manager,
presented Mr Bellhouse with a pair of binoculars from staff, colleagues and
former Managers. District Office was represented by Mr B. G. Pearse
(Inspector). Mr Talbot thanked Mr Bellhouse
for his loyal and conscientious service over 42 years, mentioning his
outstanding attendance record, maintained despite indifferent health in
recent years, and wished Mr Bellhouse many years of happy retirement in his
new bungalow on the Yorkshire coast. He entered the Bank at Leeds in 1922 and served at
many Leeds District branches. After 4 years' war service he joined the
Doncaster branch staff for the third time in 1946, becoming Pro Manager in
1960. What day is it, who am
I? In its heyday – some forty-five years as
a bank, 21 Baxter Gate had character and presence. How cruel the passage of
time can be – the fine ground level shop front façade at Doncaster is barely
recognisable today; our thanks to Mike Ingham for his contemporary photos…
… and yet how ephemeral is today’s High Street? Mike has continued to keep an eye on
Doncaster Branch, and in only the space of a few weeks, it would seem the new
“fashions outlet” has gone and been replaced by that most twenty-first
century of phenomena, a POP-UP SHOP – a kind of
little toe test of economic conditions in a local area, often followed by a
sharp exit when any available profit has been milked. A consolation is of
course that the building is actually being used for something, and at least
the upper floors still retain their architectural dignity on the OUTSIDE, despite whatever is going on on
the INSIDE! |
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