|
Streatham
Branch is added to Martins Bank’s portfolio of Branches in Outer London in
1961. It is not visited by Martins Bank Magazine until 1963. They find Streatham to be bright roomy and
comfortable, and in the article below, they set about meeting the staff and
assessing the local business opportunities for the Bank. As a standalone full
Branch with no sub-Branches, Streatham opens across the full Banking week of
six days in these attractive premises on the High Parade, Streatham High
Road. In her autobiography – “No,
Prime Minister”, published 2001 by John Blake Publishing Ltd, former Member
of Parliament Teresa Gorman recalls seeing an advertisement campaign whose
theme was business start-up, in the window of Martins Bank’s Streatham Branch
in 1967. She was looking to start her
own business, and needed help to the tune of £1000 (Approximately £16,800 in today’s
money). Having been practically
laughed at, then turned away by the Westminster Bank, she saw Martins Bank’s
advert showing the man in the bowler hat carrying a hod of bricks, and the
invitation to come in and discuss “Starting a New Business”. We are pleased
to say that Streatham branch saw the value in Mrs Gorman’s proposed business,
and with the minimum of fuss set about lending her the required funds. This is one of the first outings for the
famous slogan “Martins go to extremes to be helpful”, and an extremely good
example of how it works in action! |
In Service: Thursday 19
October 1961 until Friday 17 September 1971 Branch Images © Barclays
Ref 0030-2821 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Images © Martins Bank
Archive Collections |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Open for Business Streatham Branch first opens
its doors on Thursday 19 October 1961, and the following day the local
newspaper the Norwood News prints a lengthy spread introducing its readers to
the Bank and its new Manager, Mr N Mereweather. It seems the man in charge has
good connections with the area, and seems to be the perfect choice for the
job… {Yesterday,
(Thursday) Martins Bank opened a branch in Streatham, at 26 The High Parade,
in line with its policy of opening branches in important places in which it
has not been directly represented previously. |
Image
© Trinity Mirror Image created courtesy of THE BRITISH LIBRARY BOARD. Image
reproduced with kind permission of The
British Newspaper Archive |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Since
the war many new branches have been opened, including Covent Garden,
Tottenham Court Road, Knightsbridge, Watford and Gracechurch Street. The site
of this new branch was originally one of the shops in an existing Parade, and
provides spacious internal accommodation comprising an impressive banking
hall with a large public space, waiting room; manager’s office, machine and
staff room etc.. The walls of the banking hall are lined with various
contrasting materials and colours including flush white elm veneered
panelling, polished a natural colour, white and dark green marbles and
plastic fabric wall coverings in light attractive colours. The counter and
screens are executed in black bean, which is a dark hardwood, polished a
natural colours with stainless steel trim used to provide delicate structural
lines, and a bright contrast.
Additional colour interest is provided by the use of a plastic fabric
covering the counter front. Clerks desks and fittings are made in natural
polished mahogany with dark green covered tops. The floors are covered with
plastic tiles in attractive light grey colours, and dark blue close-fitting
carpets are provided in the waiting room and manager’s office. All ceilings
are new suspended metal tile ceilings which are used to conceal the original
irregular ceilings, the new heating installation and they incorporate a sound
absorbent material to give quiet working conditions. The front of the bank is
formed in the old shop front opening with satin silver stainless steel
framings, green marble facings under the window and white marble linings at
each side which extend into the banking hall. The shop-type fascia is formed
with bright stainless steel rimmed green Perspex letters Perspex background
all letters on a white Perspex background all of which is illuminated from
behind and, although generally conforming to adjoining fascias to provide a
degree of unity, gives together with the Bank front, that quality and dignity
of character associated with bank premises. COAT
OF ARMS The main entrance doors are flush mahogany veneered
and when open form the linings to the entrance lobby and have stainless steel
facings and handles bearing enamelled coats-of-arms of the Bank: the inner
doors are frameless toughened plate glass with similar coats of arms fixed at
eye level. The architects are W W Fisk and S H Fisk of 6a Bedford Square,
London. The manager of the new branch is Mr N Mereweather who was educated at
Westminster City School and entered the Bank in 1935 after a period in insurance.
He served first at Lombard Street Office and then at the Bank’s Whitehall
branch until 1940 when he joined the Army, being subsequently commissioned
into the Royal Artillery. He was posted to the Middle East in 1942 and later
joined the Sudan Defence Force in which he served in the Sudan and Eritrea
until he was demobilised. On his return to the Bank he went to Hanover Square
branch and then to London District Office. His first appointment was as Pro
Manager at Bruton Street branch. Mr Mereweather lived at Tulse Hill prior to
his marriage when he moved to Norbury, so he knows the district well. He now
lives in Croydon. Mr Mereweather’s main hobby is photography. He reads widely
and enjoys travelling, both abroad and in this country. English social history
is one of his particular interests. } A visit to “the family” Now we turn our attention to
Martins Bank Magazine’s first impressions of Streatham Branch, which by the
time they pay their visit, has been open for around eighteen months…
We are still uncertain how many stations there are in Streatham
but we arrived at the right one. This was fortunate for on the last day of
our London visit we were becoming unnerved by railway station announcements
made in Greek by Polish gentlemen at the very moment the trains clattered
deafeningly into the stations. Streatham High Road is very long—even longer if one turns the wrong way coming out of the
station—and it is full of shops: the roads leading off it are full of
houses—very attractive ones so far as we could see. We were glad to find our
branch which is bright, roomy and comfortable and even more glad to cash a
cheque—one should always carry a spare note if one
is in London. It
was Mr. Norman Mereweather, the Manager, who explained what it was about
Streatham that had puzzled us: one way leads to London while the other leads
to villages which are now becoming suburbs and Streatham, lying between, is
peculiar as a community, having no real focal point: in short one goes to
London or the shops or home. Nevertheless, people are also going to our branch and this is
certainly encouraging in an area which by some standards seems impersonal.
Mr. Mereweather, after eighteen months of management at this new branch, is
buoyant for his banking experience is varied and it is this ability to meet
all situations which gives one confidence.
Entering Lombard Street in 1935 he moved to Cocks Biddulph and then
spent six years in the army on the survey side in the Middle East. How many
managers can, we wonder, speak Sudanese Arabic even if it is unlikely to
be in demand in Streatham? After the
war there came Eastbourne, foreign work at Hanover Square, visiting
inspections and, in 1955, pro managership at Bruton Street. He attended a
Domestic Training Course in 1953. His
second-in-command, Mr. R. C. Baker, is an energetic man who came to banking via
shipping and insurance, starting at Westminster in 1955 and attending the
Domestic Training Scheme in 1959. He was hopeful that his efforts the
previous evening would enable him to become an a.i.b. Mr.
I. M. Hewlett, a bright young man of 24, began his career at Chislehurst in
1956 and has since worked at Bruton Street and Agency Section. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Branch Images © Barclays
Ref 0030/2821 His
his wife, who was in the Westminster Bank, presented him with a son early in April
he had a special reason for passing that evening's examination. At the time of our visit Mr.
I. G. Williams of the relief staff was assisting after a long spell in Chief
Overseas and was catching up on general branch banking. At Streatham there is only one
lady and she is happy to be the only female pebble on a male beach; Miss C.
A. Bailey joined Curzon Street branch in August 1960, came to the new branch
when it opened and now has no wish to work elsewhere. Mr. and Mrs. Mereweather
joined us as our guests for lunch over which we discussed everything from
banks to baby sitting. Our only
disappointment in a most enjoyable day was that time did not allow us to see
their new home and meet their three-year-old daughter. On this day, and indeed
throughout the week, we found such friendliness that on the homeward journey
to Merseyside we experienced much the same feeling as that which H. V. Morton
records in his book 'In search of Ireland'. After only a few days in Ireland,
he found it so easy to forget he was an Englishman that he had to say to
himself each day 'I will be true to England in the face of this awful
temptation' We hope our Grasshopper Ambassadors will take this as a
compliment. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
M |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||