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Martins Bank’s first Branch at Ipswich is opened in
1939 by Mr R B Thompson. The office is
set up hurriedly in an old shop front at 11 Buttermarket, with the aim of
moving to more suitable premises as soon as possible. Soon after the Bank arrives in Ipswich, the Second
World War breaks out, and the desire for a better branch in the town has to
be put on hold – until 1957!
Martins Bank Magazine pays its only visit to Ipswich in 1950, when the
spirit of “make do and mend” is still thriving, and the Branch is still
decorated with fittings once used by the Bank at the Ideal Home Exhibition! It is also worth noting here that two of the
original staff members will go on to make names for themselves in the
Bank: Mr R D Beaumont, a future London
Assistant District Manager, and Miss M L Perks who leaves behind her days
typing and cashiering at Ipswich to make a name for herself at London Trustee
Department, becoming the first woman to be appointed as Pro Manager by the
Bank’s Trust Company… Our branch
at Ipswich is housed in temporary premises, diagonally opposite the premises
we hope one day to convert to our use.
Nevertheless, the best use of the converted shop has been made, and
fittings once used in the Ideal Homes Exhibition make the interior look
attractive, the effect being friendly, cosy and cheery. There are several
world-famous firms in Ipswich and we were not a little surprised to find that
a big American engineering firm has established its works there. |
In Service: 1 August 1939 until 1957 Image © Martins Bank Archive Collections – Dave Baldwin
2024 Extract from Martins Bank Limited Annual Report and Accounts
1939 © Barclays |
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Our
bank has steadily improved its footing in the old town, despite the fact that
it is not well known in East Anglia where our representation is somewhat
sparse. The Manager, Mr F W Burdon, is North-Easterner who entered the Bank
in 1923 and served at Willington, Newcastle City Office, Tyne Dock, Jarrow,
on the District General Manager’s Staff and at High Street Gateshead and
Prudhoe, before going South in 1936.
His service in the South includes London itself, Bournemouth and
District Office Relief Staff: He went to Ipswich in 1939, being appointed
Acting Manager and Clerk in Charge in 1941.
Then followed a period of military service with the R.A.F. from 1943
to 1946, his appointment as Manager dating from October 1946. Mr K.V. Amatt
entered the Bank at Ipswich in 1945, and served with the R.A.F. from 1946 to
1948. He divides his spare time between playing hockey and studying for the
Institute of Bankers’ Examinations.
The only girl at the Branch is miss M.L. Perks who entered the service
in July 1940 at Ipswich, thus having completed nearly ten years at the
Branch. She has passed all her
Bankers’ examinations and acts as typist and cashier. Her passbook statements are a model of what
statements to customers should be, and we are confident that no better work
will be found anywhere. Outside
banking hours she is a keen member of the St John’s Ambulance Association and
performs a spell of duty each week at the local hospital as well as competing
in local and county contests. We had a pleasant lunch with Mr Burdon,
stopping to look at a fifteenth-century architectural showpiece of the town
on our way back, while K.V. Amatt and Miss Perks did the work, and took our
departure just before 3pm taking back with us the memory of a very pleasant
visit. |
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Martins Bank Archive Collections 1988 to date. M M |