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Three Lives… Messrs Grundys and Wood begin a banking service at 26 Silver Street Bury
in 1798, that becomes the Bury Banking Company in 1836. Martins Bank’s Branch at 26 Silver Street
bears some of the emblems of the Bury Bank. The Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank
takes over in 1888, and amalgamates with the Bank of Liverpool and Martins in
1928 to form Martins Bank. Our images
show the Silver Street Branch in three incarnations – below as a branch of
Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank, and also Barclays, and here on the right as a
Branch of Martins. Closed in 2010, the
building still exudes safety, stability and security and shows how small
scale grandeur can still be 100% effective.
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In service: On or around 1 July 1836 – 15 July 2010 As Martins Bank limited Image © Barclays |
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Images © Barclays For our feature, we eavesdrop
on the goings on at 26 Silver Street Bury on the occasion of the retirement
of their long-serving machine room supervisor, Joan Lord… on the evening of March 31 some
sixty present and former members of Bury branch and Miss Goddard (District Lady
Supervisor) met together at Silver Street to give their good wishes to Joan
Lord. Presenting her with a
crocodile leather handbag, Mr Isherwood (Manager, Bury) thanked her for her
outstanding loyalty over thirty-two years and said how much her help and
expert knowledge would be missed. Miss Lord began her career at The Rock and
moved to Bury in 1955 where for the past eighteen years she has been the senior lady in charge of the machine room.
In a brief but charming speech Miss Lord acknowledged
the good wishes and the present, then invited her guests to an excellent
buffet meal. Conversation about ‘the good old days’ continued well into the
evening among the many former members of the Bury staff brought together by
the occasion. On the
way to the future… From the many
examples of cheques and cheque books in our archive, comes this Bury cheque
from the early 1960s. This is a time of
change for banking, and even cheques themselves are redesigned and made ready
for the computer age, through the addition of the “MICR Line” – those
futuristic looking numbers which are printed onto the cheque using a special
magnetised iron oxide ink. At this
point the printing of a customer’s name on his or her cheques is being tested
by Martins Bank’s automated branches in Liverpool and London…
The cheque book
ordering slip shows a fee of three shillings and fourpence to be paid for a
book of twenty cheques. This
represents Stamp Duty, (a government tax) of tuppence on every cheque
written. |
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