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Talk about one minute to midnight – Lewisham is quite a
large and lavish branch to be opening when the merger of Martins and Barclays
Banks is all but complete, but open it does, AND to a fair degree of publicity in the local press. On the face of it, the historical links are somewhat tenuous, but it seems the Bank has
been in Lewisham before – some two hundred years earlier. Quite how is open
to debate, but Martins Bank Magazine sets out to investigate in this article
published in its Summer 1968 edition… |
In Service: 2 May 1968 until 27
October 1971 Branch Images © Barclays
Ref 0030-1625 |
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the bank's 'return' to Lewisham was the
feature of the press publicity given to our new branch when it opened early
in May. There was never an actual branch in Lewisham in the
seventeen-hundreds but our new office stands on what were once the grounds of
a large house known as 'The Limes'. There, from 1749 to
1782, lived Ebenezer Blackwell, a partner in the firm of Martin &
Company, of the Grasshopper in Lombard Street. And Blackwell did in one respect bring the
Bank to Lewisham, for he raised from his firm a loan of £600 - a considerable
sum at the time - towards the rebuilding of Lewisham Parish Church. In the annals of Lewisham 'The Limes' is famed for its
association with John Wesley. In Blackwell's day
Lewisham was still a village, a single street of pleasant houses, and to the
home of his friend, Ebenezer Blackwell, Wesley would retreat from London to
study and prepare his sermons. That single street is now the wide and busy
Lewisham High Street which has attracted all the major stores - and Martins Bank. Lewisham, through the London Government Act of 1965, is a London
Borough, its fourteen square miles enveloping Deptford, Catford, Blackheath,
Downham and nearly 300,000 people. 'The Borough has
thirty-seven branch banks, too', said an undaunted Mr Richard Purkiss, our
Manager, when we visited the branch three weeks after the opening. In that
short time, and starting with little more than the staff's own accounts, the
branch had made an impressive start to attracting business. In appearance,
the branch wears an air of distinction. As the photograph shows, the rounding
of the glass and of the edges of the steel pillars makes this design unusual
but effective. |
Image © Martins Bank Archive Collection Advertisement re-mastered 2018 |
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Inside, the curves are
echoed in the vaulting of the ceiling, the rounding of the corners of one or
two walls built of warm brown bricks, and in the vinyl tiles which run
literally off the floor to form the counter front. At the rear is a private
car park from which customers can enter the branch by way of an attractively
planted patio. Perhaps to compensate for the 'roundness' of the office, the
staff seem to have been selected for their slimness. Athletics must be
responsible in the case of Dick Purkiss, for he approaches life with a dash
that must have proved useful when he was representing Kent in track events in
the 1950's. |
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This reproduction in sepia on plastic laminate of an old drawing of
‘The Limes’, forms a mural in the corridor leading from the office to the
rear car park. à The same drawing has been used for
the cover of a leaflet, produced for customers of the branch, which explains
the association of ‘The Limes’ with the bank and John Wesley |
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Living and working in areas he
knows well, he is now setting about selling himself as Mr Martins Bank,
Lewisham. The second man is Doug Owens, a North Easterner from Ferryhill,
fresh from a Domestic Training Course, and looking forward to settling his
wife and family in their new home at Bexley. Mr Owens is used to the small
branch atmosphere and Lewisham branch suits him well. |
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A keen youth worker for
Durham County Council, he hopes to continue youth work in his new
surroundings. Peter Scrivens, who looks after the steadily increasing
business at the counter, came from Bexley Heath branch. He started three
years ago at his home-town branch, Mottingham, and is getting no small amount
of satisfaction from seeing the build-up of business. After working at
Holborn and South Audley Street branches, Margaret Pearce is pleased to be
away from the City, though it has meant giving up her place in one of the
Bank's netball teams. Her experience of working at a computerised branch is
proving useful as Lewisham has been placed straight away on computer
operation. When we stepped out into the hustle and bustle of Lewisham High
Street from an office so pleasing and restful to the eye we half expected the
people of Lewisham to be queueing to get in. Perhaps when the word gets
around . . . |
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