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Yours Mutually … 23
St James’ Street is one f two original branches of theBritish Mutual Ban,
which meres with Martins Bank Limited in 1951. The building has this rather
striking but almost forbidding exterior, and as we shall see from the images
below, a beautifully designed interior.
At
this point, no-one knows that in few
short years a radical change will take place on this quiet corner which marks
another of Martins Bank’s innovations. For now we will look at the following
article from Martins Bank Magazine, where talk is still of the amalgamation
with British Mutual, and of course, getting to know new colleagues… |
In Service: 1950 until 28 April 1995 Image © Barclays Ref
0030-2525 |
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It
is not often that we hear of a bank amalgamation these days, and the last
fusion in Martins Bank took place as long ago as 1928, when the Bank of
Liverpool and Martins Ltd. amalgamated with the Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank
Ltd. It was, therefore, with more than ordinary interest that
we learned of the negotiations which have resulted in the acquisition of the British
Mutual Bank Ltd. The history of this bank is
interesting. In 1857 the British
Mutual Investment Loan and Discount Company Limited was incorporated, its
objects being to receive or borrow money and to grant loans but not to
transact any business peculiar to a bank or an Assurance Office. The Company was acquired in 1869 by a new company called British Mutual
Investment Company Limited, whose objects were to transact the business of a
Loan, Discount and Banking Company.
The name of the company was changed both in 1875 and 1877, and in 1882
it became the British Mutual Banking Company Limited, the title being
shortened to British Mutual Bank Limited in 1945. Since
the Company first transacted banking business the Prudential Assurance
Company Limited have been represented on the Board of
the Bank, although their shareholding has
for many years been only a small percentage
of the Issued Capital. In 1950 the Bank opened its first branch
in St. James's Street and also opened the first cross-channel bank on the
Dover-Calais service. The Bank has built up a
reputation for the skilled personal service it gives to its customers, and
the amalgamation with Martins Bank will enable this policy to be continued.
We feel sure that the amalgamation is pleasing to the shareholders, the
customers and the staff of British Mutual Bank and should prove a valuable
acquisition to Martins Bank Limited. We visited the St. James's Street branch on
February 12th to make the acquaintance of our new colleagues and we received
a most cordial and friendly welcome from them all. We were very much
impressed by the beauty of the interior of this branch. |
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The Manager's room, which is
on the first floor, is approached by a handsome oak staircase and from one of
its windows the scarlet-clad sentries on duty at St. James's Palace can be
seen, while half a dozen of London's most famous clubs are just across the
street. The office is spacious, with a beautiful parquet floor, and several
most attractive little rooms away from the main banking hall. It was a great pleasure to
meet Mr. Milne and his colleagues Mr. Adams, Mr. Gilleland and Mr. Morgan,
and we were glad to meet the daughter of Mr. Marlow, until recently the
General Manager of the British Mutual Bank. We are sorry that she is shortly
leaving us. We were also pleased to meet Miss Cowley. On behalf of all our colleagues we would like to express
our good wishes to the members of the British Mutual Bank who have now become
one with us, and we shall look forward to meeting them at our various social
functions from time to time. |
Taking the stairs to the manager’s Room in the 1950s will give way to something more revolutionary in
the 1960s… |
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Image © Barclays Ref 0030-2525 |
Above Images © Martins Bank Archive
Collections |
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By 1960 the “Martins Look” has been
added to the interior, but the best is still to come… |
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This
is the view across London in 1964, captured in this image shot from the upper floors of
Martins Bank’s newly rebuilt branch at 23 St James’ Street. Of course, much
has changed on the London Skyline since then, but at this important time in
its history - entering its four hundred and first year of existence - Martins
Bank’s optimism is as high as some of those dystopian skyscrapers, as the
Bank plans its 1960s expansion in the Capital. With the help of this, and some other rare
images from the time, we will discover that in the case of 23 St James’
Street Branch, Martins does not so
much expand outwards, as upwards. The second
phase of the Bank’s computerisation comes in 1966, and St James’s Street is
amongst the London Branches of the Bank that take part in the processing of
the daily work by the new state of the art Computer Centre in Walbrook,
EC4. |
Image
© Barclays Ref 0030-2525 |
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You can read more about this further down the page. St James’s Street Branch has quite an exciting life. Opened in 1950 by the British Mutual Bank, it is still a new Branch when Martins and British Mutual Merge the following. By the early sixties, the need for a bigger, more practical and purpose-built banking facility at 23 St James’s Street forces a radical re-think. It is not possible to move outwards, so the Bank plans to take what is for them the unusual step of moving upwards, and moving the customers up with them! This is achieved by joining forces with the builders of a new development, and the biggest change of all occurs in November 1964, when as one of three towers of the new “Economist” block, St James’ Street re-opens its doors, bringing another first for Martins Bank – escalator banking! |
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Images © Barclays Ref 0030-2525 the bank’s first escalator branch was
opened to the public in November at 23, St James's Street, London, which at
first may seem a strange place for such an innovation. In the long, wide gallery of that distinguished street leading
down from Piccadilly to St James's Palace, one finds a variety of buildings
most of which have absorbed the character of the area, whether they house
wine merchants, grocers, gunmakers, publishers or clubs. Boodle's Club, for
example, is a solid, imposing building designed by Joseph Crunden 200 years
ago and no doubt typical of that period: the appearance twenty feet away of a
new four-storey, irregularly shaped octagonal tower comprising a great deal
of glass intersected by Portland stone should be incongruous but,
surprisingly, it does not strike one in this way… For one thing this new
building in which our branch is situated is not violently obtrusive, possibly
due to the lack of sharp corners. Moreover it is one
of three new towers in the Economist
block, separated by open spaces, from the centre of which one does not
notice that the highest has 16 storeys. Only the smallest has a frontage onto
St James's Street. At the ground floor
entrance to our branch one has the choice of an escalator or one of two lifts
which run up the centre of the building alongside an enclosed winding
staircase. The first floor is entirely
devoted to the banking hall, the second floor to the machine room and
management offices which, apart from their shape, are typical of the high
contemporary standard we have come to expect in our re-designed branches. |
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Left: On arrival on the ‘up’
escalator |
Right: At the head of the ‘down’
escalator |
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The strongroom and staff rooms are below
ground. In the banking hall the biggest of the very large windows measures
150 square feet but all are fitted with electrically operated Venetian blinds
and, of course, the entire building is air-conditioned, the heating being
controlled from units beneath the windows. Lighting comes from a vast
glass-panelled ceiling. We first visited the
branch in the darkness of early evening and later set off on an unescorted
tour into the highest and lowest reaches, liking everything we saw. We called
again next morning because we were still puzzled. It is not a branch where amiable
housewives dump their babies on the counter, where Wellingtons and mud cover
the floor on market day, or where the window cleaner clanks in with a bucket
to be filled. It is noiseless,
entirely brown or surgically white, beautifully fitted, clinically sterile
and, being on the first floor and having those enormous windows, it
encourages one to look down on
people! Horror of horrors! When this awful thought struck us, we decided to
talk to Mr George Milne and his staff
and soon realised that the impression was wrong and entirely due to the
unusual situation. |
The working space in the main office overlooking St James’s Street with
a bay window and the side of Boodle’s Club seen through the far windows. |
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And none of those to whom we spoke had any
criticisms: rather were they full of praise for the lay-out and amenities and
happy to work in such surroundings after the cramped conditions of the old No
23. So that was all right. The opinions of the architectural pundits on the
new Economist block vary
widely. 'An architectural miss, a townscape hit' said one. 'Influencing what
is to come while maintaining a friendly acquaintance with the best of what
will remain' wrote another: he was of course referring to the buildings, but
we think it applies equally well to our branch and those who work in it. |
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Significant
Digits… In
1966 Martins Bank’s Boffins at the LONDON COMPUTER CENTRE and at LONDON
AUTOMATION
at Clements House, are busy perfecting a new banking computer program – BRANCH ACCOUNTING.
To ensure it is tested to the full limits of its capability, the
program is used to process the daily work of most of the Bank’s London
Branches. So that the computer can recognise
our customers’ accounts, each account is given an account number, and special
machines are made available for the personalisation of existing cheques and
paying in slips when these items are brought into Branches by customers. To illustrate the “new look”, we
have restored a scanned image of a used cheque issued by a customer in 1966.
Below (right) you will see before and after pictures. To ensure that customers
of one Branch are not debited or credited with items belonging to someone at
another Branch, account numbers are allocated using a pair of “significant
digits” – the first two numbers in the account number will identify the
branch at which the customer has their account. This will also ensure that vouchers can be
sorted and read both by the computer equipment, and the staff. With this new system, Martins says goodbye
the the seven digit account numbers that have been in use since the late
1950s when the Bank first experimented with using a computer to process the
work of Branches in Liverpool. |
Going up … |
Where better than
on the escalator itself, for the staff of this futuristic new Branch to be
featured, in this part of the Martins Bank Magazine article from 1965. It is clear from the number of staff that
St James’s Street has become a major player in local banking. There are more
images of these staff members in the staff gallery below. It is a whole world
away from the quaint former British Mutual Branch Building with its nine members
of staff that we saw at the beginning of this page. |
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Image © Martins Bank Archive
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Image © Martins Bank Archive
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