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The Carlisle and Cumberland Banking
Company opens in Carlisle in 1836, and the Branch that will become part of Martins
Bank has been serving customers ever since. We are delighted to be able to
bring you several images of Carlisle Branch, as Martins took a large number
of photographs of this office from the 1940s to the 1960s. This lovely shot of the branch was taken
in the late 1940s. |
In Service: 1836 until present
day, still open as Barclays Branch Images © Barclays Ref 0030-0563 |
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Look out, as further down this page, the building
becomes cleaner - and undergoes a few more subtle changes. Our main feature is the visit to Carlisle
by Martins Bank Magazine in 1951, which begins with a look back to the staff
of the Branch in service in the year 1903… Carlisle
- now, and then… Comparing
the photograph of the staff of Carlisle taken in 1903 with those taken in
1951 one is struck by more than the fashion details. Gone are the side
whiskers and the high collars and it was with a keen sense of disappointment
that one looks at the older photographs and realises that the comparison is
purely a male one. If only they had employed girls in those days what fun we
would have had comparing the fashions of the lady members of the staff in
1903 with those of today. As it is, the fun may be had in years to come by a
generation yet unborn! Readers will admit that the photograph
of Mr. Rushforth with his girls is an attractive one. He asks us to make it
clear that they aren't his own girls but he would be very proud of them if
they were! He has three of his own, one in the Bank at Botchergate, one
married to a Scottish bank clerk, and one still at school but determined to
go to Cambridge to study Pure Mathematics, following a brilliant school
career.We had the pleasure of lunch with Mr. and Mrs. Rushforth on the
occasion of our visit on February 5th. Mr. Rushforth, recently a grandfather,
has been at Carlisle since 1933, first as Pro Manager, and as Manager since
1942. Prior to that he served at Barrow where he commenced his career in
1912, Millom, Alston, Kendal, Inspection
Department, Head Office; and Securities Department, Liverpool City Office.
He also had a spell with H.M. Forces in the First World War. He is Chairman
of the Carlisle Centre of the Institute of Bankers and was Treasurer of the
Cumberland Infirmary and Home for Incurables until the State took over. On
the formation of the National Health Service he was appointed Chairman of the
East Cumberland Hospital Management Committee, which controls the administration
and day-to-day management of fourteen separate hospitals in Cumberland and
North Westmorland, having a bed complement of 926. This is an exacting job,
necessitating attendance at many meetings and constant consultation, but Mr.
Rushforth seems tireless and even manages a little golf occasionally. S. Rigg is a First World War veteran,
being wounded at Passchendaele. His previous service has been spent at
Skipton, Settle, Botchergate, Penrith and Wigton. He went to Carlisle in
1948. J. E. Russell is a keen
Territorial Army Officer, holding the rank of Captain in the Royal Artillery.
During the war his service took him to Egypt, the Western Desert, Palestine,
Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia, Austria, France, Germany and Belgium. He went
round the Cape, calling in at South Africa, so he certainly got around. G. P.
Way is a Liverpool man who went to Carlisle last year. He was in the Dunkirk
retreat and later in the Second Front with the R.A.S.C., finishing up at
Hamburg. J. S. Ritchie is really a Head Office Relief man who moves about the
district. He has spent most of his time since 1946 at Carlisle. W. J. Hutton
is one of those lucky young men who was sent to America under the Empire Air
Training Scheme but training was called off at the end of hostilities just
before he could get his wings.
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