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Home to a prestigious golf club,
and to the even more prestigious Bentham School, Martins Bank’s Branch at
High Bentham, is one of the most delightful in the West Riding of
Yorkshire. This side view of the bank
is familiar to many of us who worked at Bentham, as a handy pathway leads to
it from a car park. In Martins’ time it
would actually have made sense to have the side of the bank as the front, by
virtue of the counter and branch layout.
Bentham will always remind us of summer days and scenic drives across
two counties to get to work. Happy
days indeed… For the first of our Bentham features, we go back to 1951 and
the visit to the Branch of Martins Bank Magazine. Then we move forward to 1967, and the
memories of Martins Colleague Dave Baldwin who recalls for us his time there
on relief, and the complications that can go with the idea of a week’s free
beer! Visiting Bentham was for
us almost like going home, a return to youthful haunts. We have spent many
happy days in the district camping and potholing, the latter sport being
peculiar to the limestone districts of the country where caves and
underground passages abound. Bentham itself is situated amid the magnificent
scenery of the Pennine range just inside the West Riding of Yorkshire, twelve
miles east of Lancaster, and our branch is excellently sited on the main
street at the top of the hill leading down to the station. It has only
recently become a full branch, having formerly been sub to Settle.
Nevertheless, as a sub office of the old Craven Bank it has served the needs
of the Bank's customers for over half a century. When first we used to visit
Bentham the upper floors of the little building served as offices, but the
premises have now been re-designed and a most attractive little house for the
manager and his wife has taken the place of the office. |
In Service: 8 March 1899 until 12 July 2023 Branch Images © Barclays
Ref 0030-0159 Sep1 |
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There is no such thing as
a free In May/June 1967
I was sent as a relief cashier to Bentham for a week and stayed at 'The Black
Bull' (diagonally opposite the branch) and on the Tuesday and Friday, was
sent to Ingleton (the branch in the image). Not many customers though. I
could have quite-easily commuted by train from Keighley but was told that I
had to stay and that my willingness and experience 'would be good for my career'. Was it? I don't think so but I
enjoyed a different walk every evening
after sitting in the pub reading on my first night. On Tuesday, I walked down
the back road to Wennington and back up the main road; Wednesday it was
Clapham on the back road returning by the main road and on Thursday it was
Ingleton via Burton in-Lonsdale and returning via a more-direct route. Good
job it was a decent week weather-wise. Then back home on the train on Friday.
Frank
Shuttleworth (left) was the first cashier and Frank Alston (right) the
Manager. We still had to 'hand-post' the current account ledgers (quite an
experience as Keighley was mechanised) and on Thursday we couldn't balance
the weekly return. Before I left,
Deryk Ingham (Assistant Manager at Keighley) told me that it was acceptable
for me to buy a pint of beer each evening and charge it to my expenses claim,
which I did, along with the 2/6 lunch and 6d for a cup of tea which I had at the farmer's cafe above the
railway station. On the Friday, I duly
cashed my expenses claim but, later, was called into Frank Alston's office and given the 'third degree': 'We
don't pay for alcohol Mr Baldwin', I
was told, so my claim was reduced by 4 x 1/6d (6/-) and I was made to repay
the amount. On my return to Keighley, Deryk Ingham asked how things had been
but I didn't mention my 'entertainment' until he pressed me ('and did you claim
for a pint each evening David? he asked) to which I replied that I had but
that it had not been permitted. 'Who said that it was not permitted' was the
response? 'Mr Alston'. Shortly afterwards Deryk Ingham came out of his office
with 6/- in his hand and gave it to me after he had (apparently) spoken with
Frank Alston and then claimed the amount from Bentham branch. Deryk Ingham,
who interviewed me when I first applied for a job with Martins, was one of the best managers for
whom I ever worked and his knowledge
and ability was exceptional. He was a 'typical' 'real' 'Martins Man' who died before his time. I have very pleasant memories of working at Bentham
for Barclays in the 1990s, and despite the town being so close to the
Lancashire border, when you visit Bentham, you definitely know you are in
Yorkshire. No namby pamby new fangled sandwich shops, the branch is
conveniently situated next door to a pub. This is a dual convenience, as the
bank is no distance at all to pay in the pub takings, and on late nights and
tricky balance days at the bank, the pub is handy for liquid refreshment – a
peaceful, and mutually beneficial co-existence!!! Editor, 2013. |
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