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Bank of Liverpool

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When the Bank of Liverpool opens at Silecroft near Millom in 1903, the business is run as an Agency – this is a throwback to earlier banking times when an Agent would agree to transact business but not as a permanent employee of the bank that engaged them. This image shows “Alacra”, also known as “Lachra” Silecroft, site of George Tomlinson, Licenced Grocer, and it is from here that the Bank’s Agency is run, in conjunction with the Post Office.

Bank Agents could often negotiate favourable terms in lieu of, or in addition to fees or wages, terms that perhaps included use of a Bank House, or they might even be required to provide their own security as a kind of insurance against loss or theft.  They were sometimes permitted to own shares in the bank, or to be paid in some way commensurate with the performance of the Agency they operated behalf of that bank. 

In Service: 1903 agency until 1925 then sub-branch until 1939

A picture containing outdoor, building, house, old

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Image © Martins Bank Archive Collections

              

Extract from Martins Bank Limited Annual Report and Accounts for 1938 – © Barclays

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Our records show a number of Agents working in the late 19th century for many of the Banks that were subsumed into Martins, but to find one – in this case Miss Mary Clark – working as late as the mid 1920s is a little unusual.  Although we have no photograph of Miss Clark, we do have her career details in the Martins Staff Database.  She was engaged by Messrs Wakefield Crewdson’s Kendal Bank in 1884, to operate as an Agent at Bootle.  From 1903, now under the Bank of Liverpool, she also attended and ran Agencies at The Green until 1908, and at Silecroft until her retirement in 1925.  She enjoyed a fairly long retirement, until her death on 1 August 1946.

When Mary Clark retired in 1925, Silecroft ceased its Agency status and was then run as a sub-Branch to Millom. It became one of five branches concentrated in this very small area of the Furness Peninsula, comprising offices at Millom, The Green, Silecroft, Bootle and Bootle Station.  In common with a number of Martins Bank’s sub-branches, Silecroft closes for the Second World War in 1939 but is not re-opened.  

Silecroft’s Agency opening times as listed for 1921, are five and a half hours each week across two days including Saturday morning.   Saturday opening for a business of this size is rare, but it may well have coincided with some kind of local trading event such as a food or livestock market.  We are grateful to Colin Skelton, former Assistant Manager at Martins Bank Liverpool City Office, who has been able to source the above photograph for us.

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Title:

Type:

Address:

Index Number and District:

Hours:

 

Telephone:

Services:

Agent:

Manager:

11-576 Silecroft

Sub to Millom

Lachra Silecroft Millom Cumberland

217 Northern

Wednesday 1200-1500

Saturday 0900-1130

Millom 202

Counter Service Only

Miss Mary Clark (1920 to 1925)

Mr J W Bargh Manager (Millom 1938)

 

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Sidcup Station

1903

 18 December 1918

1925

3 January 1928

1939

Opened as an agency of the Bank of Liverpool

Bank of Liverpool and Martins

Status upgraded to sub-Branch

Martins Bank Limited

Closed for the Second World War but not re-opened

Silsden

 

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