The danger – and what some
perceive as excitement – of bank raids were becoming a problem by the
1950s, and with the rapid expansion of the banking networks across the
United Kingdom, such events were sadly part of everyday life. Sometimes there was the unimaginable fear
of facing someone pointing a gun at you as you sat behind what was then a
very open divider between staff and customers. On other occasions branches
were broken into overnight. In Martins’ history, particularly in the North
Eastern district, explosives laid carefully to blast open safes early in
the morning was another “weapon of choice” of those willing to steal what
did not belong to them. In September
1963, thieves at Jarrow branch managed only to blow a small hole in the
wall of the branch and flee, leaving their tools behind.
Earlier, in February 1957, a
slightly more successful use of explosives saw Corbridge sub-Branch itself
fall victim to this dangerous and frightening criminal activity. We were
delighted when John Malden got in touch with the Archive – and turned
detective – providing us with the story, as printed in the South Shields
Gazette on 26 March 1957, which is shown here courtesy of our friends at the
British Newspaper Archive.
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The
Shields Evening News – 26 February 1957
Image
© Johnstone Press. Image created courtesy of THE BRITISH LIBRARY
BOARD.
Image
reproduced with kind permission of The British Newspaper Archive
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