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Sedbergh is located in a remote and
beautiful part of Yorkshire, and even in the twenty-first century, the journey
to it is not straightforward. It is almost as if someone had thrown the
tarmac into the air, and decided that the carriageway would be defined by the
patches that landed. In the depths of
Winter only the brave might attempt these roller-coaster roads from
Kendal to the Yorkshire Dales, driving
round bends whilst going up or down a sharp rise, and always, always with the low Winter sun
directly in your eyes… This is Martins
Bank’s second office in the town, built and first opened for business in
1953. |
In service: 1953 – 13 February 2015 (see also SEDBERGH
SCHOOL) Image © Barclays Ref: 0030-2578 |
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The Bank previously
operated from Evans House, part of the famous and prestigious Sedbergh
School. Martins Bank Magazine visits the
branch towards the end of Martins’ life, about a year before the merger with
Barclays, and finds customers in a state of mild confusion… Inevitably, situated next
door to the Post Office, our branch at Sedbergh receives requests for postage
stamps from undiscerning members of the public. One misguided soul remarked
'What a marvellous post office; we don't have them like this down south' and
another commented on 'the friendly civil servants'. But then Sedbergh is
altogether a friendly sort of place. We had not stepped more than a few yards
down Main Street (just wide enough for a bus) before we had acknowledged
greetings from the policeman, a tweed-clad gentleman with a dog, and three
small boys. Sedbergh is a small market
town folded into the shelter of the Pennines, giving it protection from the
north and east winds so that it enjoys a bracing but not rigorous climate. |
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Image © Martins Bank Archive Collections |
Image © Barclays Ref: 0030-2578 |
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A
signpost tucked into a hedge on the road from Kirkby Lonsdale tells you that
you have arrived but, apart from the tower of St Andrews Church standing
above the trees, there is little to be seen of the town. And what of its famous school? This too is
blended into the landscape, its buildings widely dispersed and woven into the
fabric of Sedbergh. Founded in 1525 it has become one of the most important
schools in the north of England. It is
perhaps significant that the school and Martins, both with four centuries of
tradition, should have an association going back many years through the
early Kendal bankers, Maude Wilson & Crewdson. And before our present
office was built some fifteen years ago the branch was located in Evans
House, one of the school buildings. |
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