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< Time Team… It’s 1951,
and Martins Bank opens a new branch (which it has been busy equipping and
staffing since 1950 at 33 Market Street Longton, adding another office to the
Bank’s Staffordshire portfolio, and strengthening the its foothold in the
Potteries. The building has had many
uses both before and after the arrival of Martins, and by the end of the
twentieth century it is home to what is most kindly referred to as “a number
of retail outlets”. The future of the British High Street seems permanently
in the balance in the Twenty-First Century, with the “pop-up shop” literally
here today, gone tomorrow… |
In Service: 1951 until 1970 Image © Barclays Ref 0030-1729 |
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x Only the
top two floors of the building provide the evidence that there was ever a
bank here. The lovely image on the left
was taken around the time the branch was opened in 1951. It would appear that the belisha beacon on
the left of the image is also still there, albeit as a modern “red and green
man” pedestrian crossing. What we do
to our town centres is sometimes only apparent when we glimpe the not so
distant past like this and realise just how quickly we have all changed. In 2010
- this portal to another age was
discovered between two shops on Longton’s Market Street. The 1960s had been
covered up, and as the building was changing hands once more, things briefly
looked as they did more than forty years ago… |
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We had wondered
why the Martins Coat of Arms appears the wrong way round, until we discovered
it is mounted on a removable piece of glass which must at some stage have
been replaced wrongly after cleaning!
We are indebted to Alan and Glynis Myatt for these images, and to Mrs
K Smart who contacted us having found the sign above the door of her new
shop. It seems Longton branch is
definitely in a time warp, as the original inner doors and the bank vault
area are still intact. Sadly the
basement area is subject to flooding, but the safe door (shown left) is still
there, and you could almost expect to see bank staff pottering about,
counting money. It is rare to find
branches looking anything like they used to, and Alan and Glynis’s pictures
are therefore a little piece of history, marking the short period that the
branch has resurfaced before finding yet another modern use. All this makes
us wonder how many more of our old branches still have signs and other
fixtures still intact, but maybe hidden under modern shop fittings? If you know of any more examples, please
get in touch with us at the usual address:
martinsbankarchive@btinternet.com. Behind Closed Doors… On the left, the internal doors are
still intact, and in very good condition.
On the right we get to see a little of what used to be behind those
doors – and in the article below we have more of the internal pictures that
were taken when the branch was new.
Although the building itself wasn’t new, the Architects at Martins
Bank Premises Department did an amazing job converting what was there into
such a dignified place in which to do business. Not for the first time, a
clever stone façade and internal dark wood fittings lend an air of
permanence, stability and safety to a Branch of Martins Bank Limited! This must clearly have been when Market
Street itself knew better days, and local trading conditions supported the
addition of a new Bank. So now it’s
back to 1952, and a visit to Longton by Martins Bank Magazine, not long after
the new branch had opened. As usual
there is a good deal written about the local area, and you can meet some of
the staff mentioned, in our gallery at the bottom of this page. The
Potteries are approached through a smiling countryside, disarming in its
loveliness, and the approach is made on high ground so that one looks down on
the Five Towns lying in the valley below. The visitor who sees this prospect
for the first time can be excused for standing appalled before continuing on
the downward road which leads him to the heart of the inferno which is
revealed to his horrified gaze. The whole valley belches smoke and dirt
from batteries of kilns which seem to be mingled with all other buildings
higgledy-piggledy. The factories are, in many cases, right on the main
streets as well as on the side streets and most of the industry in the valley
appears to have something to do directly or indirectly with the making of
pottery.
We made our way through the smoke-hazed streets on which the
sun nevertheless contrived to shine brightly, remembering our last visit on a wet day when the smoke
wouldn't rise and gloom and fog obscured everything. The
object of our journey was to visit our new branch at Longton and to renew
acquaintance with our old friends Mr. and Mrs. Bardsley. Mr. Bardsley was Mr. Verity's secretary for
a time, in 1946, and his wife (nee Brenda Smith) was on the Head Office
Telephone Switchboard. Mr. Bardsley entered the Bank in 1936 and served at
Hanley and Leicester as well as on the Relief Staff and in Branch Department
before his appointment as Pro Manager at Hanley in 1948. He
opened Longton last year. Premises Department have contrived to make a nice
little office of the premises which formerly housed a shop and a satisfactory
business is being developed there. Shortly after our arrival we paid a visit
to one of Mr. Bardsley's customers, the Stanley Pottery, and were shown over
the works. We were introduced to the
sagger maker's bottom knocker, who, for those unversed in the specialised language
of the Trade, is the man who makes the bottoms for the cases of fire clay in
which the china is enclosed for baking in the kilns. He flattens a lump of
clay into a “shape” with a wooden tool called a knocker while his superior
officer makes the case. We also managed to smash a plate which we were examining;
it just dropped to pieces in our hand. (We seem to have heard that one somewhere before!). The
explanation, of course, was that it hadn't been fired. (Nor have we, so far!) |
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Branch Images
© Barclays Ref 0030-1729 We
were very much impressed with a trade which has not yet succumbed to the
machine age, where the skill of the craftsman, whether at the potter's wheel
or with the paintbrush, still predominates. We were also struck with the
apparent happiness of the work people and we were told that despite the
grimness of living conditions in the Five Towns the people are noted for
their keen sense of humour and their kindliness. |
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After
lunch we went to Trentham Gardens, seat of the wartime Central Clearing
House, now restored to its proper function as a dance hall, café and
entertainment centre. The grounds were looking lovely in their spring dress
and it was hard to realise that ten minutes' run in a car and one would be
plunged again into the murk and soot of the Towns. Then to the branch again to
take the photograph of the staff. In addition to Mr. Bardsley there is Mr. R.
S. King, who started his career at Cocks Biddulph branch, going to Hanley
after the war and to Longton last year. Also, Mr. P. Boulton, who entered the
service at the Central Clearing House in 1944, afterwards going to Stafford.
Miss H. Davies entered the Bank in April of last year. We went to a piece of waste
ground less than five minutes' walk from the branch and took two photographs.
We wanted a typical background and have used the better of the two. The
other, taken against a background of twenty-six smoking chimneys and kilns,
did not quite convey the idea we meant to convey or we would certainly have
used it. |
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The
long hard road to retirement... It seems Longton’s Manager Mr Dakin had something of a struggle on his
hands trying to make a success of the Branch. This is due in part to
competition from local banks. The Midland District Results for the year 1962
reveal a number of telling statistics.
Mr Dakin has a staff of four men and two women. His length of service
(which will total forty-three years when he retires) means he is quite high
up the pay scale at £1,810 per annum.
Set this against a profit of just £370 for the year and we can see
that Longton is barely paying its own way, the Manager’s salary alone being
equal to nearly five times the profit of the Branch! This result puts
Longton at number 26 in the league table of 37 Midland Branches. There are
674 Current and Deposit accounts.
Total average credit balances are £157,000 against average debit balances
of £107,000. The District Manager’s summary of Longton’s position is quite to
the point – “Difficult area where the Manager tries hard but has difficulty
in holding our position. He would welcome a change”. Sadly for Mr Dakin, it appears the change
he craved came only when he retired – some seven years later – and this might
explain his rather dour expression in the photograph. He finally hangs up his
tie forever early in 1969, and entertains colleagues and friends to a buffet.
Martins Bank Magazine takes up the story… on January 30 Mr Dakin retired after twelve
years as Manager at Longton and 43 years' service in the Bank. He had begun
his career with the Lancashire & Yorkshire Bank in Bradford and moved to
the North Eastern District in 1936. Ten years later, six of them with H.M.
Forces, he moved to the Midland District and his appointment came in 1956. At his request there was
no formal presentation but forty friends and colleagues joined Mr and Mrs
Dakin at the branch, where the District General Manager, Mr
Hollway,
presented a handsome portable radio and a scroll listing the subscribers. Mrs
V. Fox gave Mrs Dakin a bouquet. In his speech of thanks Mr Dakin said he
had no firm plans for the future but felt that he and his wife might move at
a later date to North Wales. He then invited his guests to a buffet meal.
Mr Dakin was entertained to lunch at Head Office by
Mr Maxwell, and by Mr Hollway at Midland District Office. |
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