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The Bank of Liverpool and Martins opens a sub-Branch to Padiham – in the
nearby village of Read – in 1926. A
Banking service is offered here within the premises of the Simonstone
Constitutional Club, for a total of thirteen years. According to
local directory information, from the time, the branch is closed during the
week, and opens for just two hours each Saturday. |
In Service:
11 October 1926 until September 1939 |
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Extracts from the Annual
Report of the Bank of Liverpool and
Martins 1926 © Barclays |
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Advertisements
like this one, (right), are published in newspapers throughout the country.
Their main purpose is to raise the profile of the Bank and of one or more of
its services, but often a more local flavour is added by incluing a list of
branches – here including READ amongst the many local offices in the Burnley
area. Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections |
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A
combination of factors – from economic conditions to a shortage of trained
staff - means that a large number of smaller rural sub
offices and “front room” branches become casualties of war in their own
right, for whilst it is intended to close them for the duration of the
second World War, many of these branches are not re-opened afterwards.
Sadly the sub-Branch
at Read joins this number, closing its doors for the final time in 1939. |
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