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A Truth being – in many cases - stranger
than fiction, has no exception in the following story, which we were
delighted to receive from Paul Haydock who worked at Martins Bank’s new,
exciting, and apparently quite dangerous
new branch at Ellesmere Port in 1966. If this was a scene from a TV sitcom or a
comedy movie, it would seem perhaps a little far-fetched, which makes the
fact that is it TRUE an even more delicious prospect! Paul takes up the story… “The new branch was
all glass as you can see in the photo, a new phenomenon in bank design. |
In Service: 1965 until 2 March
2023 Image
© Martins Bank Archive Collections |
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One day when I
worked there, at around 2.30, a customer missed the door and walked smack into
the glass exterior, bursting his nose, resulting in lots of blood and extreme
distress. The girls in the branch looked after him and left him in the
toilets to recover. The branch closed and everyone went off home. At about 8pm The Manager, Mr Shepherd was
called out from home by the police and forced to go and open up the branch as
the poor chap had passed out in the toilet and been forgotten by the
staff. He awoke in the bank and phoned
the police to come and let him out. Needless to say, this was kept quiet,
especially from Inspectors!” Whenever a new Branch of Martins opens,
the Staff Magazine is often never too far behind, and just in time for
the Spring 1966 Edition comes this comprehensive report of a visit to the
shiny new premises at 100 Whitby Road… the Borough of Ellesmere Port received its charter in 1955, having
been an urban district since 1902. It owes its existence if not its status to
the Shropshire Union Canal—known to the locals
as 'The Cut'—now a partly silted inland waterway which was completed in 1795
and joined the River Mersey at 'Whitby Locks'.
Though some of the villages within the Borough today are named in the
Domesday Book, nobody had heard of Ellesmere Port before 1820 when the name
was sometimes used as an alternative to Whitby Locks. In 1863 came the
railway and in 1894 the Manchester Ship Canal was completed so that Ellesmere
Port, as the first inward port, was able to deal with larger ships and offer
greater scope to industry: in 1898 our branch was opened in Station Road.
Despite its situation, just a strip of water and a canal bank away from the
River Mersey, Ellesmere Port still does not consider itself part of
Merseyside but looks inland towards Chester only seven miles away. Whether
this loyalty will survive the next few years remains to be seen for the
Borough has a long-term overspill scheme to take 20,000 people from
Liverpool. Already the population has reached 50,000 and 80,000—the figure expected by 1983—looks like being attained well
before then. Everything depends on houses, jobs and, of course, money but
nobody will deny that the courage and foresight of the Council have been in
keeping with the town's motto 'Progrediamur'—Let us go forward.
The New Town Centre is already a reality on Whitby Road about a
quarter of a mile over the railway from our old branch site and the old level
crossing now has a handsome bridge alongside. Ample space has enabled the
lay-out and design of a sensible and workable planning scheme to be shown to
the best advantage, parking facilities are a city man's dream, the pedestrian
precinct is well thought out, the shops are busy, the new bus station is
handy, and the Civic Hall is as unostentatiously handsome as the new library.
There is much building still to be done but the Civic Trust's high
commendation of Ellesmere Port's new development is understandable and well
deserved. Our new branch, which forms part of the new business centre facing
the new shopping area, has its own very ample parking area at the rear and is
yet another triumph for modernity without gimmickry. Outside and inside it
impresses without attempting to shriek 'Look at me!' like a precocious child.
The blue brick piers, the counter of Bombay rosewood, and the copper light
shields are particularly attractive. The old branch (remember that roll-top
desk that seemed to fill the manager's room?) has become a sub branch and,
with much of the 'old town' scheduled for re-housing, the nature of its
future business may have been indicated already in its use by an increasing
number of foreign seafarers. The steel men from
the Midlands who first used the canal barges and narrowboats and established
the rolling mills are still remembered by Wolverham (a contraction of
Wolverhampton) and in the unmistakable Midlands accent of many of the oldest
inhabitants of 'The Port'. Members of the staff who have had occasion to work
at Ellesmere Port have usually remarked how far it seems to be from
everywhere else. No doubt that is why the council, with an eye to the future,
began to buy up land many years ago so that now the Borough extends far
beyond the flour mills and factories near the Ship Canal. To the south-east
the oil companies' interests cover more than ten square miles, the Viva's
roll from Vauxhall's modern factory on the northern boundary like eggs from
battery hens, to the west lies a thriving and still expanding industrial
estate, and on the Ship Canal bank Bowaters' Paper Mills have doubled in size
since the war. At the new office Mr
George Shepherd, son of our former Chester manager still in active retirement,
is in his element. A born ‘branch’ man he is as enthusiastic about the new
premises as he is about the future of The Port’. At the time of our visit Mr
Brian Johnson was away on a Domestic Training Course but he has featured
regularly for some years in reports on the Cricket Festival. Fielding as
substitute, and alive to any chances to snap up new business, was Mr Ian
Wilson on loan from Eastham branch which, with Little Sutton branch,
completes Mr Shepherd’s empire: Ian Wilson too has earned previous mention as
a big voice in the Bank Operatic Society. The younger members of this staff
are typically keen and able, and the business is a cross section of private
and industrial interests with some agriculture for good measure. If the term 'cloth cap banking' is heard less frequently these
days—to everyone's
delight, we don't doubt—it was encouraging to learn that here wages by cheque
has caught on well. At present 'The
Port' is predominantly a town of workpeople and its housing estates,
seemingly unending, must eventually absorb more good farming land: although
there is a 'residential' as distinct from a 'housing' area towards Whitby,
most of the business people commute to all parts of the Wirral Peninsula,
Frodsham or Chester. The Borough's Official Handbook is a
factual and refreshing publication, free from such terms as 'conurbation'
and 'neighbourhood units'. There are some who will say that because the
Borough has grown so fast and is so pre-occupied with making good it lacks
culture and has no soul. Certainly we were taken by surprise when after
passing rows and rows of houses on the way in, the first new buildings we
came to housed the Labour Social Club and a licensed betting office, but if
one must try to draw some conclusion it would be that in this rough and
tumble industrial world food, clothing, a home and wages inevitably take priority.
When the family car is a fact, along with everything material that
hire-purchase can provide, then there
may be an awakening. The women's organisations in 'The Port' are already
thriving and that surely is a pointer. We believe that the Borough Council
have been even more far-seeing than many people think and that one of these
days the people of Ellesmere Port are going to appreciate more fully and wish
to make better use of all that has been provided for them. And that includes
our new branch…
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