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The rapid expansion of the Bank of Liverpool in latter part of the
Nineteenth Century brings us many of the Liverpool suburban branches we know
today in Martins. The speed of growth is
in fact so great as to necessitate the creation of an Inspector of Branches
by the Bank of Liverpool – one of the earliest examples of the visiting
inspectors still dreaded by hard-working bank clerks everywhere! Just how well a visit from the inspectors
went down in the 1890s is probably something we’ll never know… In 1893 a
branch is opened at 415 West Derby Road, Tue Brook. The Branch is later moved to the premises
shown above, 611 West Derby Road.
Under Martins Bank Tue Brook is a standalone branch with no sub
branches, and opens for the full banking week. |
In Service: October 1893 until
15 May 1998 (but
see also detailed history at foot of page) Image ca. 1937 ©
Barclays Ref 0030-1687 |
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This includes Saturday mornings until the reforms implemented by
Barclays and others after the merger in 1969, when practically every bank
extends its Monday to Friday opening by one hour each day, and abolishes
Saturday opening. In the Martins
tradition of being first, Barclays is at the front of the queue to re-open
on Saturdays in the 1980s, (followed in the course of the next two decades by
most other banks)! In 1942 Miss N E
Owen joins the staff at Tue Brook, and shows such promise that within six years
she is promoted to a junior post in Staff Department, Head Office. Oddly enough
Mr R H Price, Staff Manager in 1948 also joined the bank at Tue Brook –
coincidence or “keeping it in the family”? Who knows… The following is
a short adaptation from an article about the work of Staff department,
published by Martins Bank Magazine in 1948… {It is just a truism to say that we are all concerned with Staff
Department from the moment of our application for
admission into the service until the day when our record card is taken out of
the pensioners’ file and placed among the archives in a little room outside
the department. But though our concern is great, our knowledge of what takes
place to ensure the smooth handling of the various matters which affect the
administration of a large staff, is usually slight…} {In Mr R H Price*, the Staff Manager, we
are fortunate in having a man of wide understanding and sympathy whose genial
personality had made him friends all over the service. He must know and
remember as many people as possible, but he is ably assisted by a number of
staff…} {The newest recruit to the Department is Miss Nora Owen, who joined
the bank in 1942 and has served at Tue Brook and on head Office Relief,
before joining the staff of the department in September. She was educated at
Calder High School…} |
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