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Shotley Bridge is one of many branches of the North Eastern
Banking Company, that find their way into the possession of Martins Bank from
the 1914 amalgamation of the NEBC with the Bank of Liverpool. Martins Bank
includes Shotley Bridge in its mid sixties programme of branch upgrades, and
the office doubles in size. You can compare old with new in our “then and a
little bit later” feature, further down this page. |
In Service:
10 December 1883 until 7 April 2000 Image ©
Barclays Ref 0030-2638 |
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Barclays takes over in 1969, and the branch continues to
operate for another thirty years, closing its doors for the final time in the
year 2000. For our feature, we go back
to 1954 when Martins Bank Magazine makes a short visit to Shotley Bridge
which at this point is still a sub branch run by a Clerk in Charge. We passed
a sign on entering Shotley Bridge which indicated that the place must have
been a spa, as indeed it was long ago.
We went down to see the healing waters which still rise in the old
well, but we did not sample them as we have no great liking for anything
smelling or tasting of rotten eggs. Shotley Bridge was once famous for its
sword making industry, introduced by the Germans who settled there a couple
of centuries ago. But to-day all that
is just a memory and Shotley Bridge is largely rural. Our Manager, Mr
T Hopper entered the Bank in 1916 and served at Bishop Auckland, Darlington,
Byker, Tow Law, Crook and at Grey Street, Newcastle before becoming Clerk in
Charge at Shotley Bridge in 1937. He
was made Manager ten years later. Mr. Hopper was one of the founders of the
North-Eastern Players and is still actively interested in amateur dramatics.
At Shotley Bridge, Mr. S. L. Nicholson is
Clerk in Charge, an appointment he has held since 1947. His previous service
covered Lanchester, Annfield Plain, Northumberland Street and North-Eastern
District Office. His war service was a little unusual, the latter part of it
being spent in charge of prisoner-of-war cages. B. Swan is there to assist him—a young man about to do his National Service, with R.A.F.
aspirations. More
space in which to work…
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