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We are indebted to
Martins Colleague and friend of the Archive, the late Iris Brooks, for this
lovely photograph of Martins Bank’s Shrewsbury Branch from the early
1960s. Colour images from this time – such
as this one, which was taken on to a photographic slide – are all too rare,
so it was pleasing to find Iris’s snapshot still in such good condition.
Although the Tudor exterior makes Shrewsbury Branch look like it has been
there much longer, it was actually only opened in 1953. Martins Bank has very good reasons for
purchasing buildings in the South of England that look particularly old –
there is the race to become a fully National bank, and with it the
need to instill confidence in potential customers through Branches that look
like they are long established features of the local High Street. In 1964
Martins Bank Magazine visits the Branch, and it comes as no surprise that
they go into overdrive to give us the historical facts, dates and figures of
such a beuatiful old town as Shrewsbury… |
In Service:
1953 until 31 July 1979 Image
© Martins Bank Archive Collections - Iris Brooks |
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We paid our first visit to Shrewsbury on
April 6th and of the many attractive places we have visited in the course of
our travels this town comes very near the top of the list. It is a town of
picturesque streets and ancient buildings, of quiet courtyards and secluded
closes. The Severn almost encircles it in a great loop at the neck of which
stands the ancient stronghold, fragments of which date back to 1067. Rebuilt
and re-fortified under successive monarchs it has never become ruinous and
to-day its ancient red sandstone walls bear witness to the long history of
this mediaeval border town. Here you may enter the room in which Henry VII
dined on the eve of Bosworth; there you may gaze at the house within which
John Wesley preached his first message. On a
magnificent eminence overlooking both river and town stand the modern
buildings of Shrewsbury School and within the town itself, now converted to
other uses, that modest, older building in which the tradition of this famous
public school was founded. A few minutes' drive in a car and you are on an
eminence from which you can survey the lovely Shropshire countryside in all
its glory, the lonely Wrekin and the distant hills of South Shropshire. This
is a gracious countryside, a fitting setting for a town which has grown old
graciously, yet old without any look or suggestion of decay. Our
premises, converted from a shop which was in turn converted from an old
mansion (Owen's Mansion, built in 1592) are a tasteful and noteworthy
addition to the architecture of a town famous for its beautiful timbered
buildings. Along with our premises at Nantwich it is one of the finest branch
buildings we have built, both from an exterior and an interior point of view,
and has drawn forth public praise from the Mayor of the town. |
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Interior
Images © Barclays Ref 0030/2642 |
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As
to the interior, the most pleasing fixture is the ceiling panel lighting,
which sheds a sunshine glow, through wrought iron grilles of artistic design,
evenly-throughout the office. The interior panelling, desks and fittings
combine to make dignified and pleasant working conditions and the strongroom,
of the latest watertight pattern from the Chatwood Works near the town,
completes the picture of up to date business efficiency. Mr. K. Harris-Hughes, the
successful manager of Rhyl and Wrexham branches, was entrusted with the task
of opening the new branch. Wrexham branch has already been featured in the
Magazine and it was very pleasant to renew old acquaintance by entertaining
Mr. and Mrs. Harris-Hughes to lunch and by being afterwards entertained by
them in their lovely new home high up above the town. We were also very
pleased to meet Mr. J. B-Webster again. Now second-in-command at Shrewsbury
he was at Ramsey when we visited the branch there in 1950. |
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Interior
Images © Barclays Ref 0030-2642 In fact, in no sense of the word
did we feel we were meeting strangers, for Miss Sheila M. Milner lived in the
next road to us in Liverpool at one time and knew some of the people we know.
She served at Smithdown and Toxteth branches until her family moved to
Shrewsbury and rejoined the service when the new branch was opened. She is
Secretary of one of the Young Farmers' Clubs and when her club recently took
part in a public speaking competition with the other clubs in the country she
was a competitor for her club and came out on top. The fourth member of the
staff (third in seniority) is A. C. Harris, who forsook the public service
for the brighter prospects of banking as a career and has recently settled
down to carve out his career after a spell of National Service with the
R.A.F. Our warmest good wishes to them all
for the success of the task on which they have embarked and for their own
personal success and happiness in performing it. |
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