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Not a
slag heap in sight! Martins Bank does have some wonderful
looking buildings in its Branch portfolio, and Blackhill does not
disappoint. It is opened by the north
Eastern Bank in 1893 and lasts for eighty-one years, being closed by Barclays
in 1974. During its Martins life, Blackhill is a self remitting sub
branch to Shotley Bridge and open six days across the full banking week,
indicating a brisk trade. When Barclays and Martins merge at the end of 1969,
Blackhill is downgraded to a sub-Branch. |
In Service: 11 January 1893 to 22
November 1974 Image © Barclays Ref
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For our feature we go back to 1954 to find that Martins
Bank Magazine’s preconcieved ideas about this part of the North East are,
thankfully, shot down in flames… And just to think that
for 34 years we have been under the impression that Blackhill was a hole in
the ground, a forest of pithead machinery, slag heaps, etc., and that to
visit it would be a mortification of the flesh, a penance for having made our
branch visits hitherto to places like Torquay and Bournemouth. How wrong we
were! To begin with, once clear of
the Scotswood Road and across the Tyne, the journey along the valley of the
Derwent is made through beautiful country and for sheer loveliness a blue
November sky, flecked with white clouds above the browns and russets of late
autumn colouring, would be hard to beat. Blackhill looks quite industrial by
virtue of the presence of the Consett Iron Works, and it is a straggly place
which seems to begin in Shotley Bridge on one side and end in Consett on the
other, without any very noticeable division.
The country around is extremely fine and on the day of our visit,
November 9th, we saw it at its best.
At Blackhill our Manager Mr. T. Hopper (who is manager both of Blackhill and Shotley
Bridge Branches) is assisted by G. C. L Irwin who has only been in the Bank a
short time. There is also a trainee, M. O. Binns of North Eastern District
Office, at present at the branch. On the day of our visit, J. L. Boulding
from District Office was in charge in order to free Mr. Hopper to be with us.
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