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The town of Middleton in Teesdale is just inside County
Durham, and Martins Bank’s Branch there opens around 1920 and is closed at
the time of the merger with Barclays in 1969.
It operates as a full branch, and opens full banking hours across a
six day week. The nearest branch to
Middleton-in-Teesdale is Barnard Castle, another town just inside County
Durham. |
In Service:
1920 until 12 December 1969 Image © Barclays Ref
0030-1901 |
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Martins Bank Magazine pays just one visit to Middleton in
Teesdale Branch in 1951, and in a short article (which seems mainly to be
concerned with the journey taken to get there) they meet the staff of what
they refer to as “a little branch”… We
took the moorland road for Middleton-in-Teesdale. The usual striking panorama
was partly obscured by haze and thundery conditions, and on the very top
there was slight fog. We saw the highest
inhabited house in England, Grass Hill, and in the distance the source of the
Tees. Not far from Middleton there is the first chain bridge in Europe, still
in use; and on the lonely top stands a stout Youth Hostel, betraying its
presence long before we reached it by the groups of pack-laden boys and girls
toiling away from it in the heat. Right over the back of England we went,
from Cumberland into Durham.
Middleton, although about the same size as Alston, and similar in
character, both places being in the heart of farming country, is quite
different in appearance. Time has stood still in Alston, but in Middleton can
be seen one or two modern shop fronts; the streets are wider and the pace of
life seems a trifle faster. Mr. Dixon welcomed us to his little branch where he has
been manager only a short time, so short that he has not yet moved into the
Bank House from his home in Alston. The house is pleasant and there is a nice
little plot of land at the back, but its location is not countrified as it
was in Alston. We did not meet Miss L. A. Robinson who was on holiday
when we called, but we were glad to see Mr. S. Harling, the other member of
the staff. |
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