|
MARTINS
BANK’S ADVERTISING – THE 1950s |
The drawings
commissioned by Martins for use in advertising in the 1940s prove to be very
popular, and regular monthly and seasonal advertisement slots in a number of
publications continue to feature these outstanding artworks over many years. The archive has a large number of 1950s
advertisements which will be laid out below in order of year of publication.
They begin with more commissioned artworks, and this time the bank uses the
services of several different artists. We have seven examples from 1950 of
drawings commissioned by Martins for use in its advertising. This includes three different impressions
of Head Office Building at 4 Water Street Liverpool. 1950 – Various Artists
1951 – The Stately Homes of England For our 1951 series of advertisements we have chosen the
theme of England's stately homes. In many ways they epitomise all that is
best in our English way of life:—breeding, tradition, dignity and service to
the community, and so they form a suitable medium of linking up our own message to the
public. The set lends itself to
pictorial illustration of high quality and the idea has the advantage
of topicality following the publication last year of the report of the Commission appointed to investigate the
problems facing the owners of these places as regards maintenance and
preservation. Three artists were chosen to execute the
drawings, G. H. Wedgwood, J. C. Armitage and F. G. Lodge. Our readers are already familiar with the
work of Geoffrey Wedgwood and Josh Armitage
(‘Ionicus’). F. Graham Lodge,
however, is a newcomer to bank advertising. He is a black and white artist and his work has appeared in a large number of
publications, including the Radio Times. He was artist
to ‘Everyman’ from 1929 to 1931 and to the " Observer " from 1929 to
1934. Samples of his work have
been acquired by the Belfast Art Gallery, the Bank of Scotland, the Athenaeum
Club, H.R.H. the Princess Royal, Colonel
Lord Wigram and others. He has exhibited at the Royal Academy. Born in 1908, he was educated at King's
School, Grantham and University College,
London, also at London University. He served throughout the second World War,
being invalided out of the Forces in 1945 and has since taught in London
schools. His hobby is gardening.
Images: Martins Bank Archive Collections © Artists as named
1951 1952 – The Stagecoach Era |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The
decline of the old private or ‘country’ banker and the growth of joint stock
banking was part of the process of modernisation of life in these islands,
modernisation in which the improvement of communications played a very large
part. The stage coach era has
always been considered romantic and picturesque, thanks partly to Charles
Dickens and in more recent times to Baroness Orczy. Picturesque it certainly
was, but we cannot concede the romance.
To travel in or on a stage coach was a most unpleasant experience and
a test of endurance which was only undertaken of necessity. There was the ever-present danger of
footpads and highwaymen, overturning due to bad roads, breakdowns and
indifferent inns. There is even one incident on record of the horses drawing
the Exeter Mail being attacked by a lioness which had escaped from a nearby
menagerie. Stage
coaches are said to have begun about 1640 and the very last coaches were
probably those in use in Lakeland as late as 1914. As regards crime on the
roads, the year 1893 seems to have been remarkable for a spate of road
robberies and in that year the Bristol Mail was robbed of a bank parcel
valued at upwards of £1,000.
In 1822 the Ipswich Mail was robbed of notes to the value of nearly £32,000. No more eloquent
comment on the state of the roads can be found than is contained in Blew's
book " Brighton and its Coaches." He says:—" The Sussex roads seem to have gained
an unenviable notoriety for badness from a very early period. When the
Emperor Charles VI came to England to visit the Duke of Somerset in 1703, his
coach capsized a dozen times before he reached Petworth." If the roads
treated the coach of an Emperor like that, what hope was there for the
ordinary traveller? Because of the connection with the rise
of banking as we know it today the Stage Coach period has been chosen as the
theme for this year's series of advertisements. Seven of the drawings have
been done by our old friend Geoffrey H. Wedgwood, four by the inimitable Ionicus (J. C. Armitage) and one by
F. Graham Lodge. The careers of each of these artists have been outlined in
previous issues of the Magazine. Two or three of the Wedgwood drawings are
the artist's simplification of well-known colour prints of stage coaches, a
simplification which was essential because of the exigencies of reproducing
the drawings on a very small scale. It has been left to Ionicus to give the touch of humour
which adds so much to the attraction of the drawings and to the appeal of the
series. Although many of the old coaching inns are picturesque as to their
interiors the artists found that some of the subjects we had to choose were
not, of themselves particularly attractive and one or two of the inns were
not now in existence. It was a matter of satisfaction that we were able to
find a positive connection with our own bank, which we were able to introduce
into two of the advertisements.
1956 Thinking about money… |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
As the 1950s progress,
Martins Bank wants to go all out to attract the people who until now have
seemed the most unlikely of bank customers – the waged middle and lower
classes, at the centre of which was the housewife: canny with the cash,
making the ends meet, already good at budgeting. It was no mistake that the
Bank’s main publicity leaflet “An Account At Martins Bank” featured on its
cover, a woman’s hands holding a cheque and a handbag. The campaign did also
include the hapless husband who let the cash slip through his fingers, and
the caring mother who needed every penny to care for her children. Here’s a
flavour of some of the advertisements on offer…
Images: Martins Bank Archive Collections Other 1950s Campaigns The genteel and subtle nature of
the advertising we have so far seen is about to give way to a more targeted
affair – from those who play golf, to those who drive lorries or bake bread,
the Bank is about to tailor its advertising in order to demonstrate that YOU
are worthy of being a customer and Martins is the natural choice for you…
1958 –
mind your language(s)!
M |