Serving the gin and Jaguar belt…
the
bank's second
drive-in branch opened at Epsom on September 29. It stands well back in
Ashley Road at the junction with Ashley Avenue, with a registry office on
the opposite corner and a church and the Magistrate's Court across the way.
This rather unusual combination is partly explained by the fact that the
new branch stands on the site of the old police station. Even if some
difficulty was experienced in obtaining sanction for change of use, despite
the obvious 'lock-up', 'security' and 'custody' associations of the respective
undertakings, the outcome has fully justified the trouble. The frontage has
been laid out with stone paving, cobbles and beds for evergreen and
flowering shrubs and once our customers adapt themselves to the in and out
of the drive-in this will prove a highly popular innovation in the
district. Epsom lies in what is sometimes termed the stockbroker belt—well
outside the bingo belt but close to the gin and Jaguar belt, so to speak.
There are the Downs, the Racecourse and sufficient green belt to have kept the area mercifully insulated
from becoming a suburb, and the number of estate agents' offices in this
small township are an indication of the demand—and
the price—for residential property.
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Ultra-cool: Banking by Zephyr at the Epsom
drive-in.
Long before the days of “would
you like fries with that?” and the well meaning but misguided: “I’m sorry
about your weight (wait) sir/madam”, Mr K P Marsh shows them how
it’s done…
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The
shopkeepers are courteous, the train services to London frequent, and Epsom
is altogether a good place to live in if one has-the means. The branch interior is
spacious, with a rosewood counter fronted by white marble brickettes and
dark glazed screens behind the counter space. Blue-green vinyl fabric
covers two walls and, if the overall effect is somewhat clinical, the
materials and finish throughout are worthy of what may justifiably be
termed a prestige branch. Here the selection of the staff has been as
imaginatively and successfully handled by London District as the Midland
District handled the staffing of Peterborough branch which opened on the
same day.
Mr Brian du Feu, will soon have completed his
third house move in four years—an indication
of what progress in banking can sometimes involve. He was in the
photographic business before joining the Bank and was for some years
secretary of the Jersey Camera Club: his interests include hockey, tennis,
badminton, surfing and skin-diving.
Mr Ian Fletcher joined the staff after six years at Chislehurst and
Mr Kenneth Marsh, who has appeared frequently in magazine photographs of
cricket, hockey or rugby teams, lives conveniently in Epsom as if by arrangement.
Mr C. J.
Butcher commutes cheerfully each day to Oxted with the help of his
Renault-Banger and Miss G. C. Leggett, who joined the branch shortly before
it opened, will tell any girl with ideas about the glamour of working in
the Big City that a secretary's job in a London fashion house with travel
costs of £2 a week for two years is a poor substitute for working at Epsom branch and
living at home on Epsom Downs.
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Quite naturally she wanted to try the London job
and quite sensibly she packed it in: quite understandably Mr du Feu and his
staff are very glad that she did. Epsom branch is off to a good start, and
the business is likely to continue expansion on private and commercial
lines.
Our only regret about going there is that we
cannot state how many accounts they have opened already, because one never
knows who might read these words. But we now have a lot more sympathy for
the sad-faced, milling crowds we passed on Hungerford Bridge and in
Waterloo station on our way out that morning.
They looked as if they had seen Epsom branch and
were sorry they couldn't work there.
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Above:
B. R. du Feu (Manager), I. Fletcher and C. J. Butcher
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What became of the Epsom Drive-In?
As drive-in banks don’t seem
to be have been around for the last few decades, we wondered about the fate
of Martins’ pioneering efforts at Epsom.
We asked our friends at Barclays Group Archives what happened to the
branch following the merger with Barclays.
They toldus that Epsom
Branch continued to offer its drive-in till until 1979, and the branch
itself was closed in 1981. This means there was Drive-in
Banking at Epsom for 13 years – 1966-1979 – which is not bad for an
experiment!
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