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NEW TECHNOLOGY – IBM READER-SORTER |
On Sunday 22 October 1961 Martins Bank takes delivery - at Clearing Department, 68 LOMBARD STREET London - of the latest “reader/sorter” technology, a piece of machinery
that will revolutionise the way customers’ vouchers are sorted into order for
processing to their accounts. At great
cost, the question of how to remove a significant chunk of monotonous work
from back office staff has finally been addressed. Whilst it will still be
many years before the widespread use of customer account numbers will start
to ease the work of the clearing banks, Martins has made a firm commitment to
technology, and there follows a period of tests during which a lot of work
will still need to be done to meet the challenges of the 1970s The government will soon give notice to
Britain’s Banks that by the time of DECIMALISATION in 1971, all branch
accounting procedures must be computerised.
For now, the IBM Reader/Sorter provides the first real chance to speed
up the clearing of cheques, and also another FIRST for Martins
Bank. On 25 April 1963, the day chosen to celebrate 400 years of Banking on
the site of The Grasshopper in Lombard street, the Chairman of Martins Bank,
Sir John Nicholson, makes the following announcement to assembled staff and
national newspaper editors in the board room at 68 Lombard Street: “I can now announce that within the
last two weeks, we have introduced a new operational system which is a major
step forward in clearing operations for cheques on a country-wide basis, and
we understand we are the first to operate such a system outside the USA. We are working on developments to marry the
current account and the clearing operations in order to provide an integrated
accounting system in which we can see, for the future, advantages to our
customers, as well as to ourselves” The future arrives – on the fourth floor… Between the
arrival of the Reader/Sorter in October 1961, and the the first regularl
processing of cheques in April 1963, Martins Bank’s Organisation Research and
Development Department pulls out all the stops to make the system work
effectively. What what exactly does
the future look like, when it first arrives on the fourth floor of 68 Lombard
street? These rare pictures from the
Ron hindle Estate show that it was actually quite a spectacle for anyone who
happened to be walking down Lombard Street on that particular October Sunday
Morning. Shown here for the first time
are several shots of the action showing just how mammoth a task it is to
deliver an IBM Reader Sorter.
London District News… Simultaneously with
last year's move into computer operation, though for the time being it is a
separate exercise, the Bank has installed its first automatic cheque sorter
in the Clearing Department in London. This machine can read for itself the
identity of the branches on which cheques are drawn and sorts the cheques
accordingly. It is unable to read ordinary printed matter, however, and
consequently the branch code numbers (and later on other data) have to be
printed in special characters using a magnetisable ink. In due course the
cheque sorters will join up with the computer to provide a fully automatic
system of accounting. Before this can be done it will be necessary to encode
the account identity and the amount in the special characters referred to.
When this can be provided the cheque sorters will be able to read and pass to
a computer all the information that is needed for the maintenance of
accounts. |
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Putting the machine through its paces is
Clearing Staff member Miss Valerie Blunden |
An amazing 950 cheques per minute are read
and sorted at an incredible speed of fifteen miles per hour! |
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Images: Martins Bank Archive Collections
- Ron Hindle Estate M |
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