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MANCHESTER DISTRICT OFFICE |
Martins Bank’s Manchester District Office comes into being in 1928 with
the amalgamation of the Bank of Liverpool and Martins with the Lancashire and
Yorkshire Bank. Mr F S Kitchin is
appointed the first District General Manager, although under the Lancashire
and Yorkshire Bank, there have already been two separate District Managers
since 1919. Martins’ District Offices
are responsible for the control of the local branches that make up each
particular district. This is achieved by a number of specialist departments
within each District Office. Those
departments are represented in our District Office pages by the photographs
we have available of the people who worked in them. Based on the information
given in the pages of Martins Bank Magazine, we do our best to match
photographs of staff to their correct department, but if you find an error,
please let us know about it by sending us an e-mail to the usual address: martinsbankarchive@btinternet.com No 43 Spring Gardens which is home to Manchester
District Office, is the Bank’s principal office in the city, being formerly
the Head Office of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank Limited. It is upon the insistence of the directors
of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Bank that the Bank of Liverpool and Martins,
shortens its name to Martins Bank Limited in 1928. See also: FOUR CENTURIES OF BANKING and COAT OF ARMS. Nowadays the building at 43
Spring Gardens houses a highly commended Indian Restaurant. Importantly, the building, and its
impressive banking hall remain largely as they were, but in the late 1960s,
even when the Bank’s merger with Barclays was already on the cards, Martins
was doing ambitious things – like appointing its first female Bank Inspectors
in Manchester, AND planning to knock down its Spring Gardens premises to put
something altogether different in
its place… Here come the
inspectors! Stepping out from Spring Gardens are Margaret Ashworth and Maureen Thomas, members
of a Manchester District outside inspection team and the first girls in the Bank
to take part in a full branch inspection. How have their male colleagues
reacted? 'They've been very patient and helpful/ Maureen said, 'and soon
accepted us—once they got over the initial shock.' 'We were apprehensive about breaking
into what has until now been regarded as the males' prerogative/ Maureen
remarked, 'but all our doubts were soon dispelled.' Manchester – City of Trees? The Bank’s 80 year old building at
Spring Gardens Manchester, once the Head Office of the Lancashire and Yorkshire
Bank, and since 1928 the home of Manchester District Office and City Office,
may be pulled down. Outline planning
permission has been given for the Bank’s Ł1.25 millions development scheme
which would replace the decorative Victorian building with an eleven storey
block. Included in the project is an
open space at the front of the building which would be decoratively paved and
planted with trees. So the Bank may be helping Manchester to become a city of
trees: already twenty-eight plane trees have been planted in Albert Square. An impression of the eleven
storey block that may take the place of our present office at Spring Gardens |
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