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MARTINS
BANK AT WAR – THE AMBLESIDE REST HOUSE |
Martins Bank Staff always spoke about the “family” to which they felt
they belonged – colleagues who cared about and looked after each other
through thick and thin, a quality engendered by an employer, who tried hard
to be fair and to treat every member of its staff as an individual. This spirit is demonstrated by the Wartime
Newsletters, sent out to all parts of the World during the Second World War,
which are eagerly received by staff who are away from home and serving their
country. Another family oriented touch
is the provision of the Bank Staff Rest House at Ambleside, offering a break
in the Lake District for Martins Staff from anywhere in the country. The Rest
House comprises the floors above Martins’ Ambleside Branch in Mareket Place,
and is looked after by a warden who greets and assists guests during their
stay. For some of the Bank’s Staff and their families, living with the daily
fear of bombing and the deprivations of war in the Cities, a stay at the Rest
Housein one of the most beautiful parts of England must have seemd a
wonderful and welcome treat, a real chance to rest and recuperate. At the end of the war, Martins Bank
Magazine published two articles about the Ambleside Rest House, and includes
photographs taken by some of the people who have stayed there. We are also
introduced to Mrs McIntire, the House Warden… It is not our
purpose in these few paragraphs to attempt to telescope the many admirable
descriptive works which have been written about the Lake District into a
miniature “Bank Clerk's Guide to the English Lakes”. The attractions of the
Cumberland and Westmorland beauty spots are sufficiently well known. Nor is
it our purpose to advertise the amenities of the Bank Rest House. These,
too, are so well known that the accommodation is fully booked each year for
every week that the house is open. The spirit in which we write is that of
the man who, on discovering a good thing, wishes to share it, thereby adding
to his own enjoyment. We have enjoyed the Rest House; we have appreciated
the solicitude, the kindness and the efficiency of its Warden and her staff;
we have valued the kindly interest in our happiness and welfare shown by Mr.
Gillespie, manager of our Ambleside branch. We want to
place on record our sincere thanks to these good people to whom nothing is ever
too much trouble if it means the comfort and entertainment of the guests. It
is not our purpose in these few paragraphs to attempt to telescope the many
admirable descriptive works which have been written about the Lake District
into a miniature “Bank Clerk's Guide to the English Lakes”. The attractions
of the Cumberland and Westmorland beauty spots are sufficiently well known.
Nor is it our purpose to advertise the amenities of the Bank Rest House.
These, too, are so well known that the accommodation is fully booked each
year for every week that the house is open. The spirit in which we write is
that of the man who, on discovering a good thing, wishes to share it, thereby
adding to his own enjoyment. We have enjoyed the Rest House; we have
appreciated the solicitude, the kindness and the efficiency of its Warden and
her staff; we have valued the kindly interest in our happiness and welfare
shown by Mr. Gillespie, manager of our Ambleside branch; and we want to place
on record our sincere thanks to these good people to whom nothing is ever too
much trouble if it means the comfort and entertainment of the guests. |
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WANSFELL PIKE
TOWARDS TROUTBECK Taken by R W Jardine Head Office Inspection
Department |
THE HONISTER PASS Taken by R W Jardine Head Office Inspection
Department |
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The weather they cannot regulate, but they have
solved the problem of making it endurable and even enjoyable whatever the
caprice of the day may bring. No higher tribute can be paid than that.
Comprehensive though the Guide books are, however, there are one or two
things of exceptional interest which you will not find in most of them. Most
people do not know, for instance, that President Woodrow Wilson, of League of
Nations fame, stayed in the Lake District for some months in 1906, renting
Loughrigg Cottage. He utilised the services of our Ambleside branch and on
the wall of the manager's room you can see his framed signature, removed from
the branch records for display. Another world-famous customer "of
Ambleside branch was Beatrix Potter. Until quite
recently the original drawings for the “Peter Rabbit” books were kept in
custody there, and on their removal for display in various museums in London
and elsewhere, the staff had the rare treat of being able to look at these
pictures which have brought so much pleasure to children and grown-ups
everywhere. Outside our branch you can
get the Hawkshead bus to Sawrey. The bus passes “Hill Top “where Beatrix
Potter painted these pictures and wrote the little books. The cottage has
been taken over by the National Trust and in it is displayed all the
furniture just as she left it. |
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You can see the things which she used as
models for her paintings, and out in the garden is the gate through which
Jemima Puddleduck slipped away. The place breathes of the spirit of the
famous authoress, and no member of our staff who takes his children to
Ambleside should fail to give them the thrill of seeing the Beatrix Potter
settings at first hand. She used our Hawkshead
branch as well, and very interesting are the anecdotes about her which you
will hear from those who knew her well. A perusal of the biography “The Tale
of Beatrix Potter” by Margaret Lane will add
much to the enjoyment of your next visit to the Lakes. But whether your interest lies in the Lake writers or in
the fells which inspired them, you will never cease to be grateful to those
who first conceived the idea of a place far from the hazards of war to which
war-weary bank clerks could come for a short rest before returning to the
front line, and to the far-sighted wisdom which decreed that it should be
kept open as a holiday centre after the bombs had ceased to fall. |
TARN HOWS This photograph was taken by Miss June
Foulser of Hove Branch |
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During a recent stay at the Bank Rest House at
Ambleside we had a good look at the visitor's book and were struck by the way
in which the same names tend to recur.
Some each season are newcomers, but the names of many of those who
have stayed at the Rest House in past years appear again this year. Now we
all know that such are the attractions of the Lake country that lovers of the
mountains will continue to frequent their spiritual home as long as their
feet will carry them on to the fells. But many people like to stay at a
different place each year, and if people continue to return to the same place
year by year, one is forced to the conclusion that it must be because it has
some special attraction. Well, it has; and one can pay it no higher tribute
than by saying that it is homely, which is only a shorter way of saying that
the Warden, Mrs. M. E. Mclntire, has made it a homely place. |
WINDERMERE FROM LOW ORREST Taken by T A Fawcett, Manager Windermere Branch |
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Mrs M
E McIntire “who has made the rest house into such a homely place”… |
In so doing she
has ably carried on a tradition which started right at the beginning during
the war years.For this Rest House was not hastily thrown together—a few beds, a
table and a supply of crockery. Each piece was carefully and tastefully chosen,
with everything to match, and there are good pictures on the walls. Mrs.
McKendrick attended to it personally and when she had finished it looked like
a real home. But it took an
efficient warden to make it so, to make it come to life, so that children
would want to come again and their parents would feel that there they could
have a real holiday. In Mrs. Mclntire we have that combination of efficiency
and kindliness which makes the place run like clockwork with everybody happy.
The meals, which are always appetising, are served on the dot of the
advertised time, and everything is always spotlessly clean. In short, the
only possible cause of anxiety may be the weather. During the past season the
Lake District has, along with the rest of the country, enjoyed a summer which
will become legendary. Day after day
of glorious sunshine without a cloud in the sky is something in Lakeland
which needs to be experienced to be fully appreciated. |
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The house can accommodate seven guests at the same
time; there being three bedrooms, all of which have hot and cold water. While
it is nice to see the same people returning year by year. The writer would like to see the use of this house
more widely spread throughout the staff of the bank. It has
been the means of bringing a lot of happiness to a great many people. M W |
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