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MIDLAND DISTRICT MACHINE
SCHOOL |
Book keeping – a slow and steady
job… |
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Martins Bank Statements are produced for
customers by branch machinist staff.
Each line of the statement is produced by fitting the sheet into the
machine just like a typewriter, and using the various keys to select and
calculate the many different types of transaction. This is quite laborious,
and there is no room for error without having to start all over again. It is also fairly messy, as the same sheet
is pulled out of a file and put into the machine every time there is activity
on an account. The more
advanced machines have two platens side by side so that a copy statement
(known as a ledger) can also be produced line by line for the bank to
keep. As Martins’ own computerisation
plans are put on hold for the Merger with Barclays, sadly this is how
statement production will continue in the majority of Martins Branches until
the end of the bank, and the advent of Barclays’ own ambitious automation
plans. |
WHY NOT ALSO VISIT THESE PAGES |
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(NCR) “National 32” Range
Statement and Ledger Machine Image © 1966 N C R Limited |
Martins Bank Machine Produced Statement Image – Martins Bank Archive |
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This is a re-creation of one of the statements
produced from the mid-sixties onwards using Martins’ new NCR 315 CRAM
Computer System. Staff Loan Accounts are among the first to be computerised
and copies sent to District offices, whose advances staff controlled the
borrowings of staff and customers.
Originally, the Pegasus II Computer was used to bookkeep the accounts
of business customers whose accounts experience a large volume of
transactions. The first immediate advantage of computerisation is of course
the reduction in the time and manpower used in the production of statements,
and without wishing to offend the hard working machinist, we think you will
agree that the computerised version is definitely neater and a little easier
on the eye! You can read more about Martins’ computerisation plans at LIVERPOOL COMPUTER CENTRE and LONDON
COMPUTER CENTRE. Off to Machine School! |
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A good friend of the
Archive, the late Iris Brooks was lucky enough to be a trainer for Martins Midland
District Machine School, which gave a large number of female staff in the
district the chance to learn how to operate the machines they would be using
from day to day in the branches to provide the necessary book keeping
facilities for the Bank and its customers.
These machines are referred to in Martins’ staff recruitment
advertising campaign as being able to “do most of the donkey work”. The ads are aimed at young girls who have
just left school. At this time the
Bank offers what is still a quite meagre salary, especially to its female
staff. We can however say in all fairness, that the expenses that can be
claimed in respect of courses are generous. Judge for yourself, as we
reproduce below a copy of the Joining Instructions for the Machine School run
at Derby in 1956… |
A
section of a typical Machine Accounting School, circa 1960 |
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MIDLAND DISTRICT OFFICE MACHINE SCHOOL TRAINING takes place at the District
Office School at Derby Branch. Instruction is given from Monday to Friday each
week, commencing at noon on Mondays and at 9.15 a.m. on other days and the
course covers a period of two to three weeks, depending on the extent of the
trainees' prior experience. Trainees are allowed to return home for the
weekends on Friday afternoons. ACCOMMODATION is arranged in a comfortable private house in one of the
best residential areas in Derby where breakfast and an evening meal are
provided. Trainees will be given full
instructions regarding the bus route by the Machine School Supervisor at
Derby Branch which is situated at 5, Market Place, Derby. ON ARRIVAL at Derby Railway Station, a taxi should be taken to the
Branch and trainees should make arrangements as far as possible to arrive by
mid-day on Monday mornings. If this
presents any difficulty, the Manager of the Branch at which the trainee is
employed should be requested to advise District Office beforehand. EXPENSES. The following will be paid by the Bank and should be claimed from the
Machine School Supervisor who will supply the necessary form for completion:- ·
2nd Class rail fares between home and Derby, (including visits home
during the weekends of the Course) ·
Meals, on the train and taxi fares. ·
Bus fares to and from Derby Branch for the period of the Course. ·
Gratuities paid on the journey. ·
Lunches at the usual rate of 3/6d. a day*. ·
The charge for accommodation will be settled by the Bank. As the charge
is inclusive, the question of gratuities will not arise. *(Lunch at three shillings and
sixpence per day is equivalent to 17½p or US$0.28! With inflation that amounts to a “generous”
£3.22 or $4.22 in 2018) M |
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