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We feel very
lucky to hold two original colour images of Stratford-upon-Avon Branch in the
Archive. Both are taken in the very early 1960s, when the Branch had only
been open for a couple of years. The first image shows the proximity to the
branch of Barclays to the left, and to the right the National Provincial
Bank. There are not many high streets left in the twenty-first century where
you could find even one bank, let alone three in a row! The close-up
colour image of Stratford upon Avon branch is taken from one of two slides of
Midland District Branches kindly donated by our good friend and Martins
Colleague, the late Iris Brooks. Iris,
and her late husband Gordon made several trips to see us in the Lake District
whilst they stayed at a local religious retreat, and Iris was always proud to
talk about her time working for Martins Bank. The other colour slide image
can be seen on our SHREWSBURY page.
Iris was known and liked in the Midland District branches of the Bank,
and when the Bank asked her to turn her hand to putting together local
training courses, she established the Midland District Machine School at
Derby Branch. |
In Service: September 1958 until 24 April 1998 Image © Martins Bank Archive Collections Image © Martins Bank Archive Collections -
Iris Brooks 1962 |
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Titus Andronicus and the Profumo Affair… When Martins
Bank Magazine visits Stratford upon Avon Branch some seven months after it
was opened, they are not even fifteen words into their first sentence before
“the Bard of Avon” himself is mentioned! By the second paragraph the “sudden
realisation” that they are actually visiting the town on Shakespeare’s
birthday itself, sends the writer of the article ever more into
rapture. Look out too for mention of
Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, AND Mr and Mrs John Profumo, with some years still to go before that
infamous “affair”…
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BEFORE The Branch in its days as the Shakespeare Tea Rooms |
AFTER Smooth lines, and the suspended ceiling of the new banking hall |
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The partition separating the banking hall from the waiting room
outside the Manager's Office is the focal point of the interior design. The
decorative glazing in the screen incorporating a stylized Bank Coat of Arms
as the predominant feature was designed and executed by a department of the
Kingston School of Art. Living
so far south is an entirely new experience for Mr. and Mrs. Proud, both of
whom are North-Easterners. He has worked in Newcastle, Stockton and as Pro
Manager at Durham prior to his present appointment. His
second-in-command, Mr. A. Atkin, was trained at Derby and only the junior
male member of the staff, Mr T Sumner, had previously lived in the town,
though he is actually a native of Tamworth. Miss M. Dodds, the lady member,
is Scottish and comes to us because her father is a serving officer in the
R.A.F. and has until recently been stationed at Wellesbourne. After we had
had the pleasure of entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Proud to lunch we got caught up
in the festivities right outside our branch. Following lunch at the Memorial
Theatre the visiting notabilities walked in procession to Shakespeare's
birthplace to lay wreaths and then to his burial place for the same purpose. |
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Image © Barclays Ref
0030-2816 A military band preceded them and we saw (from a distance) Valerie
Hobson, now Mrs. John Profumo, wife of the M.P. for Stratford, and Paul
Robeson. We had not seen Miss Hobson since we entertained her, on behalf of
the Bank, when she visited Liverpool some years ago. Then followed a short
drive to a quiet country lane, away from the milling crowds, for the purpose
of taking the staff photograph, and after a few very crowded hours we said a
regretful goodbye. We
were pleased to note that the new branch is making very satisfactory progress
and before long will be firmly established. Publicity is always useful, and when it works, it can pay for itself several
times over. Below, we have publicity in action – the original advertisement
designed to be placed in the local press when the Branch at
Stratford-upon-Avon first opened – and a specially published customer
leaflet, that makes the most of the location of this new branch… |
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…and
now a word or two from our sponsor, William
Shakespeare! (?) We don’t know whether or not this counts
as the Bank “milking” a situation, but as ever, they are not afraid to
promote Martins as a long standing and historic financial institution. Enter once more the mock Tudor effect - a
favourite of Martins Bank, particularly in the late 1950s - notable examples
are the branches at Swansea, Prestatyn, Shrewsbury and Nantwich, each of them
looking like they have been there since the time of William Shakespeare
himself, and whilst the BUILDING at Stratford-upon-Avon actually does go back that far, the occupier
does not! In 1958 this booklet is
produced and offered to customers to show off just what the bank has done to
this very old building - i.e. they turned it into a branch bank… Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections |
Image © Martins Bank
Archive Collections |
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Stourport on Severn |
Thursday 18 September 1958 15 December 1969 24 April 1998 |
Opened by Martins Bank Limited Barclays Bank Limited
20-83-07 Stratford upon Avon Closed |
Sunderland |
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Intellectual Property Rights ©
Martins Bank Archive Collections 1988 to date. M M |
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