National Provincial Bank

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National Provincial Bank was a British commercial bank which operated in England and Wales from 1833 until its merger into the National Westminster Bank in 1970. It expanded during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and took over a number of smaller banking companies.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] National Provincial Bank of England

The National Provincial Bank was organised as a joint-stock company by Thomas Joplin 1833. At the time, the Bank of England had exclusive statutory power to issue banknotes within a 65 mile radius of London. Although the bank's administrative offices were in London, it decided to open its branches outside the 65 mile radius so that the bank could issue its own notes. From the beginning National Provincial lived up to its name, serving provincial customers throughout England. The bank was without a national competitor for about 60 years. By 1836 it had over 20 branches across England and Wales.[1]

The first branch of the bank was opened on 01 January 1834 in Gloucester. Like the District Bank, the company planned to establish new branches and acquire smaller banks, and by 1835 it had opened 20 new offices. The bank's expansion continued throughout the nineteenth century with new branch openings and by taking over smaller local banking companies, including:—

Date Acquisition Established
1836 Vye & Harris, Ilfracombe 1807
1836 William Skinner & Co., Stockton 1815
1839 Husband & Co., Devonport 1810
1840 Fryer, Andrews & Co., Wimborne c.1790
1842 Cole, Holroyd & Co., Exeter 1822
1855 Thomas Kinnersley & Sons, Newcastle-under-Lyne c.1780

By the mid-1860s, National Provincial had acquired more than a dozen small banks and had established 122 branches and sub-branches throughout England and Wales. It finally opened a London banking office in 1866, recognising that a presence in the world's financial capital was worth the sacrifice of its note-issuing privilege. In 1866 the bank opened a lavish head office at 15 Bishopsgate in the City of London, designed by John Gibson. Expansion continued, and now that the National Provincial Bank of England was established in the capital it began to take over a number of London-based banking companies, as well as further acquisitions in the English provinces, notably:—

The classic NatWest arrowheads device, said either to symbolise circulation of money in the financial system or the bank's three constituents
The classic NatWest arrowheads device, said either to symbolise circulation of money in the financial system or the bank's three constituents
Date Acquisition Established
1878 Bank of Leeds 1864
1899 County of Stafford Bank 1836
1903 Knaresborough & Claro Banking Co. 1831
1919 Sheffield Banking Co. 1831
1919 Bradford District Bank 1862
1920 Northamptonshire Union Bank 1836
1920 Coutts & Co., London 1692
1922 Dingley & Co., Launceston 1855
1922 Dingley, Pearse & Co., Okehampton 1856
1924 Guernsey Banking Co. Ltd. 1847

1911 saw the formation of Lloyds Bank (France) when Lloyds Bank acquired Armstrong and Co., based in Paris and Le Havre. From 1917 it was run jointly as Lloyds and National Provincial Bank. In 1955, Lloyds Bank bought full ownership and it became Lloyds Bank (Foreign) and later Lloyds Bank Europe.[2]

[edit] Union of London and Smith's Bank

The bank continued to grow rapidly. At the turn of the century, the company had about 250 offices in England and Wales and approximately £3 million in capital. After World War I, the company began an accelerated acquisition-and-merger strategy. The most important of its mergers during this time was with the Union of London and Smith's Bank, itself the product of the amalgamation of two of the most venerable banking institutions in England, which added 230 branches to National Provincial's growing financial network. Prescott's Bank was established in 1766 as Prescott, Grote, Culverden & Hollingsworth at Threadneedle Street. In 1903 it merged with the Union of London and Smith's Bank which had been formed in 1902 from the merger of the Union Bank of London established at Moorgate in 1839 and Smith, Payne and Smiths, itself established in 1758.[3] After the 1918 merger, the bank traded for a few years as the National Provincial and Union Bank of England. In 1924 it shortened its name to the National Provincial Bank Limited.[4] In England and those common law jurisdictions whose approach follows that of English law in treating the duty of confidentiality as resting in contract, the classic authority is the Court of Appeal decision in Tournier v National Provincial and Union Bank of England (1924) 1KB 461.[5] The duty extends at least to information concerning account transactions and extends beyond the date of the termination of the banker customer contract. Information attained from other sources, such as a credit reference agency, is also covered.[6] The duty is not absolute for the bank may disclose information where the disclosure is under compulsion by law, where there is a duty to the public to disclose, where the interests of the bank require disclosure and where the disclosure is made by the express or implied consent of the customer.[7]

[edit] District Bank

For more details on this topic, see District Bank.

Although National Provincial's growth had been interrupted by World War I, the bank vigorously renewed its acquisition programme after the war. Coutts & Co. private bankers, acquired in 1920,[8] and North Central Finance, acquired in 1958,[9] were some of the significant purchases made by National Provincial. In 1961 National Provincial acquired the Isle of Man Bank, enabling it to enter merchant and off-shore banking[10] and in 1962, District Bank was bought to create a company with over £1.4 billion in assets and 2,100 branches, although the two banks maintained their separate identities and independent operations.[11] The bank later introduced the personal loan and, in 1965, issued the precursor of the cheque guarantee card.

[edit] Westminster Bank

The merger of National Provincial and Westminster Bank,[12] announced in early 1968, shocked the British public and banking community. In the late 1960s, the Bank of England tried to rationalise the banking industry through a policy known as competition and credit control, which aimed to put banks on a more equal and competitive footing and to improve control of the nation's money supply. Although the Bank of England indicated a willingness to allow mergers as part of the rationalisation process, no one had seriously believed it would permit mergers among the largest and most influential banks.

The District Bank, National Provincial, and Westminster Bank were fully integrated in the new firm's structure, while Coutts & Co., Ulster Bank (a 1917 Westminster acquisition), and the Isle of Man Bank continued as separate operations. Duncan Stirling, chairman of Westminster Bank, became first chairman of the fifth largest bank in the world. In 1969 David Robarts, former chairman of National Provincial, assumed Stirling's position. The statutory process of integration was completed in 1969 and the new company, National Westminster Bank Limited, opened its doors for business on 01 January 1970.[13] NatWest, as it became known, is now part of the The Royal Bank of Scotland Group.

[edit] Banknotes

Until the early twentieth century, commercial banks in England and Wales were permitted to print their own money, subject to a number of limitations. The Country Bankers’ Act 1826 restricted the issue of banknotes by commercial banks in England and Wales, so that only provincial banks over 65 miles away from London were permitted to print their own money. As the National Provincial Bank was based outside London, it was free to issue its own banknotes. In 1866, when it opened its London headquarters, National Provincial was obliged to give up its note-issuing right and deal only in Bank of England notes.

The Bank Charter Act 1844 began the process which gave the Bank of England exclusive note-issuing powers. Under the Act, no new banks could start issuing notes, and note-issuing banks were barred form expanding their note issue. Gradually, these banks vanished through mergers and closures and their note-issuing powers went with them. The last private English banknotes were issued in 1921 by Fox, Fowler and Company, a Somerset bank. Today, the Bank of England has a monopoly of banknote issue in England and Wales.[14]

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Provincial Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Past Constituents (retrieved 19 November 2007)
  2. ^ Lloyds Bank Lloyds TSB Group, About Lloyds TSB (retrieved 17 November 2007)
  3. ^ Prescott's Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Past Constituents (retrieved 19 November 2007)
  4. ^ Union of London and Smith's Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Past Constituents (retrieved 19 November 2007)
  5. ^ McClean, David International Co-operation in Civil and Criminal Matters (p.266) Oxford University Press, 2002
  6. ^ The Banking Code: Guidance for Subscribers (p.38) British Bankers' Association, March 2005
  7. ^ The banker's duty of confidentiality to the customer Ombudsman News (issue 45) Financial Ombudsman Service, April 2005
  8. ^ A short history of Coutts & Co The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, 2005
  9. ^ The History Behind Lombard Lombard North Central, About Lombard (retrieved 07 December 2007)
  10. ^ A short history of Isle of Man Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, 2005
  11. ^ District Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Past Constituents (retrieved 19 November 2007)
  12. ^ Westminster Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, Past Constituents (retrieved 19 November 2007)
  13. ^ A short history of National Westminster Bank The Royal Bank of Scotland Group, 2005
  14. ^ A brief history of banknotes Bank of England (retrieved 08 October 2007)

[edit] Bibliography

  • Ashby, J. F. The Story of the Banks Hutchinson & Co., London, 1934
  • Withers, Hartley National Provincial Bank (1833–1933) National Provincial Bank, London, 1933
  • Reed, Richard National Westminster Bank: A Short History National Westminster Bank, London, 1989