2002
DOI: 10.1017/s0968565002000021
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Penny banks in Glasgow, 18501914

Abstract: When William Callender of Royal Bank of Scotland's Glasgow office died in May 1868, there was found, folded in the pocket of his greatcoat, a handwritten list of those 'penny banks' that he had played a significant role helping to create.2 It begins with Barony Penny Bank, opened on 15 May 1852, and concludes with Working Men's Provident Bank in Partick, that commenced on 18 March 1865. Over the intervening period, Callender had been involved in the promotion of 23 others, including some located far from Glasg… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Payne's conclusion left little room for ambiguity: ‘the Glasgow savings bank did attract and retain the support of the manual worker’ (Payne 1967, p. 165). One of the ways in which this was done was the encouragement of penny banks, where the poorest savers could deposit as little as a penny a week (Ross 2002). The first penny banks were opened in the city in 1850.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Payne's conclusion left little room for ambiguity: ‘the Glasgow savings bank did attract and retain the support of the manual worker’ (Payne 1967, p. 165). One of the ways in which this was done was the encouragement of penny banks, where the poorest savers could deposit as little as a penny a week (Ross 2002). The first penny banks were opened in the city in 1850.…”
Section: IImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent academic literature on savings banks, and especially penny savings banks, has tended to focus more on Scotland and Ireland rather than England or the UK overall (Maixé-Altés 2009;Ó Gráda 2003;Ross 2002). The one major contribution to the field is now decades old (Horne 1947), while the history of a major state institution, the Post Office Savings Bank, is still to be written.…”
Section: Akroyd Industrial Paternalism and Savings Banksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many nineteenth century industrial paternalists would have heartily agreed with this philosophy, a point firmly substantiated by the work of Ross (2001;2002) on Scottish savings banks. Indeed, industrial paternalism was an extremely common motivation for establishing such businesses with the specific emphasis on teaching lessons of thrift and saving to the disadvantaged people both in their employ and more generally.…”
mentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Another was that workers may not have had enough left over to save. A third reason may have been that savings banks did not fit some workers' requirements for saving and that other small-saver institutions were more suitable (Johnson 1985; Ross 2002; Ó Gráda 2003; Boyer 2009; McLaughlin 2013; Bäcklund and Lilja 2014). This article concentrates on the third reason.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%