Plaque

Bankers Clearing House - 4

Inscription

{2 doves with an olive leaf in a laurel wreath}

This panel refers to no bank. It references Peace, a common wish, but since the panel apparently came off a building that was erected 1938/40 it seems particularly poignant.

Site: Bankers Clearing House (7 memorials)

EC4, Lombard Street, Post Office Court

At the north end of Post Office Court, attached to the west wall adjoining St Mary Woolnoth, are six salvaged carved panels. We have numbered these left to right and top down. They can all be seen in our photo, all but number 7, a fruity capital, which is behind the camera, down on the ground and predictably, damaged.

The Bankers Clearing House was on this site 1833 - 2001. Many of these sculptures reference the various banks that were members of the clearing bank system and our identification task was greatly eased by Martin’s Bank.

Geograph have a photo and quote the City of London: "These sculptures elements were installed here in 2003/4. They were decorative elements of the building previously on the site at 10-15 Lombard Street/ 83-36 King William Street and it was a condition of the planning permission to demolish the building and build a new one that this stonework was salvaged and reinstated as part of the development. The stone panels were previously over doors and entrances to passageways across the site. The previous building on the site was a Portland stone clad building constructed in 1938/40, which was designed by Whinney Son and Austin Hall." Surely Whinney, Son and Austen Hall is meant.

It would be good to know which banks were in the Bankers Clearing House at the start of WW2, since, presumably, they would all have been represented in the architectural sculpture on the building erected at that time. We cannot find a list of that date but Martin's Bank have the list as at 1962. It has eleven names: Barclays; Coutts; District; Glyn, Mills & Co; Lloyds; Martins; Midland; National; National Provincial; Westminster; Williams Deacon's. Three of these are not represented by their symbols in the sculptures: Lloyds (horse); Martin's (grasshopper + liver bird); Westminster (river, flowers, portcullis). All three were members of the Clearing House much earlier than 1940 so it seems very likely that they would have been represented on the walls of this building, and there may have been other clearing banks at that time who were also represented. It's not surprising that some sculptural elements are probably lost.

At the south end of this Court is a piece of architectural sculpture relating to the GPO buildings that were also on this site.

Spitalfields Life has a 1956 photo of St Mary Woolnuth showing a steel framed building being constructed behind. Perhaps this is the building from which this sculpture came.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Bankers Clearing House - 4

Subjects commemorated i

Bankers Clearing House

Cheque & Credit Clearing Company (or, in the form of a booklet) is very h...

Read More

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Bankers Clearing House - 4

Also at this site i

Bankers Clearing House - 1

Bankers Clearing House - 1

{3 shields, from the top down: - Bishopsgate arch (National Provincial) - dot...

Read More

Bankers Clearing House - 2

Bankers Clearing House - 2

The VR monogram must refer to the monarch at the time the Bankers Clearing Ho...

Read More

Bankers Clearing House - 3

Bankers Clearing House - 3

The monogram is TC followed by CT written backwards, part of Coutts's symbol,...

Read More

Bankers Clearing House - 5

Bankers Clearing House - 5

{Dragon/griffin with lightening bolts, stomping on a stag}

Read More

Bankers Clearing House - 6

Bankers Clearing House - 6

{3 shields, from the top down: - anchor (Glyn, Mills & Co) - blank - 2 ba...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Virginia Woolf - SW7

Virginia Woolf - SW7

SW7, Hyde Park Gate, 22

Virginia Stephen, Virginia Woolf, 1882-1941, novelist and critic, born and lived here until 1904.

1 subject commemorated
Hackney Salvation Army - 2 - Mrs Bramwell Booth

Hackney Salvation Army - 2 - Mrs Bramwell Booth

E8, Mare Street, 280

Built for the Salvation Army in 1910. Their Women's Social Work HQ moved here in 1911 from offices at another nearby Salvation Army addr...

1 subject commemorated
R. F. MacKie

R. F. MacKie

N6, Kiln Lane, 1-6

Plaque actually in Winchester Terrace.

1 subject commemorated
49 Bankside

49 Bankside

SE1, Bankside, 49, Cardinal's Wharf

Charming plaque but the history is baloney, according to Gillian Tyndall in her book 'The House by the Thames and the People who Lived Th...

3 subjects commemorated
Tommy Trinder

Tommy Trinder

SW16, Wellfield Road, 54

Tommy Trinder, comedian, star of film, stage & radio, was born in this house 24th March 1909. Streatham Society

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator

Previously viewed

Millicent Fawcett statue

Millicent Fawcett statue

SW1, Parliament Square

The 'courage' quote is from a speech Fawcett gave after the death of fellow suffrage campaigner Emily Davison.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Friday

Friday

SW17, Trevelyan Road, Norfolk House

c.2012: Brought to our attention by Clive Yelf on his always interesting blog, Faded London which seems to have folded. Wanting to establ...

1 subject commemorated
S. J. Parkins

S. J. Parkins

Resident of Hendon who served and died in WW2.

Person, Armed Forces

War dead, WW2
1 memorial