Chief Cashiers
John Kendrick ~ 1694
Thomas Speed ~ 1694-1699
Thomas Madockes ~ 1699-1739
James Collier and Daniel Race (jointly) ~ 1739-1751
Daniel Race and Elias Simes (jointly) ~ 1751-1759
Daniel Race ~ 1759-1775
Charles Jewson ~ 1775-1777
Abraham Newland ~ 1778-1807
Henry Hase ~ 1807-1829
Thomas Rippon ~ 1829-1835
Matthew Marshall ~ 1835-1864
William Miller ~ 1864-1866
George Forbes ~ 1866-1873
Frank May ~ 1873-1893
Horace Bowen ~ 1893-1902
Gordon Nairne ~ 1902-1918
Ernest Harvey ~ 1918-1925
Patrick Mahon ~ 1925-1929
Basil Catterns ~ 1929-1934
Kenneth Peppiatt ~ 1934-1949
Percival Beale ~ 1949-1955
Leslie O'Brien ~ 1955-1962
Jasper Hollom ~ 1962-1966
John Fforde ~ 1966-1970
John Page ~ 1970-1980
David Somerset ~ 1980-1988
Malcolm Gill ~ 1988-1991
Graham Kentfield ~ 1991-1998
Merlyn Lowther ~ 1999-2003
Andrew Bailey ~ 2004 -
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A Brief History
The first recorded use of paper money was in the 7th century in
China. However, the practice did not become widespread in Europe for
nearly a thousand years.
In the 16th century the goldsmith-bankers began to accept deposits,
make loans and transfer funds. They also gave receipts for cash, that
is to say gold coins, deposited with them. These receipts, known as
“running cash notes”, were made out in the name of the depositor
and promised to pay him on demand.
Many also carried the words “or bearer” after the name of the
depositor, which allowed them to circulate in a limited way. In 1694
the Bank of England was established in order to raise money for King
William III’s war against France. Almost immediately the Bank
started to issue notes in return for deposits. Like the goldsmiths’
notes, the crucial feature that made Bank of England notes a means of
exchange was the promise to pay the bearer the sum of the note on
demand. This meant that the note could be redeemed at the Bank for
gold or coinage by anyone presenting it for payment; if it was not
redeemed in full, it was endorsed with the amount withdrawn. These
notes were initially handwritten on Bank paper and signed by one of
the Bank’s cashiers. They were made out for the precise sum
deposited in pounds, shillings and pence. However, after the recoinage
of 1696 reduced the need for small denomination notes, it was decided
not to issue any notes for sums of less than £50. Since the average
income in this period was less than £20 a year, most people went
through life without ever coming into contact with banknotes.
During the 18th century there was a gradual move toward fixed
denomination notes. From 1725 the Bank was issuing partly printed
notes for completion in manuscript. The £ sign and the first digit
were printed but other numerals were added by hand, as were the name
of the payee, the cashier’s signature, the date and the number.
Notes could be for uneven amounts, but the majority were for round
sums. By 1745 notes were being part printed in denominations ranging
from £20 to £1,000.
In 1759, gold shortages caused by the Seven Years War forced the
Bank to issue a £10 note for the first time. The first £5 notes
followed in 1793 at the start of the war against Revolutionary France.
This remained the lowest denomination until 1797, when a series of
runs on the Bank, caused by the uncertainty of the war, drained its
bullion reserve to the point where it was forced to stop paying out
gold for its notes. Instead, it issued £1 and £2 notes. The
Restriction Period, as it was known, lasted until 1821 after which
gold sovereigns took the place of the £1 and £2 notes. The
Restriction Period prompted the Irish playwright and MP, Richard
Brinsley Sheriden, to refer angrily to the Bank as “… an elderly
lady in the City”. This was quickly changed by cartoonist, James
Gillray, to the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, a name that has stuck
ever since.
The first fully printed notes appeared in 1855 relieving the
cashiers of the task of filling in the name of the payee and signing
each note individually. The practice of writing the name of the Chief
Cashier as the payee on notes was halted in favour of the anonymous
“I promise to pay the bearer on demand the sum of …”, which has
remained unchanged on notes to this day. The printed signature on the
note continued to be that of one of three cashiers until 1870, since
when it has always been that of the Chief Cashier.
The First World War saw the link with gold broken once again; the
Government needed to preserve its stock of bullion and the Bank ceased
to pay out gold for its notes. In 1914 the Treasury printed and issued
10 shilling and £1 notes, a task which the Bank took over in 1928.
The gold standard was partially restored in 1925 and the Bank was
again obliged to exchange its notes for gold, but only in multiples of
400 ounces or more. Britain finally left the gold standard in 1931 and
the note issue became entirely fiduciary, that is wholly backed by
securities instead of gold.
The Bank has not always been the sole issuer of bank notesin
England and Wales. Acts of 1708 and 1709 had given it a partial
monopoly by making it unlawful for companies or partnerships of more
than six people to set up banks and issue notes. The ban did not
extend to the many provincial bankers – the so-called country
bankers – who were all either individuals or small family concerns.
However, the Country Bankers’ Act of 1826 allowed the establishment
of note issuing joint-stock banks with more than six partners, but not
within 65 miles of London. The Act also allowed the Bank of England to
open branches in major provincial cities, which gave it more outlets
for its notes.
In 1833 the Bank’s notes were made legal tender for all sums
above £5 in England and Wales so that, in the event of a crisis, the
public would still be willing to accept the Bank’s notes and its
bullion reserves would be safeguarded. It was the 1844 Bank Charter
Act which was the key to the Bank achieving its gradual monopoly of
the note issue in England and Wales. Under the Act no new banks of
issue could be established and existing note issuing banks were barred
from expanding their issue. Those, whose issues lapsed, because, for
example, they merged with a non-issuing bank, forfeited their right of
issue. The last private bank notes in England and Wales were issued by
the Somerset bank, Fox, Fowler and Co in 1921. |