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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Origins  





1.2  1782 to 1924  





1.3  1924 sale and subsequent years  







2 Fleet Street location  





3 Clients  





4 See also  





5 References  





6 External links  














Child & Co.






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Coordinates: 51°3049N 0°0642W / 51.5135°N 0.1117°W / 51.5135; -0.1117
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Child & Co.
Company typeDivision
IndustryFinancial services
Founded1664; 360 years ago (1664)
FateLast branch closed in 2022
Headquarters1Fleet Street, London, EC4
United Kingdom
ServicesPrivate banking
Wealth management
ParentNatWest Group

Child & Co. was a formerly independent private bank in the United Kingdom that was later part of the NatWest Group. The Royal Bank of Scotland incorporating Child & Co., Bankers was based at 1 Fleet Street on the western edge of the City of London, beside Temple Bar Memorial and opposite the Royal Courts of Justice. Child & Co. was authorised as a brand of The Royal Bank of Scotland by the Prudential Regulation Authority.[1] The last remaining branch (at 1 Fleet Street) closed in June 2022,[2] and it is no longer listed as one of the NatWest Group's brands.[3]

History

[edit]
Child's Banking House on Fleet Street beside Temple Bar Gate, 1850

Child & Co. was the third-oldest bank in the world and the oldest bank in the UK, predating the Bank of England by thirty years.[4]

Origins

[edit]

Child & Co. traced its roots to a London goldsmith business in the late 17th century, whose premises were known by the sign of the Marygold. Sir Francis Child established his business as a goldsmith in 1664, when he entered into partnership with Robert Blanchard. Child married Blanchard's stepdaughter and inherited the whole business upon Blanchard's death. Renamed Child & Co., the business thrived and was appointed as "jeweller in ordinary" to King William III.

Child took over most of the assets of Coggs & Dann, a goldsmith banker "at the sign of the Kings Head in the Strand, over against St. Clement Danes Church",[5] after the bank became insolvent in 1710 due to a massive fraud orchestrated by gentleman fraudster Thomas Brerewood, which became known as the Pitkin Affair.[6]

After Child died in 1713, his three sons ran the business. During this time, the firm transformed from a goldsmith business to a fully fledged bank. It claimed to be the first bank to introduce a pre-printed cheque form, prior to which customers simply wrote a letter to their bank but sent it to their creditor who presented it for payment. Its first bank note was issued in 1729.

1782 to 1924

[edit]

By 1782, Child's grandson Robert Child was the senior partner in the firm. However, when he died in 1782 without any sons to inherit the business, he did not want to leave it to his only daughter, Sarah Anne Child, because he was furious over her elopement with John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmorland, earlier in the year. To prevent the Earls of Westmorland from ever acquiring his wealth, he left it in trust to his daughter's second-surviving son or eldest daughter. This turned out to be Lady Sarah Sophia Fane, who was born in 1785.

From the death of Robert Child (in 1782) until 1793, the bank was managed by his widow, Sarah Child. Their granddaughter Lady Sarah Sophia Fane married George Child-Villiers, 5th Earl of Jersey, in 1804 and upon her majority in 1806, she became the senior partner. She exercised her rights personally until her death in 1867. At that point, the Earl of Jersey and Frederick William PriceofHarringay House were appointed as the two leading partners.[7] Ownership continued in the Child-Villiers family until the 1920s.

1924 sale and subsequent years

[edit]

George Child-Villiers, 8th Earl of Jersey, sold the firm in 1924 to Glyn, Mills, Currie, Holt & Co., which retained it as a separate business. Glyn, Mills & Co. was in turn acquired by The Royal Bank of Scotland in 1931 and merged with Williams Deacon's Bank to form Williams & Glyn's Bank in 1969. Williams and Glyn's Bank was fully integrated into The Royal Bank of Scotland in 1985 and ceased to operate separately.

A branch was opened in Oxford in 1932. During World War II, the main banking departments were evacuated to Osterley in West London and in 1942, the Oxford branch was transferred to Martins Bank. In 1977, a representative office was once again opened at St. Giles’ in Oxford.

Fleet Street location

[edit]

After Temple Bar was removed and Fleet Street was widened in 1880, Child & Co. occupied a Grade II* listed building at 1 Fleet Street, which was designed by John Gibson. The bank had previously operated from the same Fleet Street site since 1673. The building was refurbished in 2015.[8]

In February 2022, Child & Co. wrote to its clients informing them of the closure of its Fleet Street branch on 29 June 2022.[9] Despite the branch closure, RBS continues to issue Child & Co. branded debit cards, cheque books and statements (as of August 2023).

Clients

[edit]

Over the course of its 350-year history, Child & Co. attracted an exclusive client base that included the Honourable Societies of Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn, as well as numerous wealthy families. A number of Oxford colleges and several universities, including the London School of Economics and Imperial College London, were also reported to hold accounts.

Child & Co. had a legal and professional services hub that supported many of the biggest law firms, as well as three of the Big Four accounting firms in the UK.

It is believed that Child & Co. was the model for Charles Dickens' fictitious Tellson's Bank in A Tale of Two Cities (1859).

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
Notes
  • ^ "Child & Co | NatWest Group Heritage Hub". www.natwestgroup.com. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
  • ^ "Our brands | NatWest Group". www.natwestgroup.com. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
  • ^ Balmer, John M.T. Corporate identity and private banking: A review and case study International Journal of Bank Marketing 15(5):169–184, August 1997
  • ^ The London Goldsmiths 1200-1800, Sir Ambrose Heal, page 127
  • ^ Mr Bridgman's Accomplice, Long Ben's Coxswain 1660-1722, John Dann, 2019, page 25 ISBN 9781784566364
  • ^ "No. 24300". The London Gazette. 26 February 1876. p. 1646.
  • ^ "Child & Co. – Understanding our brands".
  • ^ "London Child & Co branch closure" (PDF). Royal Bank of Scotland. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  • Bibliography
  • Donald Adamson, "Child’s Bank and Oxford University in the Eighteenth Century", The Three Banks Review, December 1982, pp. 45–52
  • [edit]

    51°30′49N 0°06′42W / 51.5135°N 0.1117°W / 51.5135; -0.1117


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Child_%26_Co.&oldid=1222203118"

    Categories: 
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    Royal Bank of Scotland
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    This page was last edited on 4 May 2024, at 15:11 (UTC).

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