Cunliffe, Brooks and Co. was a bank founded in Blackburn, Lancashire, England in 1792.

The bank founded by cotton entrepreneur William Brooks (1762–1846) and Roger Cunliffe. In 1819, Samuel Brooks, son of one of the founders, opened a branch of the bank in Manchester. In the 1820s, a second generation Cunliffe opened a London house, at 29 Lombard Street. In 1844, the Manchester bank was listed in an Act of Parliament as one of ten provincial banks working under an arrangement with the Bank of England. The London house merged with Alexanders, a discount house, in 1864, but a new London house, Brooks and Co., was opened at 81 Lombard Street by the sole partner in the Blackburn bank.

Brooks's Bank, Brown Street

A new bank building in Manchester was opened in 1868 at nos. 46-48 Brown Street; the architect was George Truefitt. At the corner where Brown Street meets Chancery Lane is a three-storey oriel with crisp carved ornament and on top an iron crown.[1] In 1900, the bank merged with Lloyds Bank.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Hartwell, Clare (2001) Manchester. (Pevsner Architectural Guides.) London: Penguin Books; pp. 148-49
  2. ^ Sayers, R. S. (1957) Lloyds Bank in the History of English Banking. London: OUP; pp. 12, 14, 147, 281 and 331

Further reading edit

  • "Brooks's Bank, Manchester" Manchester Faces and Places; vol. 4, 1892–3, pp. 157–158, illus.

External links edit

  • "'Bank of Blackburn' £1 set to bring £600 at auction". Lancashire Telegraph. 10 June 2007. Retrieved 12 October 2007.[permanent dead link]