Gurney's Bank was based in Norwich and connected through marriage to Barclays Bank of London with which it merged along with Backhouse's Bank of Darlington and several other Provincial banks in 1896 to form what is now Barclays Bank.
World Bank | Bank of America | West Bank | Deutsche Bank | Bank of England | International Bank for Reconstruction and Development | African Development Bank | Asian Development Bank | Inter-American Development Bank | bank | South Bank | Lloyds Bank | Lloyds Bank (historic) | European Bank for Reconstruction and Development | National Australia Bank | Chase (bank) | West African Development Bank | State Bank of India | Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce | Royal Bank of Canada | Commonwealth Bank | Bank of New Zealand | Bank of Montreal | Bank for International Settlements | M&T Bank Stadium | Federal Reserve Bank of New York | Federal Reserve Bank | European Central Bank | Bank | Reserve Bank of India |
25 St. Ann Street in Manchester, England, is a Victorian bank with attached manager's house constructed in 1848 for Heywood's Bank by J.E.Gregan.
During his administration in the Philippines, his term was scandalized by bitter quarrels with various military officers (General William Draper; Admiral Cornish; Major Felt; Captain Thomas Backhouse (command British forces in Manila); and Captain William Brereton, RN).
As of December 2011, Home Depot is the only store still open with a McDonald's, a Citizen's Bank branch, and a Hudson Valley Federal Credit Union branch occupying space in the lot as well.
Backhouse was born in Sheriff Hutton, Yorkshire, England, and was a right-handed batsman and left arm medium pace bowler.
The former National Westminster Bank in Spring Gardens, Manchester, England, is an Edwardian bank building constructed in 1902 for Parr's Bank by Charles Heathcote.
It was created on 19 January 1943 for William Goodenough, Chairman of Barclay's Bank and of the Nuffield Foundation.
Near to the village is Dryderdale Hall, a magnificent grade II listed mansion built in 1872 by the architect Alfred Waterhouse for the Backhouse family.
Kitching was born at Great Ayton, Yorkshire, the son of Alfred Edward Kitching and his wife Annie Backhouse Richardson.
The village was the birthplace of Faith Emmeline Backhouse, mother of the war poet John Gillespie Magee, Jr..
In 1814 Tawell forged a £10 note from Smith's Bank, a capital offence, for which he was sentenced to death.
The first settlement in the area was Waulud's Bank which is a Neolithic D-shaped enclosure located in Leagrave Park at the source of the River Lea and is now a protected monument.
Lisa Backhouse is a female Australian television journalist for the Nine Network.
The current manor house was built in the French style by Henry Clutton between 1858 and 1860 for Raikes Currie, a partner in Glyn Mills' Bank.
Other records were also released on CD-ROM, including the Freedman’s Bank (of African-American records), the Mormon Immigration Index, European Vital Records Indexes, and 1880s censuses, including the 1881 British Census, which won the Besterman/McColvin Award from the Library Association of Great Britain.
Backhouse entered the double York round event in 1908, taking 13th place with 516 points.
In 1907 Backhouse married Dora Louise Findlay, daughter of John Ritchie Findlay proprietor of the British newspaper, The Scotsman; they had two sons and four daughters.
Backhouse is married to Hilary (née Mitchell) and they have three sons, Kevin, Andrew and David.
Backhouse's songs have been recorded by Jenny Morris, Renée Geyer and others, and he has contributed to film soundtracks including Sweetie (Jane Campion), Rodney & Juliet (Fane Flaws) and Brain Dead (Peter Jackson).
In addition to mentioning the work that Sullivan was doing for him, Mr. Shaver mentioned Sullivan's Transportation Building at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition, the Auditorium Hotel and Carson Pirie Scott in Chicago, with special mention of the National Farmer's Bank of Owatonna, Minnesota and the fact that Mr. Sullivan was decorated for his work by the French government.
"Volksbank" derives from People's Bank institutes (co-operatives originally created by a local population often based in a town) and "Raiffeisenbanken" refers to banks founded on initiatives by Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen (who was pioneering farmer credit unions).
William Backhouse (1593 – 1662) was a renowned English Rosicrucian philosopher, alchemist, and astrologer.