Chinese | 中文

 HOME | ABOUT | RESEARCH | EVENTS | THE JOURNAL | LIBRARY | CONTACT | RESOURCES 

 
Articles
Michelle Cale: Trust Betrayed: The Failure of the Birmingham Penny Bank, 1865
July 31, 2024  

ABSTRACT

Penny banks were Victorian institutions intended to encourage thrift among working-class people. Initially considered a model of its type, the Birmingham Penny Bank (1850–1865) collapsed because of mismanagement, bad investments, and self-dealing by its lower-middle-class directors. Thousands of depositors, including women and children, lost part of their savings as a result. An investigation followed to apportion blame for the failure. A key question was the level of liability and compensation owed by the bank’s elite former officers and trustees, including William Scholefield MP, all of whom had stepped down some thirteen years earlier. Commentators argued that the trustees had betrayed the trust of the depositors by failing to publicise their departure from the supposedly philanthropic institution. In the end, they contributed to the public subscription raised in support of the victims, without admitting liability or experiencing reputational damage.

Published on Midland History, Volume 49, 2024 - Issue 2

Open access and free to download

https://doi.org/10.1080/0047729X.2024.2358297

   

Institute of European Civilazation
TEL:086-022-23796193
086-022-23796203