Ruthwell Savings Bank
Ruthwell Savings Bank, the first of its kind, was formed in Ruthwell in 1810, by the Rev. Henry Duncan. Although a pioneer in savings bank history, the Ruthwell achieved limited commercial success and was taken over by the Annan Savings Bank in 1875.
History
Formation
The Ruthwell Parish Savings Bank was founded in the parish of Ruthwell near Dumfries, Scotland in 1810, and is widely held to be the first bank of its type. Its founder was the Rev. Henry Duncan, regarded as the "father of savings banks". Duncan was born in 1774 near Dumfries and after two years at the University of St Andrews he took a job in 1790 at Arthur Heywood & Co., a Liverpool banking house. Tiring of banking, he decided to follow his father into the church and attended both Edinburgh and Glasgow universities. In 1799 he was appointed minister of the small parish of Ruthwell.Duncan was deeply concerned about the poor, and extensive writing about their conditions led him to the importance of saving. He revived the local friendly society that had become moribund and founded another specifically for women. Duncan published a series of articles in the Dumfries and Galloway Courier, extolling the virtues of savings banks and proposing that one should be opened in every parish. However, despite the success of the friendly societies, Duncan was not convinced that their rules and regulations, were appropriate. Earlier institutions had been charitable in status. “Dr Duncan had the insight…to see that if the institution was to be of a permanent character it must pay its way.” The Ruthwell was the first savings bank established on commercial principles. In May 1810 Henry Duncan duly opened the Ruthwell Savings Bank in the Friendly Society's rooms.