The 'Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland' is a
commercial and
clearing bank, based in
Edinburgh,
Scotland. With a history dating to the 17th century, it is the oldest surviving bank in what is the United Kingdom, and is the only commercial institution created by the
Parliament of Scotland to remain in existence. It was also the first bank in
Europe to print its own banknotes, a function it still performs today.
Since
10 September 2001 the Bank of Scotland has formed part of
HBOS plc, following a merger with the
Halifax Group (formerly the
Halifax Building Society). The Bank owns a 50% stake in
Sainsbury's Bank - the other 50% being owned by
J Sainsbury plc.
On 17 September 2007, The Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland will transfer to a
Public Limited Company, becoming Bank of Scotland plc, as part of the
HBOS Group Reorganisation Act 2006.
History

The Bank's original coat of arms
Establishment
The Bank of Scotland was established by an
Act of the
Parliament of Scotland on
17 July 1695, the
Act for erecting a Bank in Scotland, opening for business in February
1696. Although established soon after the
Bank of England (1694), the Bank of Scotland was a very different institution. Where the Bank of England was established specifically to finance defence spending by the
English government, the Bank of Scotland was established by the
Scottish government to support
Scottish business, and was prohibited from lending to the government without parliamentary approval
[1]. The founding Act granted the bank a
monopoly on public
banking in Scotland for 21 years, permitted the bank's directors to raise a nominal capital of £1,200,000
Pound Scots (£100,000
Pound Sterling), gave the Proprietors (shareholders)
limited liability, and in the final clause (repealed only in
1920) made all foreign-born Proprietors naturalised Scotsmen "to all Intents and Purposes whatsoever". Its first chief accountant was
George Watson.
18th and 19th Century
The Bank of Scotland was instrumental in the raising of money for the first
Jacobite Rising in 1715. As a result the Bank's monopoly ended in
1716, and its first rival, the
Royal Bank of Scotland was formed by
Royal Charter in
1727. This led to a period of great competition between the two banks as they set to drive each other out of business. Although the "Bank Wars" ended in around
1740, competition soon arose from other sources, as other Scottish banks were founded throughout the country. In response, the Bank of Scotland themselves began to open branches throughout Scotland. The first branch in
London opened in
1865.
The bank also took the lead in establishing the security and stability of the entire Scottish banking system, which became more important after the collapse of the
Ayr Bank in 1772. The
Western Bank collapsed in 1857, and the Bank of Scotland stepped in with the other Scottish banks to ensure that all Western Bank's notes were paid.
20th century

Headquarters at 11 Bank Street (the street being named in honour of the bank moving there in 1806
Edinburgh
In the 1950s, the Bank of Scotland was involved in several mergers and acquisitions with different banks. In
1955, the Bank merged with the
Union Bank of Scotland. The Bank also expanded into consumer credit with the purchase of
Chester based, North West Securities (now
Capital Bank). In
1971, the Bank agreed to merge with the
British Linen Bank, owned by
Barclays Bank. The merger saw Barclays Bank acquire a 35% stake in the Bank of Scotland, a stake it retained until the 1990s. The merchant banking division of the Bank of Scotland was relaunched as British Linen Bank (now known as HBOS Treasury Services).
In
1959 Bank of Scotland became the first bank in the UK to install a
computer to process accounts centrally. At 11 am on 25 January
1985 the Bank introduced HOBS (Home and Office Banking Services) - an early application of remote access technology being made available to banking customers. This followed a small-scale service operated jointly with the
Nottingham Building Society for two years but developed by Bank of Scotland. The new HOBS service enabled customers to access their accounts directly on a television screen, using a
Prestel telephone network.
International expansion
The arrival of
North Sea Oil to Scotland in the 1970s, allowed the Bank of Scotland to expand into the energy sector. The Bank later used this expertise in energy finance to expand internationally. The first international office opened in
Houston,
Texas, followed by more in the
United States,
Moscow and
Singapore. In
1987, the Bank acquired
Countrywide Bank of
New Zealand (later sold to
Lloyds TSB in
1998). The Bank later expanded into the
Australian market by acquiring the
Perth based
Bank of Western Australia.
A controversial period in the Bank's history was the attempt to enter the United States retail banking market via a joint venture with evangelist
Pat Robertson. The move was met with criticism from civil rights groups in the UK due to Robertson's controversial views on
homosexuality. The Bank was forced to cancel the deal when Robertson described Scotland as a "dark land overrun by homosexuals".
[2]
HBOS
In the late 1990s, the UK financial sector market was a period of consolidation on a large scale. Many of the large
building societies were demutalising and becoming banks in their own rights, or merging with existing banks. Lloyds Bank and TSB Bank also merged in
1995 to create
Lloyds TSB. In
1999, the Bank of Scotland made a takeover bid for the
NatWest Bank. Given the Bank of Scotland was significantly smaller than the English based NatWest, the move was seen as an audacious and risky move. However, the
Royal Bank of Scotland tabled a rival offer, and a bitter takeover battle ensured, with the Royal Bank the victor.
The Bank of Scotland was now the centre of other merger opportunities. A proposal to merge with the
Abbey National was explored, but later rejected. In
2001, the Bank of Scotland and the
Halifax agreed a merger to form
HBOS ("Halifax Bank of Scotland"). The headquarters was to stay in
Edinburgh, and both bank's brands would continue to be used.
Since then HBOS has grown to become the fourth largest bank in the UK by market value, and the UK's largest
mortgage lender. In Scotland, all of the Halifax's branches have been amalgamated with the Bank of Scotland, with the Halifax brand only used for mortgages and savings products. Halifax branches in
England have used the Bank of Scotland brand for business purposes.
HBOS Group Reorganisation Act 2006
In 2006, HBOS secured the passing of the
HBOS Group Reorganisation Act 2006, a private Act of Parliament that would allow the group to operate in a more simplified structure. The Act allows HBOS to make the Governor and Company of the Bank of Scotland a public limited company, Bank of Scotland plc, which will be the principal banking subsidiary of HBOS. Halifax plc will transfer to Bank of Scotland plc, although the brand name will be retained.
Bank notes

A Bank of Scotland £50 note
Bank of Scotland was the first bank in
Europe to successfully issue paper
currency redeemable for cash on demand (which was an extremely useful facility given the poor state of the
Scottish coinage at the end of the seventeenth century). The right to issue banknotes has been maintained to the present day, but extended to other banks after 1716 when the Bank's monopoly was allowed to lapse. Following the
Acts of Union in
1707, the bank supervised the reminting of the old Scottish coinage into
Sterling.
In
1826 there was outrage in Scotland at the attempt of the
United Kingdom Parliament to prevent the production of banknotes of less than five pounds face value.
Sir Walter Scott wrote a series of letters to the ''Edinburgh Weekly Journal'' under the pseudonym "''Malachi Malagrowther''" which provoked such a response that the government was forced to relent and allow the Scottish banks to continue printing £1 notes. For this reason Sir Walter still appears on all Bank of Scotland notes.
Current issue
Bank of Scotland's current note issue feature Sir Walter Scott on the front, and on the back- representations of industries that Scotland excels in:
★ 5 pound note featuring a
vignette of
oil and
energy
★ 10 pound note featuring a vignette of
distilling and
brewing
★ 20 pound note featuring a vignette of
education and
research
★ 50 pound note featuring a vignette of
arts and
culture
★ 100 pound note featuring a vignette of
leisure and
tourism.
New 2007 series
Bank of Scotland will begin issuing a new series of banknotes in the Autumn of 2007, which will feature the common theme of Scottish bridges. It will take at least three years for the current issue of Bank of Scotland notes to be phased out of circulation.
While the colours and sizes of all of the new notes are the same as previous designs, text on the notes is larger than before. The raised, large denomination also acts as an aid for the partially sighted. 'Cornerstones' have been added to the new notes. These are watermark patterns on all corners of the notes, which will improve their durability.
Some new security features have also been added to the new design. These include a metallic security thread embedded in every banknote, which contains the numerical value of the note and the note's bridge image. A new hologram and foil patch has been introduced on the front of the £20, £50 and £100 notes, which features the Bank of Scotland logo and the numerical value of the note.
★ £5 note features
Brig o' Doon
★ £10 note features
Glenfinnan Viaduct
★ £20 note features
Forth Bridge (railway)
★ £50 note features
Falkirk Wheel
★ £100 note features
Kessock Bridge
Gaelic policy
The Bank of Scotland, like the other Scottish banks, historically saw itself as an institution of the
lowland Scottish establishment. Although it had a presence in every major
Gaelic community, it was still operating exclusively in
English in the early 1970s. In 1972, Gaelic activist
Iain Noble persuaded the bank to issue him with its first Gaelic (actually bilingual)
cheque-book. These have since become popular, and the
Royal Bank soon followed suit. Today the bank advertises itself in the
Highlands and
Hebrides under the Gaelic title '''Banca na h-Alba'''.
Corporate Structure
The Bank has several subsidiaries and brands:
★
Sainsbury's Bank (50%)
★ Bank of Scotland Corporate
★ Bank of Scotland Investment Services
★ Bank of Scotland Private Banking
★ Capital Bank plc
★ HBOS Financial Services Ltd
★ HBOS Insurance & Investment Group Ltd
★ HBOS Treasury Services plc
★
Bank of Scotland (Ireland)
★
Bank of Scotland (Netherlands)
List of Governors of the Bank of Scotland
#
John Holland 1696-
1697
#
David Melville, 3rd Earl of Leven 1697-
1728
#
Alexander Hume, 2nd Earl of Marchmont 1728-
1740
#
Charles Hope, 1st Earl of Hopetoun 1740-
1742
# Colonel
John Stratton 1742
#
John Hay, 4th Marquess of Tweeddale 1742-
1762
#
Hugh Hume, 3rd Earl of Marchmont 1763-
1790
#
Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville 1790-
1811
#
Robert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Meville 1812-
1851
#
James Alexander, 10th Earl of Dalhousie 1851-
1860
#
John Campbell, 2nd Marquess of Breadalbane 1861-
1862
#
George Hamilton-Baillie, 11th Earl of Haddington 1863-
1870
#
John Hamilton Dalrymple, 10th Earl of Stair 1870-
1903
#
Alexander Hugh Bruce, 6th Baron Balfour of Burleigh 1904-
1921
#
William John Mure 1921-
1924
#
Sidney Herbert, 16th Baron Elphinstone 1924-
1955
# Sir
John Craig 1955-
1957
#
Steven Bilsland, 1st Baron Bilsland 1957-
1966
#
Henry Alexander Hepburne-Scott, 10th Lord Polwarth 1966-
1972
#
Ronald John Bilsland Colville, 2nd Baron Clydesmuir 1972-
1981
# Sir
Thomas Neilson Risk 1981-
1991
# Sir
David Bruce Pattullo 1991-
1998
# Sir
Alistair Grant 1998-
1999
# Sir
John Shaw 1999-
2001
# Sir
Peter Burt 2001-
2003
#
George Mitchell 2003-
2006
#
Dennis Stevenson, Lord Stevenson of Coddenham 2006-
Football
Bank of Scotland sponsored the
Scottish Premier League from its inception in 1998 to season 2006/2007 when it declined to renew the deal in favour of investing in grassroots sport instead.
See also
★
British banknotes
★
List of banks
★
Royal Bank of Scotland
★
William Paterson (banker)
External links
★
Bank of Scotland
★
history, from the HBOS website