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Lloyds Bank plc [1] [4] ... Authorized Capital £2,000,000. FOUNDED ON The Private Banks of Messrs. Lloyds & Co. and Messrs. Moilliet and Sons, with-which have ...
Lloyds Bank was founded in 1765 but the wider Group's heritage extends over 320 years, dating back to the founding of the Bank of Scotland by the Parliament of Scotland in 1695. [5] The Group's headquarters are located at 25 Gresham Street in the City of London, while its registered office is on The Mound in Edinburgh.
Sampson Lloyd II (15 May 1699 – 1779) [2] was an English iron manufacturer and banker, who co-founded Lloyds Bank. [3] He was a member of the notable Lloyd family of Birmingham . Career
Sampson Lloyd (1664 – 3 January 1724) was a Welsh iron manufacturer in Birmingham, then a small town in the county of Warwickshire, England, and was the founder of the Lloyd family of Birmingham, iron-founders and bankers, which went on to found Lloyds Bank, today one of the largest banks in the United Kingdom.
Sampson Lloyd II (1699–1779), co-founded Lloyds Bank. Charles Lloyd (1748–1828), banker and philanthropist. Charles Lloyd (1775–1839), poet and friend of Charles Lamb, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Thomas de Quincey. Sampson Lloyd (1820–1889), MP and chairman of Lloyds Bank. John Henry Lloyd, Lord Mayor of Birmingham, 1901–1902.
Delta Lloyd Group (incorporating Nedlloyd insurance founded 1854) Lloyds Bank and its related organisations are not named after the London coffee house; the bank was founded in Birmingham by Sampson Lloyd.
The Lloyd family of Birmingham, a junior branch of Lloyd of Dolobran, were iron-founders and bankers descended from Sampson Lloyd (1699–1779) of "Farm", anciently in the manor of Bordesley, [7] now in the locality of Sparkbrook, who with his eldest son Sampson Lloyd (1728–1807) founded Lloyds Bank.
The Hampshire Banking Company had been established in Southampton in 1834 and the North Wilts Banking Company in Melksham in 1835, from the private bank of Moule & Co. founded in 1792. [1] Lloyds Bank offered to acquire the bank on the terms of one Lloyds share, plus £2 cash, for each Capital and Counties share in 1918, [2] with the accounts ...