
How Spanish-owned bank TSB has its roots in Scotland
At the time the TSB was founded, commercial banks required a minimum deposit of £10 to open an account, a sum far out of the reach of agricultural labourers and domestic servants who typically earned 10d (4p) a day.Many workers were only paid for the days they worked, and often received payments once every three months.Rev Duncan based his new penny bank on business principles, encouraging them to budget and paying interest on its investors' modest savings. He had worked for three years in a commercial bank in Liverpool before taking up the ministry in Ruthwell Parish so he knew how the system worked. It is believed he took the money from Ruthwell and redeposited it into a commercial bank, where he received between 5% and 6% interest and paid out between 4% and 5%.
Within five years, savings banks based on Duncan's model were operating throughout the UK, and by 2002 there were 109 savings bank organisations in 92 countries.The Trustee Savings Bank's original 18th century building closed in 1875 due to the small population of the hamlet.But the cottage where he opened his savings bank - initially for one hour a week on a Thursday evening - is now the Savings Bank Museum.It reopened last summer after being closed for five years, now housing hundreds of piggy banks as well as Duncan's desk.Duncan died in 1846 from a stroke, aged 71.The headquarters of TSB Bank at 120 George Street in Edinburgh is named Henry Duncan House after its founder.
Since 1810 TSB has gone through a number of iterations before merging with Lloyds Bank in 1995 to form Lloyds TSB.During the global financial crisis in 2008, Lloyds was forced by the European Commission to spin off the business as a separate brand after Lloyds received a £20bn bailout.Lloyds eventually sold its remaining stake in TSB to Spanish organisation Sabadell in 2015 in a deal worth £1.7bn.On Tuesday it was announced TSB will be bought by Santander for at least £2.65bn if shareholders agree, and the rival Spanish bank "intends to integrate TSB in the Santander UK group".TSB has 175 branches in the UK and 5,000 employees while Santander has around 349 banks, but it has been shutting branches, saying more customers want to do their banking digitally.The UK management said it would be "business as usual" for customers and staff, with the takeover expected to happen early next year, but the TSB name could soon be a thing of the past.

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