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Chapter 8: AT WORK
Johnnie and Gertie learn the banking business together
When Gertie started going into work with Johnnie, she thought that most of his colleagues at the bank regarded her presence as merely amusing, but Gertie sat in on all his meetings, making herself useful by making notes for her own benefit at first. Johnnie agreed that her note taking and her assimilation of the salient points were every bit as good as his own notes and he encouraged her to take over the note taking as her valuable contribution to the business. As her confidence in the procedures and conduct of the discussions and negotiations grew, and backed up by her notes, she was able to contribute firstly by reminding both parties of what had already been agreed and even make suggestions of her own.
Gertie learned a lot about the corporate banking business, about how businesses come to the bank to arrange finance in different ways. Sometimes the bank will compare the amount of the loans requested through their business plans with what resources the business has to use that capital and then assess the returns that could be expected, balanced against the costs of the development and over what period and at what rate the loans and the interest payable can be repaid.
Once the request for loans has been considered viable the bank will then consider the best way to fund the loan. Sometimes the bank can supply the full loan amount on its own. Sometimes, especially if the sums required are large, the merchant bank will invite other merchant banks to share the loan or to underwrite some of the money required through a series of legal documents, including a prospectus, sale agreements, tie in securities for the loans, create debenture stocks, draw up trust deeds and issue bonds.
Sometimes the merchant banks will have clients who have come into money, either by inheritance, selling off another company or wish to spread their investments across a range of investment possibilities. The merchant bank would then identify companies that need an injection of capital and the bank will act as a broker to bring the parties together and ensure legal agreements and securities between them, for fees from both parties.
Sometimes clients and potential clients re drawn together by the bank with possibilities of combining their borrowing potential for a project in which they have common interests. An example might be a canal construction project abroad, might bring about a consortium of partners, such as civil engineers, a bridge construction company, steel foundry and a shipping company who may form a subsidiary company just for that and similar projects.
The main company preparing to bid for the project may well use a merchant bank to bring the partners together rather than have separate companies bid for various parts of the project; a consortium with experts in their own fields working together would be more efficient and able to outbid companies who were having to sub-contract most of the project.
Particularly in the late 1940s, so soon after the devastating world war, states and countries, some old and well established, with others newly-formed out of peace treaties, independence and or by conquest, were keen to rebuild their industries and restore much of their damaged infrastructure. They would come to the financial market place to borrow capital to invest or through the bank's contacts attract investors who will give the countries what they needed by helping to bring much needed resources to the market that would otherwise remain unusable.
With some projects, the schemes were so well thought out that selling the loans to other banks, in order to spread the risks, they would be taken up more readily than others. Where projects were harder to sell, because the projects were maybe quite large, only marginally profitable, and would take a long time to return profits, such as a gas or oil pipeline, an oil refinery, a railway upgrade or building a luxury liner to take advantage of holiday-makers' post-war prosperity; these projects would need more underwriting by the banks rather than directly attract investors who had more attractive schemes promising short-term returns.
Gertie found it fascinating that banks who were fiercely competitive to fight off other banks to win the leading role in financing a project, would then cheerfully offer the same banks a slice of the action by contributing funds to the project either directly or by underwriting it. In the same way, Standhope Winter would, after due diligence in fact-checking the prospectus, buy in or underwrite other banks' schemes.
Most international merchant banks had firm contacts bordering on friendships with other banks. Most of the bankers were led my men, Gertie found, but the few women who had earned their spurs in the banking business during the war had stayed on and were beginning to make their presence felt. The "old boys network" was beginning to find itself being phased out and the schemes being brought to market were much more rigorously costed and less speculative.
Gertie found it all very interesting and she soon learned how to have a better informed view of how businesses, taxes, international trade, duties, tariffs and revenues helped to make the world go round. In December, as a large holder of shares, who had proved herself capable of understanding the business, she was elected to the board of directors of the bank and the salary that went into her bank account went up significantly. That salary still went largely unspent as Evie insisted on charging everything on her "own" account. Gertie discovered that Mama had set up a separate bank account for "Gertie's Getting Up to Speed", that Evie charged everything to.
No matter, Gertie was learning how to be comfortable in a society which was better educated and had more experience of life beyond mere subsistence level and, with Evie's support, rarely felt out of place. Possibly, Gertie thought, that Evie and Johnnie were ensuring that the circles they preferred to engage with were often liberal-minded and not at all snobbish about Gertie's origins; people she met were much more interested in the here and now, rather than past. Gertie's thoughts on this, which she often discussed with her friends, was that the recent world war had "churned up the barrel" somewhat, with officers and men sharing whatever battles, physical and mental, together in war and still surviving. And those people who emerged safely on the other side of the conflict didn't have the same prejudices that might have prevailed in earlier much more settled times.
***
It was in December, with Evie arranging so many social events to attend, that she took Grandmother Maudie's advice to send for her lady's maid Maisie to attend to her while she lived at Dorset House during her long engagement. Evie was happy to leave the mechanics of accommodating Maisie to her housekeeper and therefore Gertie's lady's maid turned up two days later.
Maisie was happy, she told Gertie, that she was sharing a cosy room in the attics with two other servants. There was Marjory, a 15-year-old under parlourmaid who was originally from Scotland, and Lucinda, a Scouse 17-year-old kitchen maid who was training to become a qualified cook by the time she was 21. Maisie said she was made welcome by each of her new roommates, who both admitted that they held her in awe. The housekeeper had also told her that while she would be free of general household duties so she could devote herself to her main job, she would be expected to be respectful of other staff and not cause any undue disruption to the household. Apparently that was a thing with the personal staff of some visitors but the housekeeper/butler partnership at Dorset House wouldn't stand for even hints of such behaviour.
Maisie pointed out that the same rules applied at Standhope Manor and she knew very well that if guest servants tried to throw their weight around, there were any number of subtle sabotage tactics that would make their lives miserable if they weren't respectful of the permanent house servants. Personal servants did have a certain high level of status among the staff, Maisie said, so they expected respect and ready assistance in complying with their charges' requests, so a friendly relationship between respective households was easily negotiated in well-run households and the Dorsets' house was run with minimal issues around service maintenance, very much on Standhope Manor lines, so Maisie felt more at home and was delighted to be with her mistress.
Gertie assured her that she was also glad that Maisie was able to join her here and delighted that she was happy in her situation.
By the time her engagement to Johnnie was announced to the press in early January 1949, Gertie was already accepted on her own merit at the bank and among those of the bank's customers who had become acquainted with her, including some of the richest and most influential people in the country, that she was smart, beautiful, and excellent company, able to get on famously with virtually anyone she met without ruffling any feathers.
Gertie found that, rather than always relying on Evie's excellent social contacts, she found she was now receiving invites from bank's customers' wives and mothers to tea or morning coffees as she was becoming regarded by them as being someone interesting to meet and to build current and long-term relationships with.
As Gertie's social life blossomed, she found Collins' regular meetings helpful. Although Collins was her private secretary, he was still bookkeeping the accounts for Standhope Manor and the Standhope Hospital in East London. He explained that Lady Standhope would continue to oversee those elements for many years to come but eventually they would pass onto Gertie, probably once she was married and her family had grown up.
Gertie thought it would be useful for her to learn the mechanics of bookkeeping. Even though she was working two or three days a week in the Standhope Bank, dealing with finances at board level particularly picking over other companies' balance sheets, she would like to know more about how these figures appeared, where they were from and how they balanced. Collins agreed that a thorough understanding of accounts from bottom to top would be useful to her. In fact, he thought, as Lady Standhope seemed to have a firm grip on both household accounts and that of a large and complicated hospital, particular in the days before the new National Health Service took over the job of providing the core income, that the Lady must have been similarly taught the mechanics by one of Collins' predecessors. So Collins schooled Gertie into the complexities of accounting practices, including preparation of budgets.
Privately, Collins admired how enthusiastic she was and how quickly Gertie tackled the complexities of accounting and continually came up with ways to challenge her with exercises that would help her in future to assess how unscrupulous businesses could disguise discrepancies to make poor companies look in better shape than they really were.
Collins also helped Gertie's social standing by investigating the small arts-type activities that were subtly targeted to her by her new friends. This enabled Gertie to have a general understanding of all of these schemes and so she only "took an active interest" in projects she personally saw some benefit to and tempered with the reassurances of Collins or Barrington that those small investments would have successful or at least mutually satisfactory outcomes.
The other project that Lady Standhope retained her financial interest in and Gertie clearly enjoyed visiting whenever she was invited, was her old employment place, the theatre.
During the winter months particularly, Lady Standhope was a regular theatre-goer and Johnnie and Gertie often accompanied her there sometimes with Lord Standhope present when he could summon the strength to do so.
Maisie was able to renew her friendship with the management and staff of the theatre and catch up on some of the gossip that always surrounds such entertainment venues. Gertie was always warmly welcomed as a special friend as well as a respected guest and she reciprocated by always being open and friendly with her old friends and keen to get to know the new staff too, expecting that she would always wish to have a lifelong relationship with a place where she first met the man who would be her first in everything.
***
Barrington and Collins were important figures in Gertie's life during her long (to her) period of unofficial and then publicly-announced engagement. However strange it might have seemed to her to be given a vast fortune of much more that two million pounds without even a marriage contract, she soon got accustomed to the regular financial updates and opportunities use the influence she could bring to bear using what to her mind was some of the enormous funds at her disposal.
Barrington had initially signed over to her the shares in the family bank, which were confirmed as thirteen percent of Standhope Winter. These were a large part of the trust fund and, although their face value when they were issued some ninety years earlier, at a penny a share, each share was now worth thousands.
Gertie's trust fund had just under three percent of Winstone's Bank, the original Istanbul offshoot that had returned to base itself in London at the outbreak of war with the Ottoman Empire in 1914; this was also a merchant bank that concentrated on shipping as its specialisation, while Standhope Winter, which had started out as a specialist in agricultural commodities in the 1820s had become more involved in industrial financing.
Gertie also had five percent of a bank in South America run by the Perez-Winter family, established in the 1850s and were once heavily involved in investing in ranches and the canning of bully beef but more recently were building airfields and transport links across the vast South American continent and delivering unbelievable returns for her small five percent interest. There were other investments that Barrington assured her were for the purpose of having a spread of sources of income so if one market went down in value, those losses would be balanced by increases elsewhere.
She discovered through Barrington's chattering commentary going through the figures that back in the 1860s, when the bank was centred on markets in the East End of London, Nelly Weinstein had founded a small hospital as a charity to help East Enders get free medical help at a time where paying for a doctor was beyond the means of most working families. Nelly called it the Standhope Hospital in honour of her family name which had otherwise died out as a surname although it lived on in the title her son inherited.
Once Collins proved to Lady Standhope that Gertie was up to speed in her financial acumen, Gertie was informed by Lady Standhope that the Standhope Hospital Charity would be handed over to her, if she wanted it and, with Gertie's enthusiastic agreement, Lady Standhope included her in programmed visits and then involved in meetings with the management. Gertie visited the hospital with Mama often and soon set up independent small projects with the hospital management to fill gaps that the stressed post-war Labour government were unable to afford. Over a period of some years, Mama stepped back and Gertie became the hospital's main charitable fundraiser.
When Gertie first became involved in the East End hospital it was late 1948 and the then Labour Government in power was introducing the National Health Service, providing free medical help for all, but the nation's resources so soon after the war were still stretched, with food rationing still in force and crippling national war debt payments which had to be met.
Gertie visited the old hospital, the structure and organisation of which she found was crumbling. The staff were still working around bomb damage dating from the war with a complete wing beyond usable, a general lack of resources and shortage of qualified staff. With Barrington's expertise and release of dividends, as well as donations from the estate of her father-in-law when he passed in 1950, Gertie negotiated with the local health authority to have the hospital absorbed into the national health scheme but with the freedom of charitable status to improve the fabric of the building and providing other aid where needed. Immediately work began on repairing the bomb damage, opening and refitting more wards, renewing operating theatres and treatment rooms and very soon the hospital began to earn top ratings for service and teaching experience and therefore attracted both experienced consultants and energetic newly-qualified medical staff to work there and become a brilliant hospital in an area of great need.
Gertie was beginning to make a mark on the world.
to be continued
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