Division
Savings Certificate Office and Division
Catalogue reference: Division within NSC
What's it about?
Division within NSC
Records of the Savings Certificate Office and Division: Savings Certificate Office: PH Series Files: NSC 11. Outline History in NSC 48. Savings Certificates Division (PH Series) files: NSC 53. Weekly Snapshot of Certificates Business: NSC 55....
Full description and record details
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Reference (The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
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Division within NSC
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Title (The name of the record)
- Savings Certificate Office and Division
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Date (When the record was created)
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1906-1978
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Description (What the record is about)
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Records of the Savings Certificate Office and Division:
Savings Certificate Office: PH Series Files: NSC 11.
Outline History in NSC 48.
Savings Certificates Division (PH Series) files: NSC 53.
Weekly Snapshot of Certificates Business: NSC 55.
Reviews and Reports: NSC 58.
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Held by (Who holds the record)
- The National Archives, Kew
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Legal status (A note as to whether the record being described is a Public Record or not)
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Public Record(s)
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Language (The language of the record)
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English
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Creator(s) (The creator of the record)
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- Department for National Savings, Savings Certificate Division, 1969-1973
- Department for National Savings, Savings Certificate Office, 1969-1969
- Post Office Savings Department, Savings Certificate Division, 1948-1969
- Post Office Savings Department, Savings Certificate Office, 1916-1969
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Physical description (The amount and form of the record)
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5 series
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Administrative / biographical background (Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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Savings Certificates
The Chancellor of the Exchequer presented proposals for additional vehicles for savers on 15 November 1915. The first savings certificates came on sale on 21 February 1916. Savings certificates were first introduced on 19 February 1916 as a wartime measure on the recommendation of a Committee set up by the Government to enquire into the possibility of attracting the savings of the small investor. They started as War Savings Certificates with a purchase price of 15s 6d and their value increased to £1 6s after 10 years, representing compound interest at the rate of over 5 percent. By the end of the 1914-1918 war, £207 million had been raised by their sale and their popularity had won a permanent place in the field of investment. On 22 November 1920 their name was changed to National Savings Certificates.
Through the years as it became necessary to change the interest rate, fresh issues of the certificates were placed on sale and in 1932 there was a Conversion Issue in exchange for certificates of the First Issue. There has never been any obligation on the holder to encash his certificates and certificates from 1916 can still be, and are, held
The Savings Certificate Office
The Savings Certificate Office was originally formed in the Money Order Department of the Post Office at Holloway in 1916. From February 1943, it came under the control of the Post Office Savings Department (POSD). Large sections of work and the staff were evacuated to Morecambe during 1939 and 1940; almost all had returned to London (Manor Gardens and Somerset Street) by late 1947. Beginning in June 1963 the entire Office was dispersed to Durham City and the Office was moved to a new building in Durham in the period 1963 to 1970.
In 1969 responsibility for the Office passed to the newly-created Department for National Savings when, under the terms of the Post Office Act of that year, the Post Office became a public corporation.
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Record URL
- https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/C1430/
Catalogue hierarchy
This record is held at The National Archives, Kew
Within the department: NSC
Records created or inherited by the National Savings Committee, the Post Office Savings...
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Savings Certificate Office and Division