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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
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    Country: United States

    Default Chancery Lane Safe Deposit vault info

    Hello,

    I am trying to find out where was all the old Milner’s vaults taken before the remodel in 1953 by John Tann? does anyone have photos of the vaults.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Aberdeenshire
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    Country: Great Britain

    Default Chancery Lane Safe Deposit.

    Quote Originally Posted by Faris23 View Post
    Hello,

    I am trying to find out where was all the old Milner’s vaults taken before the remodel in 1953 by John Tann? does anyone have photos of the vaults.
    The original Vaults were originally at the top end of Chancery Lane when built in 1876. The main supplier of security equipment was indeed Milner but there were vast extensions added around 1900 with equipment by the newly founded Ratner Safe Co. who were to become the largest supplier of Safe Deposits in the country.
    When bomb damage weakened the structure in WW1 it was decided to relocate and add the London Silver Vaults as two separate adjoining strong rooms. The first site was completely redeveloped and no doubt the doors would have gone to scrap for which there was a great demand just after the war.
    The new site was further down Chancery Lane with the entrance in a short side street called Southampton Buildings. This work was completed by John Tann Ltd.in the mid 1930s.
    Which vault, the old or the new, do you seek pictures? Only engravings are available for the first as far as I know and photography is forbidden in the second although one or two do exist.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Aberdeenshire
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    703
    Country: Great Britain

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by safeman View Post
    The original Vaults were originally at the top end of Chancery Lane when built in 1876. The main supplier of security equipment was indeed Milner but there were vast extensions added around 1900 with equipment by the newly founded Ratner Safe Co. who were to become the largest supplier of Safe Deposits in the country.
    When bomb damage weakened the structure in WW1 it was decided to relocate and add the London Silver Vaults as two separate adjoining strong rooms. The first site was completely redeveloped and no doubt the doors would have gone to scrap for which there was a great demand just after the war.
    The new site was further down Chancery Lane with the entrance in a short side street called Southampton Buildings. This work was completed by John Tann Ltd.in the mid 1930s.
    Which vault, the old or the new, do you seek pictures? Only engravings are available for the first as far as I know and photography is forbidden in the second although one or two do exist.
    corrections ; WW2 and 1950's.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
    Posts
    36
    Country: United States

    Default

    so most of the original vaults where scrapped and none where saved? I wish I could see some of the original doors. Are you sure they where not moved to any other location not even one or two?

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Aberdeenshire
    Posts
    703
    Country: Great Britain

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Faris23 View Post
    so most of the original vaults where scrapped and none where saved? I wish I could see some of the original doors. Are you sure they where not moved to any other location not even one or two?
    The cost of properly uninstalling and removing a very heavy strong room door from a demolition site would itself outweigh the value not to mention that an 1876 design would be far below the specification for the 1950s. i.e. high explosives.

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Milner Hfast      List 3  Hobbs Lock (3).JPG 
Views:	15 
Size:	35.7 KB 
ID:	22218 This is not a strong room door but a Milner cash safe from roughly the same period which illustrates the lock and boltwork casing which is attached to the back of the door plate by heavy hex-head screws.

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