London, United Kingdom
20 May 2010 – London, England – The ATM Industry Association (ATMIA) today paid tribute to Mr. John Shepherd-Barron, the inventor of the ATM, whose funeral takes place tomorrow in Tain, a small town in north-eastern Scotland.
He died on Saturday after a short illness. He was 84. His obituary can be found at http://news.scotsman.com/obituaries/Obituary-John-ShepherdBarron.6303157.jp
“John Shepherd-Barron’s invention of the cash dispenser revolutionised banking,” commented Mike Lee, CEO of ATMIA, “and spawned a worldwide industry with an installation base that has grown to over 1.8 million ATMs.”
In 2006, ATMIA presented Mr. Shepherd-Barron with a Lifetime Achievement Award. He received an OBE for services to banking in the Queen's New Year Honours List in 2005. Near the end of his life, he stated that he had used ATMs successfully for over forty years.
“I was privileged to interview Mr. Shepherd-Barron in 2001 and to finally meet him when we presented him with a lifetime achievement award on behalf of the industry,” said Lee. “He was a charming gentleman of strong convictions who was not afraid to challenge the status quo. I will never forget his words when he described how he conceived of the ATM in the bath one Saturday evening. He said he decided then and there “if chocolates can be dispensed, why can’t cash?’”
Dominic Hirsch, Managing Director of Retail Banking Research, a global leader in ATM research, summed up the sentiment of the industry towards him in these words: “Everyone who works in the ATM industry owes John Shepherd-Barron a huge debt of gratitude. For those of us who were lucky enough to know him, we will remember his intellect, his humour and above all his pioneering spirit".
“It’s so sad he has gone,“ Amanda Hardy, ATMIA’s European Marketing Director, added. “We used to speak quite regularly. He remained passionate about the industry to the end.”
In October last year, an incident occurred at an ATM which warmed the inventor’s heart. He had drawn cash at his local ATM and left a £10 note left lying in the dispenser tray. It had been handed in by a honest employee at the nearby store, whereupon it was figured out he had been the previous user. The postman then delivered the £10 note to him at his home. Shepherd-Barron donated this money to the British Heart Foundation. It was the first time he had ever had a problem drawing cash at an ATM, through no fault of the machine, of course. A letter expressing his appreciation for this act of honesty appeared in the Ross-shire Journal. It is perhaps his last public statement and can be read at http://www.ross-shirejournal.co.uk/news/fullstory.php/aid/6897/Honesty_pays.html
For more information, please contact Mike Lee at mike@atmia.com.
About ATMIA
The ATM Industry Association is a global non-profit trade association with over 1,500 members in 50 countries. Its mission is to promote ATM convenience, growth and usage worldwide, protect the ATM industry's assets, interests, good name and public trust; and provide education, best practices, political voice and networking opportunities for member organizations. In June 2003, ATMIA established the Global ATM Security Alliance (GASA) (www.globalasa.com) with the mission to employ global security resources in a united alliance in order to protect the ATM industry from criminal activity.














