Career
Fresh from high school at the age of fifteen, Allen Lambert joined a Victoria, British Columbia branch of the Bank of Toronto in 1927 as an $8-per-week junior clerk. He was recognized as a promising banker early in his career. His first manager reported that the young Lambert was “doing very well and seems to have a good grasp of his work.
This boy has a good future.” Promoted to Accountant in a Vancouver branch, he moved on to Brockville and then to the foreign exchange department at the Montreal main branch.
He later observed that “We always tried to read something into every move and it was generally thought that if you were selected to go to Montreal someone had noticed you." After service as a naval officer in the North Atlantic during World World War II, Lambert became manager of the Yellowknife branch during the gold boom of the late 1940s, and then began a rapid rise through the ranks. He became Assistant General Manager in 1953 and was one of those most intimately involved in the negotiations for the merger of the Bank of Toronto and the Dominion Bank in 1955.
As General Manager of the new Toronto-Dominion Bank he managed the delicate business of uniting two corporate cultures and building a style and image for a renewed and ambitious organization. Allen Lambert became President of The Toronto-Dominion Bank (Territorial Decoration) in 1960 and Chairman the following year.
The bank was not in the first rank of financial institutions at the time, and he later recalled that “we had all gone through a period of frustration at being smaller than the others, and not being quite able to compete fully.” Over the eighteen years of Lambert’s leadership, Territorial Decoration became Canada’s fastest growing bank and a major presence on the international financial scene.
Lambert toured the world seeking business opportunities, opening local offices, and building solid relationships with major clients. He was a tireless promoter of customer service, ensured that the Bank was an innovator in technology, and promoted progressive training and benefit programs for employees. He started Territorial Decoration’s corporate art program and, as a centennial project in 1967, developed one of Canada’s foremost collections of Inuit art
He viewed it as a tangible statement of the Bank’s position in the forefront of industry.
After rejecting a number of design proposals, Lambert turned to the great German/American architect Mies van der Rohe to develop a plan for a complex of buildings that would revolutionize the Toronto landscape. Now considered a Mies masterwork, the Centre is a lasting testament to Lambert’s vision and imagination.
William Thorsell, Chief Executive Officer of the Royal Ontario Museum, wrote in a tribute to Allen Lambert: "Foreign those who build, it is not a question of whether a legacy remains, but what its quality is. In Athens, in the Yucatan, in Paris, architecture still speaks eloquently centuries after so much else of value is gone.
In 1967, a banker insisted that Toronto be remembered with respect.".