Annewiggy
Tamworth |
1651 of 1703
Thu 11th Apr 2024 9:38pm
Another picture from the Coventry Graphic. The Craven Arms in High Street. This pub had gone by the time the picture was in print in 1913
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Helen F
Warrington |
1652 of 1703
Tue 16th Apr 2024 10:16pm
One record turned up while I was riffling through the Herbert archives - PA54/354/6 - 20 Aug 1691 Ralph Adderley (of Coventry, innholder) of the "George" inn on the northern side of Fleet Street (lying between a house occupied by Henry Pattrick on the east and one occupied by James Nailer on the west) with three stables, a coachhouse, two yards and a muckyard, a garden, a chamber over James Nailer's shop, a back kitchen which is part of J. Nailer's house (all occupied by Ralph Adderley) and a passage through Nailer's ground between the back kitchen and the inn's own, these altogether comprising a three-bay frontage, along with a stairway nearby
Since I have pictures of a pair of yards drawn by Troughton, including exterior stairs that fit this description I'm thinking that The George Inn was next door to the building on the west Corner of West Orchard - the same location of the City Arms (not the one you're familiar with but an earlier version that sat in roughly the same place - see Board of Health map). In fact on the BoH map there is a George Yard, off West Orchard, which would have been where the stables etc would have been accessed, not from Fleet Street.
In other words, the George Inn wasn't related to the later George IV opposite but to the City Arms.
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks |
1653 of 1703
Mon 22nd Apr 2024 8:54pm
Hello,
It's bedtime story time, are we all tucked in?
Once upon a time, I was waiting for the No7 bus to Sewall Highway, at the Lower Ford St bus stop adjacent to the Canterbury Arms & Foresters pubs..
You can't go to sleep yet!
It was around 9pm, on a wet, soggy Sunday evening. I was returning home, after I had played piano for our chapel youth group.
I was sheltering in the entrance of the Foresters, when a gent emerged to go into his home, next door to the pub.
"You can't stay there in this rain, come inside", he said so friendly. I explained that I'm only fifteen. He then pulled me in, introduced me to the lady in charge. I explained that I was waiting for the No7 bus. She told me to sit here, where I could see it emerging from Priory St, so that I wouldn't miss it, & furnished me with a glass of lemonade.
I will never forget that kindness.
When I got home, mum asked where on earth had I been, I was smelling like an ashtray.
That was the first time that I can remember ever being in a proper pub, legitimately.
That act of kindness from both of those individuals, shaped me. I know it now as an act of 'Common Grace', my mum used to call it.
Hope you liked that.
Lights off now when you've drunk your cocoa.
ps. The advent of time & my memory, it might have been the Foresters, not the Canterbury Arms. I had alighted from the old No3 at the Alex cinema & walked passed part of the Singer factory, so I would have picked the driest place to stand, where I could see the bus coming along Ford St. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Helen F
Warrington |
1654 of 1703
Tue 23rd Apr 2024 8:22am
A lovely story.
Great photo too of the three streets in panorama. Taken as individual views it would be easy to imagine them in different places as they're quite different. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
PhiliPamInCoventry
Holbrooks |
1655 of 1703
Tue 23rd Apr 2024 8:53am
Hello Helen & thank you for that.
I was brought up in a home where I was taught respect for folk in general. Chapel folk & pubs just simply didn't mix in my growing up experience. I knew folks in chapel who had signed proclamations of abstinence for one thing. That was based on an era at the turn of the century where I might have had some sympathy, but in the fifties, alcoholism wasn't such an issue. It became more of an issue in the seventies, particularly in my age group.
On Thursday afternoons, mum's shops half day closing, mum would often meet up with her three shop managers for a treat somewhere. Usually a pub, following a matinee at the hippodrome.
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Helen F
Warrington |
1656 of 1703
Sun 28th Apr 2024 4:37pm
This is a fantastic twofer from David Fry and Coventry Digital. Both the White Bear and the Livery Stables at the end of New Street are visible. It's pictures like this that fill in gaps in clearer pictures of individual buildings. It fits the older maps.
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
1657 of 1703
Mon 29th Apr 2024 10:35am
Wow, that's amazing research, Helen! Like you say, it just goes to show how difficult it is to match up older and later views when the shape of the actual buildings cannot be relied on. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Helen F
Warrington |
1658 of 1703
Mon 29th Apr 2024 12:10pm
When I first read the Real Ale Rambles site, the numbering and locations of the pubs looked confusing but I now realise that it's due to them changing names, moving about, expanding and contracting.
The data invariably comes to me via our good members and yourself Rob. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
1659 of 1703
Wed 8th May 2024 9:45am
Anyone know of any images of The Cock on Jordan Well? |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Helen F
Warrington |
1660 of 1703
Wed 8th May 2024 10:35am
The Cock was located on the southern bit of Jordan Well, near to the corner of Much Park Street that wasn't covered in any photos that I've seen, other than a very fuzzy BFA shot. You can see the location on the 1850 map. The Cock Yard wasn't behind it but behind and to the side of the building next door to the east, suggesting the pub may have moved prior to the map being created. There is a very side on view to the area in a Troughton sketch but it's less useful than the aerial photo, although it strongly suggests that the area was rebuilt in the early 1800s. That was probably due to a programme of widening the entrances to certain roads for ease of access. So the building in the aerial shot was probably the one occupied by your relative.
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
1661 of 1703
Mon 20th May 2024 12:08pm
We don't have a dedicated Hay Lane thread so adding here - what happened to that building directly next door to the Pub? I originally thought it was war-damaged but have seen images of it with the Baptist Chapel ruins so not sure what happened for it to be missing today -
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Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
1662 of 1703
Mon 20th May 2024 12:59pm
Neil, do you mean the narrow bit just to the left. It appears to be part of the Golden Cross in some pictures. The only thing I can find in the newspapers is in December 1970 they are advertising as being open "after the fire " could that explain it ? |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
NeilsYard
Coventry |
1663 of 1703
Mon 20th May 2024 1:38pm
Yes thats the bit Anne here |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
1664 of 1703
Mon 20th May 2024 3:01pm
Looking through the pictures of the Golden Cross. There is a 1960's one which still has the building, then some in 1975 which have what looks like a frontage, Google maps look like there is just a space behind so whatever happened was between those dates. More recent pictures look as if they may have built there now. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
1665 of 1703
Mon 20th May 2024 3:24pm
A further picture in the CET shows the old frontage in 1968. |
Local History and Heritage - Coventry Pubs |
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