NeilsYard
Coventry
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1471 of 1703
Thu 12th Aug 2021 9:25am
Fred's pub section has an old image but not seen this one before - must have been a very late shot of the Canal Tavern on Leicester Row which went mid 60's I believe. Thanks to my FB mate Dean Nelson.
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Primrose
USA
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1472 of 1703
Sun 22nd Aug 2021 6:07pm
In talking to my mother about the Old Wheel where the landlord was Percy Cross, she says he became the landlord of the Navigation throughout and after the war. The Coventry pubs section shows him as the landlord in the 50s, and there is no landlord of the Navigation named at all between 1940 and 1955. She's sure he was the landlord in those missing years. |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Annewiggy
Tamworth
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1473 of 1703
Mon 23rd Aug 2021 1:01pm
Hi Primrose. Looking through the newspaper archives, Percy Cross left the Old Wheel to go to the Crystal Palace at Attleborough. On 23rd November 1937 he left The Old Griffin Inn to go to the Navigation Inn. There are references to Percy Cross, also known as L P Cross, being at the Navigation until at least 1953, so your mother is correct! |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Helen F
Warrington
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1474 of 1703
Mon 23rd Aug 2021 1:10pm
Hi Primrose, Anne. There are quite a few updates that members can add to the pubs section and I believe that work will be done on it when Fred Luckett and/or John Ashby are free from commitments. I've got quite a few snippets about pubs, especially how some of them moved location, confusing the records no end. I might make a topic dedicated to the issue as I'll have forgotten most of the things I find before long. |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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1475 of 1703
Mon 23rd Aug 2021 1:54pm
Rob, I'd be happy to add images I've found of pubs that do not currently feature an image. We've come across more recently. |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Rob Orland
Historic Coventry
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1476 of 1703
Mon 23rd Aug 2021 8:29pm
That will be great Neil, thank you. As long as they're copyright-free or with owner's permission, you're welcome to email them to me and I'll add them.
I'm happy to update any of the pub pages with new information from any members who would like to help. Fred & John will, I'm sure, be happy to learn more when they get more time. |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
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1477 of 1703
Tue 24th Aug 2021 9:30am
Annewiggy,
I take it you mean the Navigation, Stoney Stanton Road, not Bedworth, identical in build but the Navi at SSR was almost home to the Home Guard. Most of their training talk during the war over a pint. The pub stood back a little, half a dozen bikes out front, the tank, now gone from across the road, but Billy Buggins hut the other side of the bridge and road. Ah yes I can see it now, but never found out why it was called Paradise, unless because of birds and trees centuries before. |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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1478 of 1703
Tue 14th Sep 2021 11:48am
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Midland Red
Thread starter
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1479 of 1703
Tue 5th Oct 2021 1:50pm
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Helen F
Warrington
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1480 of 1703
Tue 5th Oct 2021 3:00pm
Some nice info for the pubs section, MR
In 1919 the licensee was J Hains
In 1920 they building was being demolished before rebuilding as a Tudor style building
So it went from Arrmit Wallace Brown (who got in 1924) to a guy confusingly called Horatio Nelson in May 1925
Then from Mr Horatio Nelson to Sydney Burleigh Edwards in April 1927
By 1933 the licensee was A S Lane
And so on.
Post copied from topic Smithford Street (inc. Ram Bridge) on 5th Oct 2021 6:10 pm |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Midland Red
Thread starter
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1481 of 1703
Wed 6th Oct 2021 4:52pm
Posted on the Much Park Street thread, showing the late, lamented Greyhound pub
On 6th Oct 2021 4:36pm, NeilsYard said:
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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NeilsYard
Coventry
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1482 of 1703
Thu 7th Oct 2021 4:59pm
I always liked the White Lion sign for the pub in Ironmonger Row. Francis Coudrill was a puppeteer and illustrator from Warwick.
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Helen F
Warrington
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1483 of 1703
Fri 8th Oct 2021 2:23pm
Looks like Alex from Madagascar before they coloured him in. Plushy! |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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Helen F
Warrington
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1484 of 1703
Sun 10th Oct 2021 8:28pm
I've been looking at the Coach and Horses in Much Park Street. I'd already worked out that it was in two places but I'm now beginning to think that there is no connection between the two. The first was just north of the later Midland Brewery on the west side of the road. The other location is well known, just south of the Whitefriars gate on the east side. The former starts out in at least 1684 with Thomas Millward as the licensee. In 1686 Edward Waldron of Alcester, Warwickshire, an ironmonger, and John Catternes of Coventry, a tiler, transfers the property to Thomas King of Coventry, Alderman and brewer. It's called The Black Bear (or various spellings of such).
There's a comment "heretofore in the tenure of George Baker, now or late of Charles Milward" and I'm thinking that it means that George Baker takes over as licensee from Charles Millward? Or is it the other way round?
By 1759 Thomas King (I), (II), (III) and (IV) have died and a brother Edward King sells to William Lemon (I). By that time the place had been renamed the Coach and Horses. The records aren't clear if the inn is occupied by Turville Drayson of Dunchurch, Warwickshire, innholder or if he loans Mr Lemon money, or both.
Poor Mr Lemon dies almost immediately and the situation gets very complicated about what then happens to the inn. In 1763 Drayson is repaid and the property becomes fully part of the Lemon family ownership. It seems that it was offered to Cleophas Dullison (I) but the deal is broken. After taking it to the authorities the inn is handed over in 1769. Mr Dullison isn't named as the owner of an inn, his business is carting and the location is ideal as it has several stables and 4 coach houses.
Thereafter there is no mention of an inn other than as having previously been The Coach and Horses run by William Lemon. Although there was still a malt house in the yard, called Broad Yard in 1850, that was probably connected to the local pubs if only as a supplier but it's not apparent who was running it. The yard was later merged with the gardens of Knaves Post Yard to the north and eventually became the location of the Standard Motor Works.
Confusingly the records of that Coach and Horses are merged with those of the building next the the gatehouse but I'm yet to find who, if anyone, ties them together. I'm not even sure when it started trading or if it was a renamed previous pub. It may be that the owners liked the name that had long been associated with the street. I shall investigate further.
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Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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gangan
Stockton, Southam
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1485 of 1703
Tue 12th Oct 2021 6:25pm
On 6th Oct 2021 4:52pm, Midland Red said:
Posted on the Much Park Street thread, showing the late, lamented Greyhound pub
On 6th Oct 2021 4:36pm, NeilsYard said:
I worked in Lloyds Bank, Corporation Street, in the late 60s early 70s and used to run to the Greyhound most lunchtimes for a pint of Bass and a crustry ham roll. Happy days |
Local History and Heritage -
Coventry Pubs
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