The School Hill Hotel was known locally as T’Skennin’
Door due to its having two doors set on slightly different angles.
School Hill itself took its name from its proximity
to St George’s School at the top of Bath Street. When St George’s church was consecrated in 1796
Green Hill was immediately to the west of the church, with Lark Hill further on
towards the road to Chorley. School Hill was to the north of the church.
In his book, Bolton Pubs 1800 – 2000, Gordon Readyhough
tells us that Ellen Crompton was the licensee in the 1880s when the pub also had its own brewery. Indeed, Mrs Crompton was already at the pub in 1871, according to
Worrall’s Directory for that year, and there is every chance that she and her husband John were the pub’s first licensees. Mr Crompton had previously
run a beerhouse on Higher Bridge Street.
Later, the School Hill became a Settle’s pub. Settle’s
were a local firm based on Cross Street, just off Turton Street [more details on Settle's brewery can be found here]. Settle’s sold out to Dutton’s of Blackburn in 1951. Dutton’s
and its 800-odd pubs were bought by Whitbread in 1964. The presence in the above photo of a Whitbread tankard on
the front of the pub suggests the image was taken post-1964.
The School Hill closed in 1972 and was demolished
soon afterwards. The whole area was redeveloped and Topp Way opened roughly on
part of the site of the pub in 1980.
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