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The term ‘back street pub’ is normally used for pubs
off the main road, but the Bee Hive really was in a back street.
Its address was 51 Back Derby Street but it was actually an end terrace on Milk
Street. Part of the property had been converted into a pub and was given its own
entrance in Back Derby Street. The licensees and their families actually lived
in another part of the same property, 2 Milk Street.
The pub dated back to the 1840s when a labourer
named Henry Ashton opened up part of his home in Milk Street as a beerhouse. He
was succeeded as landlord on his death in 1864 by his second wife Ann Ashton, with his son
James Ashton working in the pub’s brewery.
The Ashtons were succeeded in the 1870s by the Reddy
family: Martin Reddy and wife Mary. Martin Reddy died in 1888 and he was
succeeded by his wife, Mary and when she died in 1899 by their daughter, also named
Mary.
The Bee Hive became a Magees house. It closed in
1936 and the property was converted back into a private residence where the younger Mary Reddy lived until her death in 1957. It was
demolished in the early-1960s, along with part of Milk Street. The rest of the
area was pulled down in the early-seventies.
Faringdon Walk was built on the site of Milk Street.
Back Derby Street still exists in part, but the stretch close to what was Milk
Street is now Ashbury Close. The shot below from 2012 (copyright Google Street View) is of the Ashbury Close - Faringdon Walk junction. The Bee Hive stood
on the site of the bungalow on the corner.
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