Derby Street runs across the centre of this 2012 image (copyright Google Street View). High Street runs off into the distance. The Jolly Carter was situated on the right-hand corner as we look, where the sign is. The Rams Head still stands on the opposite corner though it is now an Asian food shop.
The
Jolly Carter was situated at 281 Derby Street on the corner of Derby Street and
High Street, directly opposite the Rams Head.
James
Green was a carter living on Derby Street in 1841. Aged 36, he lived with his
wife Mary, also 36, and their five children. Business must have been good
because the Greens were able to afford to employ a servant. While the image of domestic
help is somebody working in a large house in an Upstairs, Downstairs setting it
is surprising just how many tradespeople in more modest households utilised
servants in the nineteenth century. Pubs were full of them.
James
Green branched out into the beerselling business around 1842 and like many who converted
their homes into beerhouses in the middle of the 18th century he
named his pub after his ‘other’ job and called it the Jolly Carter.
The
Greens remained at the pub well into the 1850s; however, they were gone by 1861 when
the pub was being run by John Smith. He was a coal miner living at Edge Fold
with his wife and baby in 1851. Like James Green he remained in his other job
working as a coal miner while his wife, Mary, ran the pub.
The
Jolly Carter appears to have struggled as landlords came and went. But Derby
Street at that time was a competitive market. The pub was bought by local
brewers Magee Marshall & Co whose Cricket Street brewery was about 200
yards away from the Jolly Carter.
The
problem for the Jolly Carter was that Magees owned a number of other pubs on
Derby Street. Magees houses the Rams Head, the Crown and the Pike View were all
nearby and Magees wanted a full licence for one of those pubs, the Pike View, enabling it to sell
wines and spirits as well as beer. Licensing magistrates were loath to simply
upgrade a beerhouse’s licence to a full licence. They expected some
horse-trading to take place as they wanted to reduce the number of licensed
premises. A brewery had to be prepared to give up other licences before the
magistrates could be expected to grant a full licence.
In
1904, Magees applied for a full licence for the Pike View. In return they said they were
prepared to give up the licence for the Jolly Carter, a beer off-licence at
68-70 Rosamund Street, as well as the Elephant and Castle on Blackhorse Street,
a fully-licensed pub since 1804. The magistrates granted a full licence to the
Pike View and the Jolly Carter closed.
The
old beerhouse became a shop and for a number of years it was a tripe dressers owned
by Vose and Sons who merged with a number of other Lancashire tripe shops in
1920 to form United Cattle Products (UCP). It was a poodle parlour in the
seventies and was demolished along with the rest of the row in the 1980s.
No comments:
Post a Comment