Mill Hill Street and the site of the Mill Hill Tavern (copyright Google Street View) pictured in September 2014.
The
Mill Hill Tavern was situated right at the top of Mill Hill Street at
its junction with Windley Street and Kestor Street.
The
name Windley is significant in the history of the pub as the first
recorded landlord of the Mill Hill Tavern was John Windley in the
middle of the 19th
century. It is thought that Mr Windley was formerly a schoolmaster
who gave his name to the street formerly known as Hill Lane that ran
alongside the pub.
The Mill Hill Tavern doesn’t
appear on the 1849 list of beerhouses in the Little Bolton area, but
by 1853 John Windley is listed as being in business at licensed
premises that are assumed to be the Mill Hill Tavern.
John
Windley left the Mill Hill in the mid-1860s. He died in October 1871
and was described as a retired publican in the census taken earlier
that year. He was succeeded by John Wood, a man already in his
seventies. He died in 1868 and his wife Ellen took over the running
of the pub. She was assisted by her son Thomas who brewed the pub's
beer.
The
pub was sold by the Woods to Henry Heyes who owned the Fox and Goose
on Deansgate. On Heyes' death in 1881 the Mill Hill Tavern was sold
again.
The
Mill Hill's very existence was under threat in August 1881 when the
annual brewster session refused the transfer of its licence to Thomas
Pickersgill. The session was presided over by the then Mayor of
Bolton, Joseph Musgrave. A factory owner, Conservative and no friend
of pubs or their customers, Musgrave refused the licences of 14 pubs
and beerhouses at the 1881 session, but Pickersgill appealed and was
granted the licence at a later hearing.
Magee
Marshall owned the pub for a while at the end of the 19th
century. It then became a rare outlet for Grant's Tower Brewery of
Ewood, near Blackburn before being sold to William Tong's whose
Diamond Brewery was situated just off Deane Road. Tong's was taken
over by Walker Cain Ltd in 1923. Walker's merged with Joshua Tetley
Ltd to form Tetley Walker.
It
was a Tetley Walker pub that the Mill Hill ended its days. It was
granted a full licence in 1962 that enabled it to serve wines and
spirits as well as beer. But the whole of the Mill Hill area was
redeveloped in the 1970s. The pub closed in 1972 and the building
remained standing for a few years later but it was demolished along
with much of the rest of Mill Street.
The
Mill Hill caravan park now stands on the site.
|
Over 300 of the closed pubs of Bolton from the 19th century to today. Lost but not forgotten. Use your local pub and stop this list from lengthening.
Saturday, 22 April 2017
Mill Hill Tavern, 121-123 Mill Hill Street, Bolton
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Thursday, 20 April 2017
White Hart (Carringtons), 155 Deane Road, Bolton
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The White Hart in a picture taken as part of a survey of Tetley pubs in Bolton around 1974. Image: Gerard Fagan/Bolton Lancs Bygone Days Facebook group. |
The
White Hart was situated at the corner of Deane Road and Cannon
Street. According to Gordon Readyhough's book Bolton Pubs 1800-2000,
the pub dated back to 1808. It was one of the principal inns on the
road leading out of Bolton towards Deane, Westhoughton and Wigan.
In
1818 the licensee was James Pendlebury who owned the pub for at least
a decade. It was during Mr Pendlebury's tenure that a bowling green
was opened on land behind the pub a little further up Cannon Street.
It was used as such for around 50 years until the land was sold for
housing. Houses to the north of Royle Street were built on the old green.
By
the time of the 1836 directory Thomas Welsby was the landlord and
according to the 1841 census it was owned Thomas Johnson. However,
both Mr Johnson's predecessors still lived in the area. Thomas Welsby
was in business with his son on nearby Cannon Street where they
described themselves as 'manufacturers'. However, James Pendlebury
appeared to be operating in somewhat reduced circumstances. Now aged
65 he was a cotton spinner living behind the pub on Back Blacburn
Street, as that part of Deane Road was then known.
One
former landlord had even less luck. John Forshaw was at the pub in
the late-1840s, but he was hauled in front of a debtors' court in
1851. He had left the White Hart – a fully-licensed public house –
to run the St Patrick's Tavern, a beerhouse in Great Moor Street.
However, he had since gone out of business and was now living in
lodgings at the Man and Scythe on Churchgate.
Like
many pubs at that time, the White Hart had its own brewery. John
Cooper was an experienced brewer and came to run the pub in 1852, but
he had gone by the end of the 1850s to be replaced by John Proffitt.
The
Proffitt family were in charge for around 20 years. John's son Peter
Proffitt lived in Cannon Street and worked as a brewer at the pub. By
1875, John had retired and was living with another of his sons in
Mayor Street opposite Queens Park. Peter Proffiit then took over the
running of the pub until he retired and went to live with his son in
Wellington Street. The two pub-owning Proffitts died within a year of
each other: John in 1896 and Peter Proffitt in 1897.
Many
prominent local societies met at the White Hart. One such was the
Derby Lodge of Ancient Shepherds. At their anniversary meeting at the
pub in 1869 the lodge's chairman Thomas Unsworth gave a speech in
which he advised all young men to join some order and provide for
themselves against some unavoidable calamity. [1] The Loyal Order of Ancient Shepherds was – and still is - a friendly society
set up to help families against hardship brought about by illness or
death.
William
Wood was at the White Hart by 1891. He had previously been at the
Brewers Arms in nearby Atherton Street and by 1895 he had moved to another local
pub, the Noble Street Tavern. By then, Daniel Duke, a former landlord at the Hen and Chickens, was
in charge at the White Hart.
Tong's
Brewery, situated just a little further up Deane Road on the corner
of Blackshaw Lane, took over the pub in the early part of the 19th
century when James Guffogg was the licensee. By 1924, Charles Makin
Rothwell was landlord. Formerly a cotton spinner from Sunninghill
Street, off Derby Street, he later moved to Blackpool where he died
in 1947.
Tong's
sold out to Shaw's of Leigh in 1927 with the White Hart being part of
a considerable local tied estate that formed part of the deal. In
1931, Shaw's were bought out by Walker Cain of Liverpool. They
merged with the Leeds firm of Joshua Tetley to form Tetley Walker in
1960. That in turn became part of Allied Breweries Ltd the following
year.
By
1960 the old White Hart building was over 150 years old so Tetley
Walker decided it was time for it to be rebuilt. To ease the
transition the brewery bought buildings to the rear and side of the
pub, in particular houses numbered 1 and 3 Cannon Street plus a small
engineering works fronting Defence Street which ran parallel to
Cannon Street on the other side of the pub. Those buildings were all
demolished around 1961 and the new White Hart pub was built on the
site. When that was completed the old building was closed down and
demolished with the land turned into the pub's car park.
The
new White Hart was built in the same design of other estate pubs
built by Tetley Walker around that time. The Prince Rupert
off Lever Edge Lane was another example. Whereas the old White Hart
had a central entrance with equal-sized lounge and vault on either
side of the front door, the new pub had its entrance somewhat
off-centre. That meant a much smaller vault but also a much bigger
lounge where there was more comfort as pubs tried to make themselves
more attractive to couples – particularly females. It also led to
increased profits as lounge prices were a penny or two a pint more
than in the vault.
These
estate pub designs of the fifties and sixties were functional but
have been much-maligned for their architectural qualities and it is only now, as many of these pubs
disappear, that the style has found some appreciation. See here for a
collection of images of estate pubs in Manchester and surrounding
towns, including Bolton.
But
having a larger lounge meant pubs could take on the local political
clubs in offering live entertainment. At the beginning of 1964 a
young singer named Michael Haslam took up a residency at the White
Hart where he sang songs by the likes of Roy Orbison. He built up a
decent local following, so much so that Beatles' manager Brian Epstein
travelled from Liverpool in May of that year to watch Michael perform
and immediately signed him up to a mangement deal.
“Michael
is ready to move into the centre of the entertainment business,”
said Epstein. Haslam recorded two singles and he toured with the
Beatles, Gerry And The
Pacemakers and Billy J Kramer. But
that was a good as it got. He went back to obscurity and died in
2003. [2] [3] His sister, Annie Haslam, went on to enjoy a successful
career as vocalist with prog-rock band Renaissance.
When
the White Hart was rebuilt it went over to keg beer which replaced
traditional, cask-conditioned ale in many pubs in the sixties. But in
1978, real ale drinkers noted with some glee that handpumps had been
re-installed at the pub. [4] The reason only became apparent the
following year [5] when a new Tetley beer called Walker's Warrington
Ale was introduced at a small number of local outlets. As well as the
White Hart these included the Bradford
on Bradford Street, the Church
on Crook Street, the Crofters at Bradshaw, the Gaiety on Bradshawgate
and the Prince Rupert
on Holmeswood Road. However, the new beer didn't last very long. In
April 1980, the local beer magazine What's Doing announced that the
handpumps had been ditched in favour of fast-flow dispenserettes.
The
White Hart was renamed Carrington's around 1986 as a nod to the
family of that name from the American television series Dynasty. It
was attempting to appeal to a younger audience. By this time the live
music had long since ended largely due to the presence of Derby Ward
Labour Club which had been rebuilt in the late-sixties just a few
yards away from the White Hart. Derby Ward boasted a huge concert
room which singers – and customers – preferred to the much
smaller lounge at the White Hart.
The
Carrington's experiment didn't last long and the White Hart closed in
1990. It was converted into the Deane Medical Centre the following
year. The building still exists though the frontage was altered in
2011. [6]
The former White Hart premises pictured in July 2016 (copyright Google Streetview). Note the extension on the left-hand side of the building, constructed in 2011. |
[1]
Bolton Evening News, 28 July 1869.
[2] Bolton News.
Original article 17 January 2005. Accessed 19 April 2017.
[3]
Manchester Beat. Accessed 19 April 2017.
[4]
What's Doing, the Greater Manchester beer drinkers monthly
magazine, April 1978.
[5]
What's Doing, November 1979.
[6]
Whatpub.com. Accessed 19 April 2017.
Tuesday, 11 April 2017
New Bridge Inn - Printers Arms, 15 Churchbank, Bolton
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The
New Bridge Inn was originally known as the Printers Arms. It was
situated on the left-hand side going down Churchbank close to where
it becomes Churchgate.
There
is no mention of the pub in any directories from the 1850s and the
first mention we have is in 1869 when it was being run by Wilson
Inman.
By
1871, John Butterworth was in charge. Born in 1832, Mr Butterworth
was a cotton operative in Simpson Street in 1861.
The
1876 Bolton Directory shows Thomas Derbyshire as the landlord. At
that time it was still known as the Printers Arms, possibly as a nod to
the vocation of a former landlord.
The landlady in 1895 was Mary Ann
Witter. She had taken over the pub with her husband Thomas a couple
of years previously having run the Peacock on Kay Street for a while.
By this time it had been named the New Bridge Inn presumably to
commemorate the rebuilding of the bridge on Churchbank that ran over
the River Croal. The pub was the last building before the bridge.
The
New Bridge was owned by Wingfield’s Silverwell Brewery whose
brewery premises stood on Nelson Square. Wingfield’s later became
part of the Manchester Brewery Company who wanted to rebuild another
of their pubs, the Crofters Arms on St George’s Road. In what
became a confusing deal the Crofters was sold to Bolton Council who
then sold it on to Magee, Marshall and Co. But the council would only
give planning permission to Magee's for the rebuilding of the
Crofter's if the licence of the New Bridge was given up. The
confusing aspect is that the New Bridge was still a Manchester
Brewery pub. Nevertheless, the Crofters was re-built and the New
Bridge closed in 1907. The final landlord was George Jackson, a
Yorkshireman who was originally a saddler by trade.
The
building subsequently became a boarding house. It was demolished in
the sixties along with three other properties along that row.
[Click here for more on Wingfield's Silverwell Brewery]
[Click here for more on Wingfield's Silverwell Brewery]
Saturday, 8 April 2017
Blue Boar, 96 Deansgate, Bolton
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The pub was owned by its licensees for much of its early existence and they would also double as brewers at a small plant behind the pub. One of the last of those was Thomas Wright. He was the licensee in 1895 though prior to that, in 1891, he was at the Church Inn on Bamber Street. He was back in the Daubhill area on the next census in 1901 when he is described as a journeyman brewer living in Birkdale Street.
[1] Manchester Courier, 29 April 1848
Another recent closure and a sad loss both to local
drinkers and local historians. The former for obvious reasons, the latter
because the Blue Boar was one of the oldest pubs in Bolton dating back to the
18th century. Until its closure in 2016 it was one of the few
surviving pubs from the Bolton licensing list of 1779.
From 1843 until around 1869 the pub was owned by
Thomas Dickenson. Mr Dickenson was hauled in front of the courts in April 1848.
He was accused of breaking the regulations regarding the sale of alcohol on
Good Friday. In those days – and until fairly recently – Good Fridays were
treated as a Sunday. Selling booze before midday on that day was illegal. Mr
Dickenson was caught and fined 20 shillings. That was £1 in old money and the
equivalent of around £115 today. (Getting a drink on a Good Friday afternoon
was hard work up to the Sunday licensing laws were liberalised in 1995). [1]
The pub was owned by its licensees for much of its early existence and they would also double as brewers at a small plant behind the pub. One of the last of those was Thomas Wright. He was the licensee in 1895 though prior to that, in 1891, he was at the Church Inn on Bamber Street. He was back in the Daubhill area on the next census in 1901 when he is described as a journeyman brewer living in Birkdale Street.
The pub was subsequently owned by three local
breweries: Magee, Marshall’s; Tong’s and finally the Bromley Cross firm of Hamer’s based at the
Volunteer Inn. It fell into the hands of Dutton’s of Blackburn who took over
Hamer’s in 1951 and then Whitbread’s when they bought out Dutton’s in 1964.
The Blue Boar was popular with Bolton's Irish community in the fifties
and sixties. By the early eighties it was a two-roomed pub with a vault to the
right of the entrance and a lounge in front, but a controversial refurbishment
in the autumn of 1982 saw vault and lounge knocked into one large room, though
the bar remained in the same place. There was sawdust instead of carpets on the
floor and beams made from rough timber appeared along with farm implements and
chains on the walls. [2]
Local drinkers noted the refurbishment with some
horror although they were partly mollified by the reintroduction on real ale
for the first time in a number of years. Castle Eden was initially on offer
followed in 1983 by the cask version of Whitbread Trophy Bitter. [3]
By the summer of 1985 the sawdust had been replaced by
carpets. [4]
In 1994, the Blue Boar became one of Whitbread’s
Hogshead pubs meaning it sold a number of real ales. But Whitbread decided to get
out of pubs and brewing and the Blue Boar was one of a parcel sold by the
company to Enterprise Inns. Enterprise themselves later sold the pub and it was
owned by a succession of individuals until its closure in July 2016. It was a
live music venue around 2008/2009.
Oddly, the pub was owned by Bolton Council at the time
of writing – April 2017. The council also owns the former Sweetens bookshop
building. It is believed that the whole block will eventually be demolished
to provide access to the car park to the rear although some rumours suggest it will become student accomodation.
.
.
We’d love to think that the pub will one day re-open
and we consign this entry to history, instead. That’s unlikely. Cultural
vandalism might be one way to reduce the proportion of empty shops in the town,
but what a sad and ignominious way to end almost 250 years of history.
[1] Manchester Courier, 29 April 1848
[2] What’s Doing, the Greater Manchester beer drinkers’
magazine. January 1983
[3] What’s Doing, October 1983
[4] What’s Doing, August 1985