The White Swan
Hotel
The White Swan Inn at Alnwick in Northumberland boasts a very fine dining room within its
portals. The first class lounge from the S.S Olympic, 1910-1936, (twin ship
to the legendary S.S Titanic), is reconstructed within the White Swan. When the Olympic was broken at Jarrow in
1936, the fixtures and fittings were sold off in lots.
SS Olympic
Ye Olde Cross
Ye Olde Cross Inn in Narrowgate at Alnwick in
Northumberland is also known as ‘The Dirty Bottles’. This is due to some old
bottles which have been sealed up in the front window for some 200 years. The story goes that the landlord at that time
was putting the bottles in the window space when he dropped dead. His wife
declared that there was a curse on the bottles and if anybody attempted to move
them, they too would drop dead and the bottles have remained untouched since
then.
The Dun Cow
The Dun Cow is a traditional 17th century pub in
Old Elvet, Durham,
which appears in the Campaign for Real Ale Guide. It reminds us of Durham’s origins and the legend of the Dun
Cow.
St Cuthbert, Bishop of Lindisfarne (Holy
Island), died in 687 and was buried in Lindisfarne Priory. In 875, in danger from Danish raiders, the
Lindisfarne Congregation left the island and began their ‘wanderings’ through
the north of England, taking with them St Cuthbert’s body and other treasures
including the Lindisfarne Gospels. They
eventually settled at Chester-le-Street in
882. Some two hundred years later
following further danger the congregation resumed their wanderings and in 995
whilst near to Hetton to the east of Durham,
the coffin transport came to a standstill and would not move any further. After intense meditation the monks prayers
were answered when St Cuthbert appeared in the vision of a monk called Eadmer
who told them to take the coffin to a place called Dun Holm. Dun Holm meant Hill Island,
later called Duresme and finally Durham. The monks were then able to continue but
nobody seemed to know where Dun Holm was.
Luckily the monks heard a milkmaid asking another milkmaid if she had
seen her dun cow and was told that it had been seen grazing near Dun Holm. The monks followed the milkmaid in her
search for her cow and thus arrived at the appointed place on a premonitory of
a peninsular in the River Wear. Here
they built a ‘White
Church’ as a shrine for
St Cuthbert’s relics, and so the Cathedral and the City of Durham was founded.
The Turk's Head
T
he very fine
market cross in the Market Place at Barnard
Castle in Co Durham,
dates back to 1747. The equally fine
weather vane on the building has two bullet holes in it!
In 1804 a soldier
and a gamekeeper were drinking in the Turks Head pub some 100 yards from the
market cross when they developed an argument over who was the better shot. The upshot was that they went outside the pub
and selected the weather vane as a target.
They each took a pot shot and amazingly they both hit the target. Apparently they agreed to call it a draw and
returned to the pub to celebrate.
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The Drunken Duck
Formerly the Barngate Inn near to the village of Outgate
just north of Hawkshead in Cumbria, The
Drunken Duck Inn obviously has a story to tell. Apparently a Victorian landlady found her
six ducks lying ‘dead’ outside and she started to pluck them ready for the
oven. However,. She soon found that they
were not dead – they were drunk! It
seems that a barrel of beer in the cellar had leaked into the duck’s feeding
ditch! The distraught lady, it is said,
knitted woollen jackets for the ducks until their feathers grew again!
The New Hall Inn
This pub in Lowside at Bowness in Cumbria dates to 1612 and is better known as 'Hole in t'wall' due to the fact that it adjoined the old blacksmith's shop. Apparently the thirsty smithy made a hole in the joint wall so that his ale could easily be passed through. The hole has now been enlarged into a doorway and the old smithy is now part of the pub. An inscription on a beam reads: 'The blacksmith he did sweat in here and slake his thirst on Hartley's ale'. Thomas Longmire, champion wrestler of England and holder of 174 belts, was landlord 1852-1862. It is said that he was visited by Dickens in 1857 who described him as a quiet looking giant.
The Miles Thompson
The Wetherspoon chain has pubs in converted buildings in many towns and Kendal is no exception. The Miles Thompson in All Hallows Lane was formerly a washhouse and bathhouse known as Shearman House and is named after the designer.
See photograph of descriptive plague on the building.
The Guide over
the Sands Inn
The curiously named Guide
Over the Sands Inn at Allithwaite in Cumbria, overlooking the northern part
of Morecambe Bay, reminds us of the ancient routes which actually cross over
the wide bay when the tide is out.
Before the advent of more efficient transport, it was quicker for people
to travel that way than overland.
However, the quicksands, shifting fogs and sudden tides, made the
crossing of these routes a dangerous business, indeed the Tidal Race, occurring
every 12 hours, can out run a galloping horse.
Very few people can identify the safe paths across the sands when the
tide is out and eventually The Queen’s Official Guides to the Sands of
Morecambe Bay were appointed to
ensure the safe passage of travellers.
Every day the sands are
different as the sea washes away old tracks making the job of the guide
extremely hazardous. The official guide
still lives at Cartmell and his house is surrounded by laurel bushes whose
leaves he uses to mark the safe routes across the Bay. The appointment is funded by the Queen, as a
service to the public from the Duchy of Lancaster.
It is still possible to
make such walks to this day, but only the foolhardy would attempt such
crossings without the guide!
The Pump House
Many of the old dock
buildings on Liverpool’s re-claimed waterfront, have been converted to a
variety of uses, whilst retaining the ambience of a by gone age. The
old pump house has been completely renovated and now houses a very fine
riverside pub
Albert and the Lion
This pub on the promenade next to the Tower reminds us of Stanley Holloway's famous monologue about young Albert Ramsbottom and his encounter with the lion at the zoo :
"There's a famous seaside place called Blackpool that's noted for fresh air and fun and Mr & Mrs Ramsbottom went there with Albert their son ............"
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