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	zephyr123
	 chapelfields  | 
	 
	1 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  10:25am  
	 
	Hi all
Anyone have any info (photo would be great) of Brewers Arms, 71 Craven Street, 1874-1909
Ta 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	2 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  11:26am  
	 
	Hi Zephyr and welcome to the forum  
 
As far as I can tell from reading planning records, No 71 was the last building in Craven Terrace next to the public footpath which links Hearsall Lane and Craven Street. This was destroyed in the war and much later rebuilt as a pair of flats with an underground garage which may occupy the space once used as a cellar. | 
| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	Midland Red
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	3 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  11:53am  
	 
	Is it not this building from the above map which now looks like a converted shop at 46 Craven Street ?
Google Maps
The 1891 Census shows Brewers Arms as 71 Craven Street and Craven Arms as 65 (it's 58 now!) so the renumbering of the buildings may have caused the change 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	4 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  1:23pm  
	 
	You could well be correct Midland Red although in my day it was being used as a post office. 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	Midland Red
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	5 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  1:30pm  
	 
	Just looked again at the 1891 Census
Craven Arms is 65 (Frederic H Smith - Licensed Victualler)
Brewers Arms is 71 (William Gorsuch - Watch Gilder - Licensed Victualler)
Post Office / Grocers Shop is 73 (Edward Beaumont - Grocer & Watch Finisher)
  
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	6 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  2:16pm  
	 
	Thanks for that Midland Red  
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	Midland Red
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	7 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  2:35pm  
	 
	I wonder what 46 was as it looks like an ex-shop front today
And counting out on your map the legend "Brewers Arms" is against 46 rather than 44
There's an alleyway between 44 and the Post Office (42) both on your map and on today's Google Map which confirms which property is which 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	8 of 29 
	Fri 10th Feb 2012  3:08pm  
	 
	Indeed, Midland Red.
No 46 looks most like the post office I remember when I lived in Craven Street yet every council map up to 1972 shows it as being at No 42!
Its frontage would have been painted red and there was a postbox let into the front wall. I don't see any way No 42 could once have had a post box or a sign indicating it was a post office?
 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	zephyr123
	 chapelfields Thread starter 
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	9 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  8:57am  
	 
	Spot on dutchman, #71 is indeed on the end of Craven Terrace (I live there) so I was a bit puzzled about the map, as the writing 'Brewers Arms' doesn't actually indicate where it is, as the Coombe and Hearsall does. Wish I could track down a photo. 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	Midland Red
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	10 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  9:13am  
	 
	Morning Zephyr
71 was the Brewers Arms under the old numbering system
If you look at the map and work along from Craven Arms (was 65, now 58)
66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73 became
56, 54, 52, 50, 48, 46, 44, 42
The B of Brewers Arms is against 71/46, the Post Office is 73/42 - see the alleyway on the map between (now) 44 and 42 which is clear to see on Google Maps
Hope this clarifies it for you
  
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	zephyr123
	 chapelfields Thread starter 
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	11 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  11:46am  
	 
	Well I'm still intrigued, how can even numbers be changed over to odd numbers? Don't make sense. 
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	Midland Red
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	12 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  11:52am  
	 
	No doubt someone can explain why it was done, but the change was from consecutive numbers to odds and evens on opposite sides of the road
If you look at 46 Craven Street on Google Maps you can move along the row and see the various buildings and the alleyways referred to 
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	13 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  12:18pm  
	 
	Craven Street ended just beyond Mount Street in those days. The extensions to (at first) Sir Thomas White Street and then Queensland Avenue didn't come until much later.
A huge swathe of houses were destroyed in the Blitz.  
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	zephyr123
	 chapelfields Thread starter 
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	14 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  12:23pm  
	 
	Hi dutchman. Just to make this topic more confusing, "B" of Brewers Arms on map is indeed against 46, which does look like a shop front. Post Office (1891) was at #73 which is 42 today, and having just walked across the street for the millionth time to have another look, it don't look like a commercial premises at all? Confused dot com  
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| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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	dutchman
	 Spon End  | 
	 
	15 of 29 
	Sat 11th Feb 2012  1:08pm  
	 
	Indeed Zephyr, I am confused as well. To add to my confusion there is a building further up your side of the street (currently No 105) which looks very much to me as if it was a pub at one time but I can find no record of it having been used as such. It's internal layout is entirely consistent with being used as a pub and it even has a cellar! For a very long time I was convinced this was the erstwhile Brewers Arms:
 
 
An alternative explanation is that it was once a master watchmaker's house but in that case it would bear a blue plaque to that effect! Incidentally, the tiny house to the right of the house is a very recent addition. | 
| Streets and Roads - Craven Street | |
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