Kaga simpson
	 
	Peacehaven, East Sussex
	 
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	1 of 25 
	Sat 26th Jan 2019  12:27pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 24th Jan 2019  8:49pm, PeterB said (County Hall thread): 
I popped into the Slug and Lettuce and took a quick photo (not paying their prices!).
  
The judge's alcove is empty and I didn't notice the chair elsewhere. The public entrance is at the rear left (in direction of photo). There are steps up to a balcony (public gallery?) at the rear of the court, no hallway, just a glass lobby now. A walkway extends along the right hand side of the court, but this looks too narrow for any seating. The underside looks wider, but the curved roof suggests this was probably the original width. I would estimate about 50 people in the gallery as I'm sure they would cram in as many as possible. No health and safety in those days. 
The cells are through the opening on the right after the bar.
The "Governor's House" is located behind the judge's chair and is presumably where he would have stayed. I presume the doorway on the walkway was used by dignitaries to get to the public gallery without going outside.
There are more photos on  TripAdvisor which may be useful.
The steps down to the cells were in front of the bar and can been seen in some photos.
  
Peter B, the fourth picture in TriAdvisor - would that be the knaves post, by the lamp standard?  
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	Midland Red
	 
	
	 
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	2 of 25 
	Sat 26th Jan 2019  1:00pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Water pump?
  
 
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	Prof
	 
	Gloucester
	 
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	3 of 25 
	Sat 26th Jan 2019  8:31pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
The Knaves Post is in the Herbert I believe Kaga! 
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	Kaga simpson
	 
	Peacehaven, East Sussex
	 
	Thread starter 
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	4 of 25 
	Sun 27th Jan 2019  1:11pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Prof, thank you.
                  The knaves post was in figure form in front of a house in Much Park Street then moved to the crypt of St Mary's Hall. A terror to evil-doers, the legs and round the neck were shown the shackles of the malefactor, whilst the clothes of meagre quantity of prison cut.
Tradition says that evil-doers were whipped with the cat on their naked skin from the Mayor's parlour in Broadgate to the knaves post and back, tied to the back of a cart and drawn through the principal streets of the town. So many lashes according to their sentence. It was said if the culprit would fee the officials, they would rub the cat in bullocks blood and lay the cat on easy, thus satisfying the public gaze.
The stout high walls of the Coventry gaol, surmounted by  a line of revolving spikes, were a terror to evil-doers, the walls of considerable strength, and pulled down with part of the gaol to make room for the Free Library.  
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		Local History and Heritage - 
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	Annewiggy
	 
	Tamworth
	 
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	5 of 25 
	Sun 27th Jan 2019  4:33pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Picture from a newspaper
   
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		Local History and Heritage - 
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	Kaga simpson
	 
	Peacehaven, East Sussex
	 
	Thread starter 
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	6 of 25 
	Wed 30th Jan 2019  10:13am  
	 
	
	 
	 
Thank you, Annewiggy, wondered what it really looked like. Tried to look for these things in the CET in the fifties, the back numbers went back three weeks only. It's been a long wait. 
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	Helen F
	 
	Warrington
	 
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	7 of 25 
	Wed 30th Jan 2019  11:10am  
	 
	
	 
	 
Knaves Post
Try this link Kaga. If you click on the photo and then zoom, you can see a very detailed photo of it in place on Much Park Street. To move around the picture click, hold and drag.  
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	Prof
	 
	Gloucester
	 
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	8 of 25 
	Fri 1st Feb 2019  8:30pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Slightly clearer photo than Anne's in situ.  Sorry Helen did not see yours first.
   
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	Helen F
	 
	Warrington
	 
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	9 of 25 
	Sat 2nd Feb 2019  2:19pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
You post away Prof. I can't afford to irritate the repositories of images by posting too many, so I tend to just put in a link, but the images themselves make a better post. 
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	Annewiggy
	 
	Tamworth
	 
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	10 of 25 
	Sun 2nd Apr 2023  1:07pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
These 2 pictures are from the Official souvenir of the Godiva Procession August 7th 1907. Amazingly a lot of the pictures are in colour. Wish I could read the brass plaque, I wonder if it is with the post in the Herbert.
  
 
 
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	Prof
	 
	Gloucester
	 
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	11 of 25 
	Sun 2nd Apr 2023  7:53pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Does my  post 79 in St Mary's Guildhall topic help with the inscription?  A little clearer I think!  
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	Annewiggy
	 
	Tamworth
	 
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	12 of 25 
	Sun 2nd Apr 2023  8:29pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Yes it does Prof. The artist has made it nice and clear ! 
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		Local History and Heritage - 
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	NeilsYard
	 
	Coventry
	 
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	13 of 25 
	Mon 3rd Apr 2023  11:05am  
	 
	
	 
	 
Nice one Prof!
  
 
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	NeilsYard
	 
	Coventry
	 
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	14 of 25 
	Mon 19th Feb 2024  12:53pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
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	Helen F
	 
	Warrington
	 
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	15 of 25 
	Mon 19th Feb 2024  3:30pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Neil, part of Mr Shelton's collection maybe? I'm fairly sure that the stone archway on the bottom left of your photo was into a cellar in Little Park Street, though I'm not sure where. My best guess is that it's under this house below. The gap on the left of the sketch was where Kirby House was. The archway on the right was Court 1. These items were collected before the war.
  
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