On the left of the group, members of the Webb family from Mill Street including Fred Webb senior on the end and Grandad Webb, third from the left.
Reference: WH0071
Black Eagle Brewery Tap publican John Francis and friends outside The General Wolfe Inn 1898, on their way to the races on Derby day. Note the company trading title above the window as Ben Bushell had yet to clinch the deal of takeover of Smiths brewery at Blighs in Sevenoaks. In 1904 the Company would ...
Reference: WH0064
This was the Kings Arms’ advertisement in Hooker’s Almanack from 1900 to 1904 under the proprietorship of Robert Hyde, who had three daughters, his sister and three servants living in the hotel and working as staff.
Reference: WH0084
The Crown Hotel opposite Westerham Station was known for its fine dining cuisine, and this reputation was to carry it through until the Hotel was closed and pulled down in the late 1990s. It is amazing it kept going that long as that part of town would struggle to sustain such a large establishment without ...
Reference: 0012
Note that a Pony and Trap was available for hire, but there was no overnight accommodation in this tiny pub, the only ‘full-license’ drinking establishment in town lacking this facility.
Reference: WH0063
One of two beerhouses in town, these had a restricted license only allowing the sale of ale and porter as alcoholic beverages, as against a full-license public house or hotel that could sell spirits alongside beer. It is not known whether the Crown beerhouse was tied to a brewery or was independent, and it is ...
Reference: WH0074
Scroll to the bottom of this page to see where they all were on the map