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
Parking was clearly not a big problem in the 1920s
Reference: 0054
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
Albert Harold Octavius Streatfeild was one of the strong cricketers in the family. Known by his friends as Harold Streatfeild, he was known within the family by the younger members as ‘Uncle Poodle.’ As the Estate manager at Squerryes, he married Dorothy Warde in 1911, thus creating family ties between the Wardes and the Streatfeilds. He ...
Reference: WH0413