Unspoilt gem and for many years identified by CAMRA as a best real heritage pub. Retaining two bars, In winter both bars are snug and warm; in summer with the doors open the bar is at one with it's surroundings. Hungry walkers and cyclists exploring the area will be pleased to know that landlady Deborah is a great cook and that food is available at all times. Bed and breakfast accommodation in unit at rear of pub. Real cider is generally Castlings Heath Cottage.
Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance
Listed status: II
A lovely old thatched building, whose interior is packed with historic features, the small 'old bar' on the right being especially cherishable. A 1989 book called The Perfect Pub, opined that this was it.
The building itself is probably 18th-century, although the timber-framing behind the rendering may be older. The smaller bar on the right has wooden panelling in the dado, an old bar counter and shelves, complete with a drawer by way of a till. The quarry-tiled floor, tongue-and-groove panelled ceiling, old fireplace (but modern brick hearth surround) and bare wall benches all add to the atmosphere. The larger room on the left saw some changes in 1976. The servery was created by cutting back the off-sales area by several feet and opening a counter: However, the off-sales hatch was repositioned and the outside door still survives on the side of the pub. Note the hole in one bench for the now rare pub game of pitch penny. On the big table you can make out two scratched shove ha’peny boards (that nearest the door has beds that look more suitable for farthings than ha’pennies!).
This attractive thatched wayside 18th-century pub retains its two room and off sales layout. The pink rendering conceals a timber-frame which could be older. Greene King bought it from the local landowning Coleman family around 1912. Its little altered interior results from being run by some long serving licensees such as the Beere family who had it for 50 years. The most famous of its former licensees is Sam Potter who ran it for 20 years until 1989 and the pub is still called ‘Potter’s Bar’ by some locals! When he retired, Greene King wanted to sell the pub as a private house but a campaign by locals persuaded them to sell it as a pub. When Charles and Liz Lydford bought it saying they would give it 6 months to prove viable otherwise it would become their home, Sam encouraged locals to use it, one of the main reasons why this small unspoilt pub remains open. Although not named, the Cock was given the title of 'The Perfect Pub' in the 1989 book of the same name by Nick & Charlie Hurt, and it is easy to see why.
The small ‘old bar’ on the right has its own front door and is also accessed via a narrow door from the main left hand bar. It has a small bar counter with genuinely old woodwork, and a set of old bar back shelves with a till drawer in it. This small quarry tiled floored room has a low tongue and groove panelled ceiling, old wooden panelling in the dado around the room with bare wall benches attached on the left wall side, an old bench on the right near the servery and a small shelf to rest your drinks, a large scrubbed table, and an old fireplace with a fine wood surround with what looks like 1930s brick interior.
The main bar on the left is accessed from the corner door and has a quarry tiled floor, a 1930s brick fireplace with a coal fire and seating consisting of two basic bare benches, an assortment of chairs and a few bar stools. The only changes to the interior took place in 1976 - previously service here was via a hatch. Half of the present servery was originally taken up by the off sales, but the reduced off sales area still remains with its twin doors for service to the left and is entered by a side door further from the road. The counter and bar-back shelves in the main public bar date from 1976.
In the end of one of the benches is a hole that is the rare pub game of Tossing The Penny. New licensee James Davis has purchased thirteen George III ounce pennies to bring the game back into use. Note that on the large scrubbed table is carved an early form of shove ha'penny. The outside gents' and ladies’ toilets are still in service. The Cock is a rare outlet for the locally produced Castlings Heath Cottage Organic draught cider, which is described as ‘very dry’.
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This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 2 regular beers.
Cock, Brent Eleigh