This is an unspoilt and timeless old town centre local which has a lively if narrow taproom and two quiet snugs at the back; the old 'bottle & jug' hatch still exists for outside drinkers. Bass is ever present, unusually in kilderkin (18 gal) casks, but the Sharp's and Skinner's beers occasionally vary, and a guest ale or two intervenes from time to time. The planked bar ceiling is festooned with an impressive collection of key fobs, while the ancient and unpolished bar top shows distinct signs of warping, and is often covered in an eclectic selection of bar towels. No food provided, but you may eat your own on the benches outside. Popular with locals and visitors alike, the pub is Grade II listed and Cornwall's only three-star entry in the CAMRA National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. The pub has also recently celebrated 50 consecutive years in the Good Beer Guide. It sits beside the main bus terminus; buses run until late evening to Truro and Camborne.
Historic Interest
on CAMRA National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors
Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance
Listed status: II
This classic Cornish pub is all about its simple bar, corridor and rear room, which retain features dating back to Victorian times.
A small town centre pub, the Seven Stars has been in the hands of the same family for seven generations since 1868. For 50 of these years, until his death in 2012, the licensee was Barrington Bennetts who was also an ordained Anglican clergyman. At the front, the public bar has various late Victorian fittings, plus metal stillages introduced in the late 1940s. There was formerly a partitioned-off oyster bar here and its rare, white marble counter-top is still in place. The walls and ceiling are covered with matchboard panelling. The gas lights at either end of the bar are still in working order (though not now used). A passage, with an off-sales hatch, leads to the rear smoke room which has a hatch/doorway to the back of the bar. In the ceiling is a ‘coffin hatch’ for raising and lowering bulky items to the upper floor. The Victorian building was extended to the right in 1912 with an off-sales shop (now defunct).
Prominently sited in front of a small square in the centre of town, the Seven Stars is an urban classic. The original Victorian building (1868?) was extended to the right in 1912 and an off-sales shop added. Closed during the war it was not re-opened until the late 1980s but as this didn't work out and when the local tobacconist retired, the business was transferred to the Seven Stars shop and continued until 2006. The pub has been in the same family since 1868 and, as well as being a local Anglican clergyman, Rev. Barrington Bennetts was behind the bar for over 50 years until his death in 2011. A notable feature of the exterior was the sign board high up at roof level - which fell down during a storm and is still to be replaced. Such boards commonly feature in old pictures of pubs but they have now all but disappeared.
The completely unspoilt public bar at the front has a late Victorian counter, shelves and a wooden stillage from around 1898. The beer is served from casks behind the bar the metal stillages were introduced in 1947 and 1949. The white marble counter on the right dates from the days when there was a separate oyster bar - see the brown paper bag in a frame on the wall on the left. Sadly, the glass snack counter on stilts introduced by Meredith & Drew in the mid-1950s has recently been removed but there are still-working gas lights at each end of the bar. The tiled fireplace dates from 1912 and seating mainly consists of benches attached to the panelled walls. Among the drinks on sale is 'Grandma's Weapons Grade Ginger Beer' but this is an alcoholic version at 5.5% ABV!
From the front door a passage leads to the rear and has an inner door with 'Saloon Bar' and seven blue coloured stars on it which was originally positioned on the front of the pub when the main bar was subdivided by a partition. Beyond the off-sales hatch with its sliding windows and red Formica shelf is the rear smoke room. This also has a 1912 tiled fireplace, two large plain mirrors of some antiquity, a hatch/doorway to the back of the bar, skylight and 1960s seating. Look for the "coffin hatch" in the ceiling. The former gents' outside WC is now the ladies' while the gents' facilities are inside. Former landlord the Rev. Bennetts was only the second real person to appear in The Beano comic (No 3151 for 7 Dec 2002 - "Crazy for Daisy") where the Seven Stars was called "The Reverend's Pop Shop" with a story all about him selling 'pop to the whole of Beanoland' for 50 years! A cartoonist for the comic drinks here - the only other real person named in The Beano is David Beckham!
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This Pub serves 3 changing beers and 3 regular beers.
Seven Stars, Falmouth