This Pub is Closed Long Term
Marston's 20 year lease ended on September 18th 2023. Pub closed but owners wish to keep as pub following essential repairs. ACV applied for.
Planning application 23/4760N: "Listed building consent for general repairs comprising but not limited to: - timber frame repairs; joinery repairs; external decoration; masonry repairs; retaining wall repairs and re-roof. " (19 Dec 2023). Proposed repairs not yet approved (15/07/2024).
Approved 19-08-2024, with conditions.
Half-timbered Tudor, thatched inn, dating from 1614 is a veritable time-capsule. With open fires, beams, settles and scrubbed tables, it provides the perfect setting for a quiet pint. Its name derives from the crest of the Crewe family, the silver lion. The building faces the elevated prospect of St. Bertoline's church, the scene of a Royalist massacre in the Civil war. Ale was sold here by the Parish Clerks as early as the 16th century, when it was known as the Clerk's Cottage.
Having obeyed the injunction to enter by the "other door", you find yourself in a small room looking much as it has done for hundreds of years. To the left, down a step is in the quarry-tiled bar where the beams are low enough to catch unwary tall visitors. Don't miss the tiny back room with its stove. Although the White Lion can be busy, especially when lunch is being taken, it has its peaceful spells. Two outdoor drinking areas overlook a small stream, the Wulvern (Or Wulvarn Brook, named in memory of the last wolf in England, supposedly killed in Barthomley Wood), a tributary of the Valley Brook, in the centre of this quiet and attractive village. Was a Burtonwood pub for many years.
Historic Interest
Grade II* listed. Dating from 1614. Thatched Roof, re-thatched in 2013, following roof fire. Marston's 20 year lease finished at end September 2023. ACV applied for.
Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance
Listed status: II*
This is an outstanding thatched inn dating from 1614. It has open fires, low beams and settles, looking much as it has done for hundreds of years. The tap room never had a bar counter and originally beer was served from a hatch. The larger room has doubled as a courtroom and a schoolroom in the past. A time capsule worth the effort to find.
This fine half-timbered building, facing the medieval parish church, dates back to the early 17th century. The oldest part in terms of pub use is the delightful beamed tap room in the centre of the building. This never had a bar counter and drinks were brought from the parlour behind (now the kitchen). The furniture and fittings are from the 1930s, including a high-backed settle which appears to be constructed from reused old wall panelling. Note the glass-covered section of exposed wattle-and-daub on the left-hand side showing the method of filling in the walls between the timber framing. The fire surround is an unfortunate Modernist replacement of an inter-war brick one. The large room to the left (where the servery now is) has seen use as a courtroom and a schoolroom before becoming part of the pub in 1953, which is the date of most of the fittings. The tiny room at the back was converted from private quarters in 1994.
A splendid half-timbered building dating from 1614 with three rooms and a section of wattle-and-daub on show. The original pub room is the small beamed tap room accessed via the right hand latch door, which has a figure '1' on it - a requirement of the licensing magistrates. This unspoilt room with a solid red-brown floor has fixed bare benches on the front wall side; an assortment of tables including a couple of scrubbed ones; and some chunky 'publican's rustic' stools. Situated near the settle is an oval-shaped table created from a piece of oak with a brass edging which has been here for years. A similar table in the corner of the room is a copy made by a customer a few years ago.
The room has half-height old panelling and a fitted settle which is old as is indicated by the well worn seat. However, the high back of the settle is unusual - most similar settles have panels but this one features old fielded panels - which look like they are re-used wall panels but the date of the change is unknown. There is a 1930s-style brick fireplace with a coal fire but this may date from 1953 when there were changes in the left hand room.
Note the glass covered section of wattle-and-daub on the left hand wall and a mummified rat which came from the loft and discovered by builder when the pub was re-thatched in 1999. It has no bar counter - originally beer was served from a hatch situated in the doorway of what is now the third public room situated at the rear. There was actually a servery in the area where there is now a kitchen - the wall that separates the kitchen from the present third room is a recent addition. It is believed that the servery consisted of a bar back fitting where the ovens are now situated and also a counter/cabinet just about where the wall is situated. However, the third room was only ever a private room and not used by customers until 1994. Note the figure '5' on the door to the cellar. A passage on the rear right leads to a door and across the cobbled yard is the outside gents.
The beamed room on the left on a lower level and with a figure '2' on the door was for 200 years the twice-yearly Court Leet and Court Baron for the Manors of Crewe Green, Barthomley and Leighton; and has been used as a school room in the past. It only became a pub room in 1953 which is the date of the bar counter and bar back fitting. There are two upright columns featured in the bar counter which originally went right up to the ceiling beams until the 1990s when a former licensee cut the top sections off and added the copper caps. It has an old red tiled floor and some new tiles; old half-height panelling; and a brick fireplace which looks 1930s in style but was probably added in 1953.
The tiny room at the rear of the pub was converted from private quarters in 1994 and has a flag-like tiled floor, a tiled fireplace with stove and is served from a doorway/hatch to the side of the bar. Upstairs there is a small function/meeting room where the ceiling was removed in the 1990s so it is now open the the rafters and it has a small Victorian cast-iron fireplace.
The pub closed on 1st April 2013 following the thatched roof catching fire. Following repairs it was reopened on 23rd July 2013. The roof has been re-thatched and the three rooms downstairs have been cleaned [and re-painted where appropriate] to remove the effects of smoke damage. Exterior brickwork on chimney etc has been re-pointed.
White Lion, Barthomley
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