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Parent Page
Appleby Magna
Village Site
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Appleby's Black & White Public House
by Gerald Box

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The exposed architecture of the Black Horse suggests that
part of it at least dates from late in the Sixteenth Century.
Work is in progress to try to find out more about this
period of the village’s history in general.
This may shed light on the pub’s earlier days.
Meanwhile, due to the generous co-operation of the
brewers, Marstons, it has been possible to compile a part
history from 1789.
There was a house on the site of the pub before 1789 and
we know that it had been owned by one John Parr and that there
had been two other previous owners.
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So far, we do not know their names but these three
generations would take occupation of the site back to circa 1700.
We know of Parr from an Indenture dated 1789
when the house changed hands. By this legal transaction
the owner John Wright, a currier of Ashby, sold the house
“...together with outhouses, edifices, Barns, stables and
orchards, gardens, ways, watercourses, commons and commons of
pasture and commodities...”
The longwinded phrase does not necessarily indicate that
the property included all these additional features, however.
Eighteenth Century lawyers
were just as adept as those of today in trying to cover every
possible contingency, inflating their fees in doing so.
John Wright is also referred to as a yeoman which
indicates him as a man having a landed status above that of many
in the community of Ashby.
The purchaser was George Wright, possibly John’s son. The fact that John signed the document and George
did not may suggest some measure of trust existed between the parties.
John had a new wife but her right of dower was extinguished in
the document.
One exception was made in the sale of the property,
that of the right to a pew or seat in the church, belonging to
the messuage. We know
from the description in a later document dated 1827 that this was :
“ The first pew on the right on entering the church from the South
door thereof.”
The purchase money for the Black Horse in 1789 was £30.
Despite that it was a transaction from Wright to Wright, we
must not assume that it was from father to son.
The name Wright occurs in many
Seventeenth Century Hearth Tax Returns and Probate Inventories
in both Applebys, Magna
and Parva. In these
documents , some of the deceased are described as yeoman and some not.
But the study of Appleby families must be the subject of
further work. We cannot
yet say that the building was then regarded as a public house.
But at some stage
before 1818 the property became “...known by the sign of the Black
Horse.”
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Bull Ring, Appleby Magna
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THE
BREWERS ARRIVE
On 23 February 1818, George Wright ,
now described as a victualer, raised a mortgage of £60
guaranteed on the property. ” The significance here is in the
names of the mortgages : Michael John Bass and George Ratcliff,
described as brewers and co-partners. They required George Wright to pay interest at 5% and to
take out fire insurance of £50. They also required a signature
for which George supplied a cross.
It seems that he had not mastered writing.
This document is valuable in some of the clear details
which it gives about the property. It includes reference to a house or tenement forming part
of George’s 1789 purchase with the yard, garden and
appurtenances thereto belonging, adjoining or lying near to the
said first mentioned message “...which had formerly been a
barn or carpenter’s shop now in the possession of the said
George Wright.”
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For two years it may be assumed that
George kept up his interest payments on the mortgage.
But by April 20 1820, the brewing firm claimed that he
owed them £50 for goods supplied.
This little matter was settled by a further mortgage of
£50 on the same terms. The
same recurred in 1825 and by 1827.
Though George Wright may have been pleased at the rate at
which his property had appreciated since 1789,
it might be said that
he was not a very capable business manager.
By September 1827, Bass and Ratcliff claimed that he owed
them £260 in principal and interest.
How that figure is calculated is not easy to work out :
the interest due of the various mortgages can be
calculated not to have exceeded £62.
But how much of the principal he had been expected to pay
between 1818 and 1827 cannot be established nor whether his
bills for beer supplied had been met.
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But the brewers held the whip hand and they met the
situation with a plan which was
elegantly simple from their standpoint. First they assessed the property as
worth £220 and made George a tenant at a rent of £12 per year
to be paid quarterly. The
following day, 27 September 1827, the innkeeper conveyed the
property to the brewers - including the right to the church pew.
Appleby thus acquired a tenant as keeper of ales at the
Black Horse - with many conditions.
George’s tenancy was a yearly one and he had to keep
the house in an orderly and regular manner.
He was to buy
all ale, beer and other liquors from Bass and Ratcliff who
required to be consulted before he could assign the licence. The
conveyance is a legal document in standard form but attached to
it is a handwritten single sheet of paper, again marked with
George’s X. It
is entitled Agreement for letting the Black Horse for One
Year... Having Lately Purchased from George Wright a public
house in Appleby ...(the purchasers) Agree to Let...”
A picture might emerge of a penniless
George, bargaining in what had so lately been his own bar
parlour, for a home.
How long he remained a tenant is not at present clear.
What is clear is that the Black Horse was now firmly
under brewery control and that the 36 year ownership of George
Wright ended with him as a tenant.
The first official Census of Appleby was taken on
6 June 1841. From
the return compiled of it, we can read that on Over Street (no
street numbers were then given) there lived Samuel Parks aged 45
described as a Publican with Hannah his 30 year old wife and two
daughters, Mary 5, and Lucy 3.
It can be safely assumed from other evidence, that Over
Street in 1841 formed part of what is now Top Street.
The next entry that the enumerator recorded was of a
Willam Parker, a carpenter aged 50.
Following these, the enumerator’s records details for
Mawby’s Lane. It
seems safe then to assume that in 1841
it was the Black Horse which Parks the innkeeper tenanted
and that Parker the carpenter, was his next door neighbour.
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ENTER THE BOWLEYS
Moving on to 20 February 1864,
a Marston’s conveyance of then exists to show that one
William Parker had sold a carpenter’s shop to Thomas Bowley,
described as an innkeeper.
Although the seller of a workshop, Parker enjoyed modest
substance : the deed of sale
records that he owned land at the rear of the
carpenter’s shop and had a dwelling house there, also.
There was a road leading to this house.
By the sale, Thomas Bowley was to have full and free use
of this road and
also access to the well situated on Parker’s land.
By 1864 then, Thomas Bowley lived at the Black Horse and
he is recorded as innkeeper of the Black horse in White’s 1857
Gazeteer of Derbyshire. At
present we lack the date of his taking over from Samuel Parks
but he held the tenancy until his death on 20 June 1877.
He had apparently achieved a consolidation of his
interests by buying out Parker’s carpenter’s shop, house and
land. Was
Bowley a carpenter despite his description as innkeeper ?
His son John James Bowley may well have followed him in
the trade since in Thomas’’ will dated November 2 1876 James
is described as a cabinet maker who was living in Birmingham.
The Bowley name remained associated with the pub via
Thomas' ’widow Ann, in 1891.
By that date, decennial surveys were giving much more
detail. Thus the
Black Horse is listed as having a widow, Ann Bowley aged 68 who
was born at Windley in Derbyshire,
who is described as a Licensed Victualler and as Head of
the House. But
she is marked in the appropriate column as “...neither
employed or unemployed.”
If she declared herself thus to the Census enumerator,
she may have tried to convey that she was still the licensee but
in semi retirement. Also
recorded as living at the Black Horse in 1891 is Annie Bowley,
described as grand daughter, single, aged 21, born in Birmingham and whose
employment is given as “assistant”.
Given the Birmingham connection, we can speculate that
Annie may have been the son of John James
Bowley, cabinet maker, and that she lived in the pub,
helping out her elderly grandmother.
However, the Bowleys were prominent in Appleby history.
In addition to Thomas at the Black Horse, in 1857, a
John Bowley kept the Anchor Inn which was at Appleby Parva.
But by 1877, John William Bowley is described in
White’s History, Gazeteer and Directory as a farmer and
victualler at the Moore’s Arms. This had replaced the Anchor,
demolished to make way for New Road and to “tidy up” the
Moore’s estate.
The Moore’s Arms was the replacement.
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Also listed there is a James Bowley
described as a joiner and builder,
carver and cabinet maker.
Further work is needed to establish positively if this
James was Thomas’ son and Annie’s father but it seems
likely.
In 1887 there had
been a different small development in the Black Horse’s
history. In
that year, the Governors of Market Bosworth School who had
extensive landholdings in Appleby, sold some land to Bass,
Ratcliff. The land is described as part of Hall Close and the
sale price was £67.10s. 0d.
This land adjoined the pub, and extended 54 feet from its
rear wall, was about 130 feet in length
and forms what is now the car park What precisely was the
brewery’s motive in the purchase is unclear.
Possibly, the house owned by the earlier Mr Parker stood
on it and may have presented a difficulty.
A copy of the plan referred to in the sale agreement
gives quite a lot useful detail.
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had bought from Parker may have assumed the status which we
would now call a “granny flat.”
It was sold on 5 July 1892 by the trustees of Thomas
Bowley, that is, his son John James and a Walter Vernon Garrat,
a clerk of Scalpcliffe Rd Burton.
This is known from the conveyance which refers to
“...all that building now
used as a
kitchen and pantry with room over in the occupation of Ann
Bowley which building was sometimes since erected by
Thomas Bowley on the site of a building formerly used as a
carpenter’s shop.” The description of the
land and the rights to the well are just as described when
Parker made the original sale to Thomas Bowley.
By1892, either the elderly Mrs Ann Bowley had died, or
grand daughter Annie had been in occupation of
the “flat”. It
was sold for £40. If
it were a granny flat, or possibly a bolt hole for Annie, the
“assistant” at the pub, would John James Bowley have put his
own mother or Annie - who we have speculated was his daughter
out of their home for this amount
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is the truth, it was vacated.
The reason may well have been foreknowledge of the sale
of the Black Horse by Bass, Ratcliff and Gretton, as they had
now become : it had occurred just two weeks earlier. The pub changed hands at £650 and the buyer was a
William S Cooper who was also the buyer of the flat.
He is described
in the conveyance as a brewer of Acresford.
Was it prior knowledge of Bass’s sale that caused John
James to feel that either his daughter or his mother would be
unhappy with their new next door neighbours, or was subtle
pressure applied perhaps, the new owners wanting to incorporate
“the flat” into their new acquisition from Bass?
Within five weeks of his purchase, Cooper raised two
mortgages on the property.
On September 2 1892 William Matthew a grocer of Linton,
advanced £400 at 4%and the following day a further £160 was
raised from Thomas Carter and Thomas Richardson both of
Donisthorpe, at 4.5%
The Bowley tenancy had now disappeared from record since
at this date, the Black Horse is described as being in the
occupation of William Starbuck.
He was still there on 19 May n 1899 when Thomas Carter one of the Donisthorpe mortgagees
died. He is buried
at Netherseal. Two
London men, Vaughan Morgan of 22 Harrington Gardens, S
Kensington and Leopold Siligman of 18 Austin Friars appear then
to have moved fast to
secure the Black Horse though probably not for any long term
interest of their own.
An indenture
dated 1 November 1899 shows them assume the mortgage of the
Linton man, William Matthews and by a further indenture of the
same date they took on also that of Carter, now dead, and his
surviving partner, Richardson.
But the apparent severance of local South Derbyshire
connections as owners of the pub were not to disappear.
Within a year, on 20 November 1900, the mortgagees Morgan
and Seligman sold the
premises to Sydney Evershed, Brewers of Burton on Trent.
The conveyance does not seem to exist and so the price
cannot be stated. But from a Fire Insurance Policy of 24 June 1903 we
know that a premium
of £1. 5s. 9d. was asked to insure the property for £550.
This policy was renewed in 1920 at £3.5s.6d. for the sum
of £1,750 and
again in 1923 when the sum insured was £2,000 and the premium
£4.11s.3d. In
1905, Sydney Evershed Ltd had been consolidated within Marston,
Thompson and Evershed . So
by 1905, 93 years ago, Marstons had arrived in Appleby and the
value of the Black Horse seems to have increased from £30 in
1789 to £2,000 some 6700%
What is of real interest in the documentation of the 1903
Fire Insurance Policy is some of the detail on the policy.
It reads;
"
£500 on the building known as the Black Horse Inn and on
the stable and coach house all adjoining and forming one risk,
brick and timber built and thatched, ...
£50 on the building of the private
cottage brick built and tiled [my italics, twice] near the above
and separated therefrom by a yard about eight yards wide."
This description would seem to
correspond with the description of the property deal between
William Parker and Thomas Bowley in 1864.
Did the “yard about eight yards wide” provide the road
that lead to the dwelling house occupied once by Mr Parker which
we have speculated may have stood on the area now covered by the
car park.
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This is about as far as
I have deduced
and there is no doubt room for correction and other, alternative
deductions. - Gerald Box
Opposite:
Current landlord Laurence Freeman at the bar |
SOME
MORE PUBS IN APPLEBY
There
were other publicans in the village.
They are
listed as James Yardley, 45, who was in Church St., possibly the
Crown for in 1857 White records in his Gazeteer of Derbyshire
that it was kept by a James Yardley who is described as being
also a seedsman. Another
man described as Publican was Samuel Cotton, 40, who occupied
Appleby Fields House on the Tamworth Rd.
part from Samuel
and his wife there were present on the day in question also two
women named Jones plus two women servants, four male servants
and an agricultural labourer.
In 1857 this was the Red Lion pub kept by William Goodall.
The property disappeared with the arrival of the motorway.
A little later, in 1877 a farmer John Garner also kept
a “beerhouse. It
is likely that there were more beerhouse keepers, undeclared as
such. Another
pub that disappeared was the Queen Adelaide
which
was on the corner of Bowley's Lane.
The
Quarter Sessions Records for Leicestershire for 1794 reveal that
on 7th October the bench authorized one John Townsend of the
Plough Inn, Appleby to create a Friendly Society. The creation
of friendly societies at pubs during this period was a frequent
occurrence
The
Leicester Journal of 7th December
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