Sunday, 31 July 2011
23 Tim Bobbin , Wardleworth - Rochdale
First visited : I can't recall a visit but there is a tick against it in the book indicating that I did once. *
This was more or less opposite the Railway but closed around 2002. It was an attractive three-storey building but is now in a poor state of repair with steel girders propping it up on the Rochdale side. This may have precipitated its closure but it also sits in a pretty exclusively Asian area. The building seems to be occupied as a private residence but for how much longer is open to doubt.
* Update - I have unearthed a diary entry for 31/01/1986 which reads "Had mince pie, peas and chips at the Tim Bobbin" . This means my visit took place during the period I was visiting Rochdale Library to research my dissertation.
22 The Railway, Wardleworth - Rochdale
First visited : Not visited in time
After passing through Hamer the A58 dips to cross Hey Brook. The primary school of the same name here provided a perfect illustration of changing demographics during the 70s as my mum and gran would never fail to remark on the ever-dwindling proportion of white kids in the playground as we passed by on the bus. The road then rises again to enter the district of Wardleworth.
Near the crest of the hill was once a bridge carrying the line between Rochdale and Bacup. I can remember the stone pillars on either side of the road but I think the iron bridge was taken down when the railway closed in 1967. The pub is the only reminder of the line now visible from the A58. Wardleworth Station was just behind it but nothing now remains although a cycle path along the old line starts from this point.
I was cautiously looking forward to visiting this one thinking there might possibly be some old photos of the line ( there isn't much on the net ) but unfortunately it appears to have closed although the building's still occupied. Interestingly it's an Asian name over the door. There's a Bed and Breakfast sign on the James St side indicating it once offered accommodation to travellers.
Thursday, 28 July 2011
21 High Sheriff , Hamer - Rochdale
First visited : 28 July 2011
This is one I'd forgotten about although it's just a few doors down from The Entwistle Arms. After visiting it this lunchtime, with luck I'll be forgetting it all over again.
Standing amidst an undistinguished row of shops and set slightly back from the road it's easily passed un-noticed. Its best feature is the blue mosaic above the door indicating its former ownership by the long-defunct Bury Brewery Company . This appears to have gone un-noticed by the website breweryhistory.com which maintains a list of such things, a testament to The High Sheriff's unobtrusiveness.
Inside there's absolutely nothing to detain you. It's small, dark and dingy with near-bare walls painted in unfetching shades of brown and maroon. The tiny lounge area is utterly dreary; apart from that you've got an otherwise unfurnished room for the pool table, a tap room from the ark, one fruit machine and some tables in the back yard for the smokers. Other than me there was one old bloke in there.
This is a pub waiting for death and it did actually close for a while last year; the mystery is that anyone thought it worth re-opening.
Sunday, 24 July 2011
20 The Entwistle Arms , Hamer - Rochdale
First visited : 24 July 2011
The rival pub to Flower Of The Valley in Hamer is almost opposite , having the advantage of being on the same side of the road as the shops. It is an eighteenth century three storied building with original mullioned windows at the top. The name derives from a large Lancashire landowning family who had a branch living at nearby Foxholes Hall. The hall was demolished in 1973 but you can still see the old driveway going off to it further down the A58.
This is another pub with a bus stop that I used to use outside, the reason being that the shop next door was at one time The Aquarist Bowl and supplied most of the tropical fish we kept briefly in 1976-77 and the last tank we used for goldfish. The owner wasn't particularly friendly but it was the nearest place that sold tropicals and they were usually healthy. I think it closed down early in the eighties.
I dropped in around 2pm today. It's fairly small , clean and tidy but very old-fashioned apart from the inevitable TV screens for Sky Sports. There's a cosy bar area then a larger room to the right which can be curtained off for meetings ( an IT club meets there on a Thursday night ) and a large games room beyond. The pub also appears to have claimed possession of the road (John William St ) running behind it as there are wooden picnic tables forming an effective roadblock. It's not exactly a beer garden but most of the other customers ( middle-aged men ) were out there this afternoon. The landlord seemed a nice bloke.
It's an unpretentious friendly pub but the same observation I made about Flower of the Valley applies here.
Saturday, 9 July 2011
19 Flower Of The Valley, Hamer - Rochdale
First visited : 10th July 2011
Just beyond where The Woolpack used to be is the junction with the A664, after which the A58 reverts back to a single carriageway and enters the district of Hamer. The next pub you come to on the left is a Sam Smith's pub called Flower Of The Valley. It's always been a distinctive grey colour.
Despite its lovely name this is another pub I'd never felt inclined to visit. In September 1993 I arranged to meet a blind date here because she lived nearby and it was the first unambiguous meeting place that came to mind. When she turned up we decided straightaway to move on to somewhere more gentil up Whitworth Road ( I was driving ) without calling in at this one. In hindsight we should have stayed put ; that would have ended the misery sooner. No, she was a nice enough lady ( not a girl ) but we were each a million miles away from what the other was seeking.
So not until around 5.15 pm today did I cross the threshold and after last week's horror I was braced for the worst. Fortunately it didn't deliver on that score. It's quite an old fashioned pub with seperate rooms going off from the main bar area which looked pretty basic. The rooms are quite acceptable. The main lounge is clean and tidy with a bad choice of wallpaper but some nice pictures while a smaller snug to the left of the bar looked invitingly cosy. The wood pannelled games room also looked attractive.
The clientele were harmless looking; it was nice to see some other children in there. It seems to be a locals pub having only 5 parking spaces at the side and I have doubts about its future as the council estate to the rear seems to be exclusively Asian now. Nevertheless it was slightly better than expected so good luck to the landlord.
Sunday, 3 July 2011
18 Wagon and Horses , Smallbridge - Rochdale
Not visited
I didn't miss out The Wagon and Horses after all. One of the other lads must have spotted it go by while I was writing The Greengate in then mentioned it after I'd noted The Woolpack.
Beyond noting that it is now an off licence and convenience store I have nothing to write about it.
I didn't miss out The Wagon and Horses after all. One of the other lads must have spotted it go by while I was writing The Greengate in then mentioned it after I'd noted The Woolpack.
Beyond noting that it is now an off licence and convenience store I have nothing to write about it.
17 The Woolpack, Smallbridge - Rochdale
Not visited
The Woolpack was an odd one, a little further along the A58 near the grim Howarth Cross Secondary School. It seemed cut off from its clientele by the dual carriageway although there were houses behind it. Next door was a very incongruous little branch of Barclays Bank.
Unfortunately the pub closed down early in the last decade then fell prey to arsonists in 2005 leading to a complete demolition of the building. At the moment it is just a patch of waste ground.
16 The Sandknockers , Smallbridge - Rochdale
Not visited
The Sandknockers caused some schoolboy sniggers when I attended nearby Alice Ingham School between 1974 and 1976 but the name actually derived from a local trade of crushing local sandstone to produce sand. Despite a genuine historical connection with the area the pub was only named that in 1973, before which it was another Red Lion.
The pub was actually on the near side of Wardle Road coming from Littleborough and always looked more impressive with its whitewashed walls than the Bull's Head on the opposite side. However it began to struggle in the last decade. In 2003 the landlord decided that painting it banana yellow would revive its fortunes. When that didn't work it changed its name to the Spring Mill Tavern and tried to become a live music venue. In 2009 it closed for good and the building is up for sale for retail use.
15 Bull's Head , Smallbridge - Rochdale
First visited : 3 July 2011
Here's where the book goes a bit wrong - the perils of writing on a moving bus. First we've missed one out , the Wagon and Horses which is now a convenience store. And we've got the next two the wrong way round.
The Bull's Head is a large red brick pub at the bottom of Wardle Road where the A58 widens and becomes a dual carriageway for a short while. Unless there's one lurking in the backstreets that I don't remember it is now the only pub in the Smallbridge area
I'd never previously felt the need to go there and Smallbridge is not an area in which to linger although in the mid-70s we used to take the bus to the nearby library as its children's section was better stocked than Littleborough's. Today's lunchtime visit amply justified my previous lack of interest.
If the Bull's Head has benefited from the demise of all its rivals you'd be hard pressed to see any evidence. The interior is unspeakable. Despite being quite a large building the seating area is small and narrow and the seating itself is absolutely manky , torn and filthy. The place looks like it hasn't seen a lick of paint in 30 years. It opened its doors quarter of an hour late, couldn't serve anything for the next 5 minutes and couldn't take any money for it until a further 10 minutes had elapsed. For decoration there were a few tatty pool and darts trophies and notices about CCTV, drugs and barred people. It seems to be surviving on cheap beer, Sky Sports and Saturday night karaoke. The barman was actually quite genial despite looking like an old lag ( as did his three other customers ) but I couldn't wait to get out and won't be back.
Friday, 1 July 2011
14 The Greengate - Wardle
First visited : 23 January 1986
So now we come out of Littleborough for the first time and the next pub along the A58 is The Greengate half a mile further on. The journey into Rochdale from the Littleborough border isn't blessed with many nice buildings but The Greengate is one of them, a stone built pub that looks seventeenth century with mullioned windows.
I've only been in it the once, after a special general meeting of Littleborough Civic Trust. In 1985 there had been a coup against the Chairman for the past three years , Keith Parry . He was a talented man and on his day a considerable asset but it was generally felt that we had become very much his second priority behind the Coach House Project . He was replaced by the vice -chairman Betty Pickis and I think he always thought she'd orchestrated it ( they'd never been friends ) but really she was just in situ ; the real mover was my friend Roy Prince who had just retired and now became vice-chair. They set about revitalising the Civic Trust and it might not still be around today without them . One of the things we needed to do was revise the Constitution which we did in committee but needed a bigger turnout of members to ratify it. Roy and I persuaded some of those who walked regularly with us but didn't usually attend business meetings to come out on a cold Thursday night in January to do the necessary.
Once done we decided to go for a drink afterwards. I don't know who suggested The Greengate ; we never usually went there and it was in the wrong direction for most of us but that's where we retired to and it was a pleasant hour spent in a warm and comfortable pub.
13 Ox and Plough, Dearnley - Littleborough
First visited : circa 1992
The Ox and Plough is situated right on the edge of Littleborough at the busy junction of the A58 with Smithy Bridge Road . When the Civic Trust did the Littleborough Boundary walk it used to start and finish here.
The pub didn't take part in the Littleborough Quiz League but we did once have a fiixture against them on a Sunday. Someone couldn't make it so we roped in a regular from The Queen's called Gerald who embarrassed us by arguing so aggressively that the question had been imprecise when he flunked his individual round that they agreed to let him have it. We said nothing but never invited him again. The interior was non-descript.
The Ox and Plough must have been hit by the closure of much of the nearby Birch Hill Hospital over the last decade and changed hands on an almost weekly basis in 2003 but it survives still.
12 The New Inn Dearnley - Littleborough
First visited : circa 1988
And we were doing so well. Alas the New Inn is the first one we've come to that has now bitten the dust. It was situated in the Dearnley area just short of a mile from the town centre. It was virtually next door to the old co-op building where my mum ran her playgroup in conditions that would have given any modern day H & S inspector nightmares. Hence their committee meetings were often held in this pub.
I went in for quiz fixtures and remember it being quite cosy but otherwise unremarkable.
It closed down and in 2009 was sold for conversion to flats.
11 The Sun Hotel - Littleborough
First visited : circa 1989
The Sun lies just beyond the Whitelees Road junction on the same side of the A58 as The Royal Exchange. A relatively imposing red brick building which hides some unattractive industrial buildings from the main road The Sun has been a hotal since the early nineteenth century.
In my time it was one of the few accommodation options in Littleborough although in 1986 when the Plysu firm was talking to Littleborough Civic Trust about moving into the area their director referred to it as "basically a transport cafe". That might reflect southern sensibilities but I wouldn't imagine it attracts many holiday-makers.
Again, I first visited it for a quiz fixture. The high ceiling did suggest hotel more than pub but otherwise there was no discernible class difference from Littleborough's other pubs.
10 The Royal Exchange - Littleborough
First visited : circa 1988
The Royal Exchange was the next pub on the right of the A58, a third of a mile from the town centre. It's an odd triangular building occupying the acute angle formed by the junction of Featherstall Road (the A58) and Whitelees Road. It was built in the mid-nineteenth century but by my time it mainly existed to serve workers at Whittle's Bakery just behind it.
I was familiar with it from a young age as the bus stop just outside it was the nearest one to my church and first school , St Mary's. There was a small row of shops beside it but I think they're all private dwellings now.
When we entered the Littleborough Quiz League as the Red Lion in 1988 the Royal Exchange was the hub as the organiser Roy Beninson was a regular and captain of the team there . He also died in the early nineties and seemed like a decent bloke. He certainly didn't cheat because they were never a good team. The most memorable thing about playing them was Mr Annuit.
I've no idea what his real name was. He was in his mid-sixties I'd guess and had a nautical air about him, bald as a coot with a short grey moustache. He'd invariably wear a vile David Icke- style turquoise tracksuit with a zip down front, open, whatever the weather , to reveal an even viler tattoo on his chest ( a bird I think but I never wanted to look too closely ) . What made him hilarious was that whenever they got a question wrong he'd react to the correct answer with a swipe of the air and the exclamation "Aargh ! A knew it ! A knew it ! " Except he didn't.
As a pub it's a small, basic, old man's haunt that you can't imagine anyone recommending but it survives.
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