Saturday, 6 August 2016
128 Lincoln Inn - Rochdale
Not visited
This was on the right hand side of Oldham Road as you moved further towards the centre of Rochdale near to the Rochdale Canal. It closed relatively recently ( May 2013 )
127 The Bay Horse - Lowerplace
First visited : 6 August 2016
The Bay Horse is almost opposite The Plough on the opposite side of Oldham Road.
It looks OK from the outside and has a nice tiled vestibule but little else to commend it. It's small with one large open room facing the bar and a small lounge to the side. It was reasonably well patronised for a Saturday teatime when we called, with some guys playing darts with little regard for the safety of those having to sit nearby. It's not unfriendly but a bit tatty with nothing to entice a future visit.
Sunday, 1 May 2016
126 The White Lion- Lowerplace
Not visited
The White Lion stood on the corner of Oldham Road and Kingsway. It was demolished when the road improvements were made in 2007 but how long it had been closed before that I couldn't say.
125 The Plough - Lowerplace
First visited : 30 April 2016
This isn't one I have any plans to visit again.
The Plough is on the right hand side as you approach the lights at Kingsway. It's an attractive stone built property but pretty unwelcoming on the inside.
It's small, without a great deal of seating plus an over-loud jukebox and unattractive clientele. The landlord is obviously into amateur football as most of the wall space not taken up by TV screens is given over to photographs and other memorabilia of three local clubs . That's the only positive thing I can say about this otherwise charmless pub.
Saturday, 2 April 2016
124 The Dog and Partridge - Balderstone
Not visited
This was the next pub down Oldham Road towards Rochdale. I remember when I was in the sixth form this had a reputation as a place where you could get served and therefore attracted a few recalcitrants on Wednesday afternoons. It is now an Italian restaurant.
123 The Royal Hotel - Balderstone
(Acknowledgements to www.derekparsons.com for the picture )
Not visited
This was the next pub down from the Yew Tree having gone under the M62. It has been closed since at least 2012.
122 The Yew Tree - Balderstone
(Acknowledgements to www.derekparsons.com for the picture )
First visited : 2 April 2016
This was a long-delayed visit and something of a nostalgia trip.
I used to see The Yew Tree every day between 1978 and 1983 from the windows of my last school Bishop Henshaw RC Memorial School. The school's cross country course , such as it was, went right past it . A few months before I went to the school, my Mum had dined at the Yew Tree with her playgroup colleagues , in the pub's most distinctive feature, a genuine Pullman railway carriage which had been parked beside it since 1968. The carriage apparently remained there until 1998 when it became too costly for the pub to repair so it was sold on to the East Lancashire Railway.
Some of the sixth formers used the pub's car park ; whether or not they paid something for this I couldn't say.
There was , probably still is , a bus stop right outside it which I used when returning from after school activities.
The pub's had a big face lift since then and is quite odd inside. When you go through the front door you're into a beige-painted corridor and it's not immediately obvious where the bar is. In fact it's the second door on the right. The pub still does food but I didn't sample any of it. It's spotlessly clean and well kept.
I went in a rather odd front lounge with painted photos of Edwardian ( I'm guessing ) people whose names meant absolutely nothing to me. But it was the view from the window that captivated me. Bishop Henshaw's has physically disappeared ( it became known as St Cuthbert's in an unnecessary sop to the failed middle schools that used to feed it, when they were abolished in 1989 ). Apart from a small sub-station on the far left of the site, all the buildings I knew have been razed to the ground and replaced by new ones . I had been back the odd time for summer fetes and things in the nineties but now it is no more. There was nothing of any great architectural merit to mourn but one's past gets less tangible by the day and sights like that bring it home to you.
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