Robin Hood (Stretford, Manchester) (1): Difference between revisions

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* "Mr. John Owen in the 40th volume of his interesting manuscripts, which are in the Manchester Free Library, has made drawings of the following Stretford buildings, copies of some of which illustrate this volume [... including] Robin Hood Inn, kept by John Hamer, at the corner of Urmston Lane", cf. {{:Crofton, H T 1899a}}, vol. III (1903), p. 24.
* "Mr. John Owen in the 40th volume of his interesting manuscripts, which are in the Manchester Free Library, has made drawings of the following Stretford buildings, copies of some of which illustrate this volume [... including] Robin Hood Inn, kept by John Hamer, at the corner of Urmston Lane", cf. {{:Crofton, H T 1899a}}, vol. III (1903), p. 24.
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== Notes ==
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File:google-earth-street-view-robin-hood-stretford-1.jpg|Stretford's original Robin Hood was situated around here on what is now Park Road / Google Earth Street View
File:google-earth-street-view-robin-hood-stretford-1.jpg|Stretford's original Robin Hood was situated around here on what is now Park Road / Google Earth Street View
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Revision as of 17:08, 15 May 2020

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The original site of the Robin Hood.

[[File:|thumb|right|500px|The Robin Hood / Anonymous. Old Stretford ([s.l.], [s.d.]). Photo­graphic post­card (monochrome). 141 x 89 mm..]]

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-07. Revised by 3.133.141.6, 2020-05-15.

The pub now at 125 Barton Road, Stretford, Manchester, was originally situated on the north-western corner of the junction whose south-western corner it now occupies.

For the current pub, see Robin Hood (Stretford, Manchester) (2). Evidently the inn only became the Robin Hood at (probably) some point in the 19th century, for H. T. Crofton noted in 1903 that "[t]he Robin Hood Inn is the modern name for the old Waggon and Horses, and stood on the west side of Butt Lane, which leads from King Street or Urmston Lane towards Derbyshire Lane".[1] The O.S. maps (see below) tell us that Butt Lane has now, as it were, had its name bowdlerized to 'Park Road'. A citizen born c. 1816 remembered that "[i]n the roadway at Four Lane Ends, opposite the Waggon and Horses, which was afterwards the Robin Hood, there was an iron ring fixed for bear baiting".[2]

One 19th century keeper active after the pub had become the Robin Hood was named John Hamer[3] Slater's Directory for 1845 lists Josiah Johnson Smith, victualler", as keeper of the Robin Hood.[4] The O.S. maps listed below include the indication "P.H." for the present pub. An unlabelled building is shown at the old location. The pub had probably moved across Urmston Lane by 1898. See the page on Robin Hood (Stretford, Manchester) (2).Template:PnItemQry

Gazetteers

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Maps

Drawings

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