Mary Tomlin (Nottingham): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:NottsNottinghamWhiteHorseBrewhouse1a_GeorgeCrutcher_15July2011.jpg|thumb|400px| | [[File:NottsNottinghamWhiteHorseBrewhouse1a_GeorgeCrutcher_15July2011.jpg|thumb|400px|The brewhouse. Photo: George Crutcher]] | ||
<big> | |||
'''William T Tomlin and Mary Edith Tomlin''' | <big>'''William T Tomlin and Mary Edith Tomlin''', ''White Horse, 313 Ilkeston Road, Nottingham''</big> | ||
</big> | |||
Ray Farleigh writes: | |||
''Kelly's Brewers & Maltsters Directory of 1877 lists Thomas Vickers, Ilkeston Road as a small brewer. The Brewers Journal July 1887 had a gazette notice of a first and final dividend of 6s 4½d in the bankruptcy of Sarah Vickers, widow, licensed victualler and wine & spirit merchant of the White Horse Hotel, 313 Ilkeston Road. Then in the Country Brewers Gazette, 27 May 1897, the White Horse "home-brewed public house" for sale by auction on 16 June, for many years in the occupation of Samuel Malbon Hopkin deceased and now of his executors. H Edward Hopkin(s) in 1898; Mrs Mary Elizabeth Tomlin in Kelly's in 1923.'' | |||
Revision as of 08:35, 7 June 2017
William T Tomlin and Mary Edith Tomlin, White Horse, 313 Ilkeston Road, Nottingham
Ray Farleigh writes:
Kelly's Brewers & Maltsters Directory of 1877 lists Thomas Vickers, Ilkeston Road as a small brewer. The Brewers Journal July 1887 had a gazette notice of a first and final dividend of 6s 4½d in the bankruptcy of Sarah Vickers, widow, licensed victualler and wine & spirit merchant of the White Horse Hotel, 313 Ilkeston Road. Then in the Country Brewers Gazette, 27 May 1897, the White Horse "home-brewed public house" for sale by auction on 16 June, for many years in the occupation of Samuel Malbon Hopkin deceased and now of his executors. H Edward Hopkin(s) in 1898; Mrs Mary Elizabeth Tomlin in Kelly's in 1923.
William T Tomlin brewing from 1898 to 1914, followed by Mary until 1926, almost certainly his widow. The pub became a Shipstone's house, but is now in use as a cafe. The former brewhouse still stands at the back.
- NottsNottinghamWhiteHorse1 SP Dec05.jpg
When William Tomlin rebuilt the pub in 1912, he incorporated a plaque in the gable 'WT 1912'
- NottsNottinghamWhiteHorse2 SP Feb06.jpg
Mary Tomlin sold the pub to Shipstones, who applied their name in mosaic lettering in the front lobby.