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Blacksmiths Arms

Date of photo: 2016

Picture source: Google Streetview


The Blacksmiths Arms was situated on Bedford Road. This pub has now been converted to an Indian restaurant.
The building appears to have been constructed just before 1890 with yellow bricks made at one of the small local brick works, possibly that owned by Francis Wythes, adjacent to the site, and which it is known ceased operation in 1890. The new building replaced the earlier unlicensed beer house.
There are deeds from 1899 which are held at Bedfordshire Archives showing that the Public House was then owned by Bedford brewers, Higgins and Son.
The 1890 building resembled a small house with a tiny bar on either side of the front entrance door, but attached to it was a blacksmiths forge which until the 1980’s still contained the forge and equipment.
These dates would entirely reconcile to the evidence that the public house was built after the construction of the Bedford to Kimbolton Road in order to afford travellers the facility of a place to take a drink while their horse was being re shod or the wheels of the carriage repaired. The Victorian equivalent of a modern service station with refreshment facilities one could say!
In the late 1890’s the Fensome family had a total monopoly of three of the pubs in Ravensden as three brothers held the licences for three of the houses, William - the Blacksmiths Arms, David - the Horse and Jockey, and James - the Case is Altered.
During the Second World War the Blacksmiths Arms was very popular with American servicemen from Thurleigh taking the opportunity for one last drink while on their way back to base from a night out in Bedford. It was also frequented by girls from the Womens Land Army training unit at Ravensden House, some of whom it is said met their future husbands there.
In 1991 the whole place was enlarged and refurbished. The forge equipment was removed, the archway giving access to the rear was filled in. All of this newly gained space was encompassed into the pub proper, thereby increasing the overall size of the establishment three fold and providing room for a restaurant area.
After some difficult years in the early 2000’s the pub was eventually sold and is now an Indian Restaurant.
Trevor Stewart (December 2024)
 

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