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Torquay > Old London Inn
Old London Inn
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The downstairs part of Ryan’s Bar, on Abbey Road, used to be
The Old London Inn.
The only entrance was half way up the steps opposite the Gallery entrance of
the Theatre Royal. It had a public bar, a private bar, a smoke room and a
Bottle & Jug. As the Inn counted among its patrons the audience, actors and
staff of the theatre, when the building changed into a cinema in 1933 a good
deal of trade was lost.
In 1992 the Herald published a couple of articles from Harold Browning,
whose father was the landlord. He recalled how, during the 1930s, the London
was a Beer House and could only sell beer and cider. The cider came as
either sweet or rough, the latter being scrumpy and known as ‘lunatic
broth’.
To quote Harold: “It may well be that the expression ‘legless’ came from
drinking rough cider. People who could normally drink a fair amount of beer,
on drinking rough cider simply lost the use of their legs… they simply
collapsed, perfectly coherent, but absolutely unable to stand.”
Bar food consisted of the newly arrived Smith’s Crisps and local Cornish
pasties.
“Our supplies were delivered by draymen driving horse drawn wagons,” wrote
Harold.
“As it was customary to give each coach driver a pint we reckoned that they
each drank at least 20 pints a day…
“Our customers consisted mainly of working men, some of whom came in still
dressed in their corduroy trousers with leather straps around the knees,
straight from digging the roads by pick and shovel…
“Occasionally an American warship would come into the Bay and their sailors,
coming from Prohibition in the States, soon got very drunk and it was a
common sight to see their naval police collecting up the drunks and
literally throwing them into the boats in the inner harbour”.
In 1837 the Court Book of the Manor of Torwood recorded that seven houses
were to be built in the ‘orchards, furze and grass plots’ on Lower
Commercial Road – later to be renamed Lower Union Street. Up till 1874 there
was still a plant nursery owned by Joseph Morgan at, what was to become,
Castle Circus. The name Morgan’s Gardens lives on in Morgan Avenue.
While the land was being cleared, an old well was filled in and at the
bottom was found a cannon ball. This was claimed to be from the French
‘shelling’ of Torquay – following on from their 1690 attack on Teignmouth.
The new houses were built with garden plots and rails in front and had a
front and back parlour. However, with the development of Upton and Torre and
the opening of the railway in 1848, the Higher and Lower Commercial Roads
became popular thoroughfares. The front herb gardens and flower plots then
developed into shop fronts. |
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Source: Kevin Dixon |
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