» Main Index
» Search This Site
» Submit Update
» Contact Us
|
Home >
Dorset >
Shaftesbury > Fountain Inn
Fountain Inn
|
Date of photo: 2017 |
© Copyright Maigheach-gheal and
licensed for reuse under
this Creative
Commons Licence |
|
|
The Fountain Inn was situated at 2
Breach Lane. This grade-II listed pub closed in 2017.
It is a coaching inn dating from the c1750’s, and is comprised of the inn
with a small house of earlier date and a series of outbuildings attached to
its east. The first edition Ordnance Survey map published in 1887 shows the
inn as standing on the edge of an L-shaped plot. It is believed that the inn
was mainly used by coach passengers to quench their thirst while they waited
for extra horses to be added to enable them to make the steep climb up Tout
Hill into Shaftesbury. C19 trade directories confirm that in 1851 the
publican at the Fountain Inn was Charles Goulden, a local stone mason
(Hunt's Trade Directory of 1851), in 1865 it was run by Richard Brickell, a
local farmer (J. G Harrod & Co. Postal & Commercial Directory of Dorset &
Wilts 1865) and in 1895 by Frederick Pickford (1895 Kelly's Directory of
Dorsetshire). In the c1980s the associated outbuildings to the east were
sold off and rebuilt to form a row of six houses. |
Source: David Fisher |
|
|
|
Listed
building details: |
A coaching inn dating from the
c1750’s, incorporating an earlier house to its east with an C18 front..
MATERIALS: Both the inn and attached house, the latter set further back from
the road, are built in stone rubble, set on a plinth. They are painted to
the front and each has a pitched tiled roof (steeper to the house) with
gable end stacks in brick.
PLAN: the earlier house has an L-shaped plan, the rear wing now forming the
kitchen to the pub, with a later lean-to attached to its north gable end,
and the front wing remaining in domestic use. The later inn buildings form a
U-shaped plan, which together with the rear wing of the earlier house
enclose a former court yard that was roofed over in the c1980s.
EXTERIOR: The two storey house, set back from the road, has two three-light
windows to each floor, those to the first floor with leaded panes, and those
at ground floor level, including the central entrance, with segmental heads.
The inn to the left also has a two storey two bay front with a central
entrance with a timber panelled door and two large timber sashes with cross
bar to each floor. During a listing inspection in the 1970s a Medieval
carved stone head was seen, incorporated in the stonework to the front, now
possibly covered by the pub's sign on the front elevation.
The rear of the house has segmental headed windows to the ground floor and
timber three light casements at first floor level. A small flat-roofed
porch, added in the late C20, is built into the corner of both wings.
Attached to the rear of the pub is a corrugated iron terrace cover resting
on scaffolding poles, obscuring part of the elevation. The stone rubble
gable ends to either side, with later lean-tos, are blind.
INTERIOR: The ground floor of the pub has been opened up entirely with the
former open courtyard to its centre now roofed over (since the c1980s). The
front part of the pub retains part of its flagstone flooring and a
projecting stone rubble fire place with timber bressumer. The pub's kitchen
(part of the earlier house) contains an C18 classically shaped ceiling beam.
Other ceiling timbers have been removed and replaced with only fragments
surviving.
The first floor of the pub, the attached house and the adjacent
outbuildings, including all roof spaces, could not be inspected. |
|
|
Do you have any anecdotes, historical information, updates or photos of this pub? Become a contributor by submitting them here. Like this site? Follow us on
Make email contact with other ex-customers and landlords of this pub by adding your details to this page. |
|
|