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Lancashire >
Prescot > The Engine
The Engine
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1999 auction catalogue |
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The Engine was situated at 86 Sewell Street. |
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The Engine until 1818 had been called the Fire
Engine. It had been called “The Fire Engine because in the mid 1700’s, the
nearby Prescot Hall Coal Mine was using the latest type of pumping engine to
drain water from the shafts. It was a Newcomen Engine, which gave the idea
for the original name of the pub.) The town of Prescot was surrounded by
coal pits and in those far off days the flooding of pits was a constant
problem. The Pub stood in Snig Lane, which was renamed by Prescot Local
Board in February 1871 to Sewell Street. It was of unusual design, being
semi-circular in plan, the main entrance was through a stone portico of two
Roman Doric style columns. (Info.from Inns of Prescot & Whiston by Mavis
Abraham & Bill Blinkhorn 1988). |
Colin Brown (February 2016). |
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Contacts |
Make email contact with other ex-customers and landlords of this pub by adding your details to this page . |
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Name |
Dates |
Comments |
John Renwick |
1976 |
I was working there part-time in the evenings whilst
still at school. Nicky and his wife were the landlords |
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