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Surfleet > Mermaid Inn
Mermaid Inn
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The Mermaid Inn was situated at 2
Gosberton Road. This pub closed in 2020. Planning permission has been granted to convert to
residential use. |
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From Lincolnshire Heritage: |
Late 18th or early 19th century inn with
attached accomodation, altered to form a large roadhouse in the early 20th
century. The buildings are largely orientated along a rough north to south
axis. They are mostly of two storeys, being built of brick with stone
dressings, and under a variety of pantile and slate roofs. Little is known
about the early history of the inn, although it is known to advertised for
sale in 1810. By the mid-C19 the inn had become associated with Surfleet
Brewery, which had been constructed to the south and west of the inn (see
MLI126055). As part of the establishment of a brewery on site, a new
principal frontage to the public house was constructed, fronting Gosberton
Road to its east. Further alterations were made with the early 20th century
conversion to a roadhouse, and in the later 20th century, when the interior
was largely modernised, although some early fixtures and fittings still
survive. F
The buildings that comprise the inn were built in several phases. The oldest
building was originally an early 18th century detached kitchen of an earlier
building on the site and is now attached to the current inn. It is a small
one room building with a barrel vaulted cellar and is constructed of English
bond white-painted brick. The steeply pitched roof no longer conserves the
original pantiles. The earliest phase of construction of the main inn
buildings is from the early 19th century. This being composed of the
original inn building and former detached stables. The original inn
building, possibly dated to before the first mention of the inn in 1808, has
an east-west orientation and is constructed of brick. The inn and stables
were connected by a mid to late 19th century building and all three
buildings were covered with one contiguous slate roof covering by the early
20th century; a further 20th century extension would connect these buildings
even more. The former stables were also extended to the west in the mid to
late 19th century and would be extended again in the 20th century. In the
mid-19th century a new principal range was added to the south of the
original inn building, shortly after the opening of the brewery in 1838; the
detached 17th century kitchen was incorporated to this new range as a
service quarters. The Smith family resided in the building complex from 1860
but did not open a public house, despite having a license, although the
brewery continued to be in use. The brewery was completely demolished by
1939 and The Mermaid Inn opened as a public house in 1938-1939. The inn was
located on the route that became in the 1920s the A16. |
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