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Home > Northumberland >
Whitley Chapel > Fox & Hounds
Fox & Hounds
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Date of photo: 2012 |
© Copyright Brian
Norman and
licensed for reuse under
this Creative
Commons Licence |
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The Fox & Hounds was known locally as The Clickem Inn. This
grade-II listed
pub is now in residential use. |
Source: Mike Shingleton |
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A 1974
video about the landlady of the pub can be found
here. |
Warren
Rushby (June 2023) |
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From The Independent, 3rd July 1999 |
Selwyn Fairlamb became
the first pubowner to find himself turfed out of his own lounge and beer
garden yesterday. Strictly speaking, his little plot, at the back of the
200-year-old Fox and Hounds pub in the village of Whitley Chapel,
Northumberland, is not a beer garden at all. That is because he has shut the
pub after a series of disputes with regulars in the 10 years he ran the pub
and turned it into his own home-from-home.
It has not exactly made him Mr Popularity with local Tynedale councillors,
who were unhappy to lose the drinking-hole, affectionately known as the
Click 'Em Inn.
And since he didn't seek planning permission for the changes he made after
shutting the pub four years ago, the council has now forbidden him from
living in the converted parts - including his own lounge and garden.
With the pub closed, 49-year-old Mr Fairlamb, who works as a chartered
surveyor, decided the eight-metre square bar area would make the perfect
domestic lounge.
But the ruling forbids him from changing its use and moving in his
furniture. "He can't sit in the lounge watching TV because that would be an
infringement," said Tynedale's head of development control Jack Chown. "We
will also prevent him from using the former beer garden as a domestic
garden." Mr Fairlamb has been given a year to move out of the rooms that
used to be the pub and told he could be taken to court if he does not
comply.
"Scattered rural communities such as Hexhamshire are losing their facilities
all the time," said parish council chairman David Trotter. "We lost the post
office here last year, we lost the village shop many years ago and there's
often talk that we could lose our resident vicar. We've also lost the pub,
of course, but we maintain hope of getting it back. The only centres of this
parish are the school and the village hall and it would be nice to have the
pub back too."
Mr Fairlamb would not talk about his difficulties, yesterday, but his
planning agent described the situation as ludicrous. When the pub's closure
prompted a 339-name petition in the village he claimed lack of support made
the business unviable. |
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Listed
building details: |
Inn, C18. Rubble with stone flag
roof, brick stacks. Main part 2 storeys, 3 bays, slightly irregular.
Left-of-centre old boarded door flanked by 4-pane sashes, all with timber
lintels cemented over; smaller 4-pane sashes above. End stacks. To right
1-storey 5-bay part with bay I renewed door, bay 2 4-pane sash and 3 C20
casements. C20 brick ridge stack; included for group value. Interior: 2
plain C18 fireplaces, north-east corner stair with 2-panel door, old
transverse beams. |
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