Thanks And Acknowledgements

My thanks go to Kent Libraries and Archives - Folkestone Library and also to the archive of the Folkestone Herald. For articles from the Folkestone Observer, my thanks go to the Kent Messenger Group. Southeastern Gazette articles are from UKPress Online, and Kentish Gazette articles are from the British Newspaper Archive. See links below.

Paul Skelton`s great site for research on pubs in Kent is also linked

Other sites which may be of interest are the Folkestone and District Local History Society, the Kent History Forum, Christine Warren`s fascinating site, Folkestone Then And Now, and Step Short, where I originally found the photo of the bomb-damaged former Langton`s Brewery, links also below.


Welcome

Welcome to Even More Tales From The Tap Room.

Core dates and information on licensees tenure are taken from Martin Easdown and Eamonn Rooney`s two fine books on the pubs of Folkestone, Tales From The Tap Room and More Tales From The Tap Room - unfortunately now out of print. Dates for the tenure of licensees are taken from the very limited editions called Bastions Of The Bar and More Bastions Of The Bar, which were given free to very early purchasers of the books.

Easiest navigation of the site is by clicking on the PAGE of the pub you are looking for and following the links to the different sub-pages. Using the LABELS is, I`m afraid, not at all user-friendly.

Contrast Note

Whilst the above-mentioned books and supplements represent an enormous amount of research over many years, it is almost inevitable that further research will throw up some differences to the published works. Where these have been found, I have noted them. This is not intended to detract in any way from previous research, but merely to indicate that (possible) new information is available.

Contribute

If you have any anecdotes or photographs of the pubs featured in this Blog and would like to share them, please mail me at: jancpedersen@googlemail.com.

If you`ve enjoyed your visit here, why not buy me a pint, using the button at the end of the "Labels" section?


Search This Blog

Saturday 7 February 2015

Updates

7th February, 2015: Folkestone Gazette Reports 1950 - 1954 Added

Two Bells (2) 1950s



Folkestone Herald 28-3-1953

Local News

Protection order made by Folkestone Magistrates on Tuesday: Charles Henry Welling, of 82, Rosebury Avenue, Tottenham, in respect of the Two Bells, Canterbury Road.

Folkestone Gazette 28-7-1954

Local News

The licensees of the Two Bells and the Royal Standard, Canterbury Road, Folkestone, were granted an extension from 10.30 p.m. to 11 p.m. from August 6th to 14th, with the exception of Sunday, at Folkestone Magistrates’ Court yesterday. The application was made be­cause of the fair to be staged during the week on the Canter­bury Road Recreation Ground. Chief Inspector L.A. Hadlow said the extension was granted last year because of the Coron­ation and the two licensees found it so advantageous during the week of the fair that they had decided to make application this year. The police, he said, had no objection.

Folkestone Herald 20-8-1955

Local News

At Folkestone Transfer Sessions on Wednesday the Magistrates granted an appli­cation for permission to carry out alterations at the Two Bells public house in Canterbury Road. It is proposed to build a new kitchen with a living room above and turn the old kitchen into a large saloon bar.
 
Folkestone Herald 3-3-1956

Local News

An anonymous telephone call led police to question a Dover man about the theft of £25 from a Folkestone public house, it was stated at Folkestone Magistrates` Court on Tuesday.

Before the Court was Bernard Wilfred Henley, 30 year old plasterer, of 16, The Linces, Dover, who pleaded Not Guilty to stealing the money, belonging to Charles Henry Wellings, of the Two Bells, Canterbury Road, Folkestone, on December 2nd. Henley, married with two children, was found Guilty. He was put on probation for two years and ordered to pay £7 13/10 costs. When the accused asked for time to pay the costs, a prosecution witness, Mr. D.M. Jolliffe, manager of Lloyd`s Bank, Buckland, said he would waive his claim to expenses amounting to £1 6/-. Henley was given two months to pay the balance of £6 5/10.

Mr. R.P. Tunstall, prosecuting, said on the date of the offence, and for some time before, structural alterations were being carried out at the public house. It was significant that Henley was one of the men engaged on the work. Mr. Wellings put a box containing £25 belonging to the dart club in his bedroom. Henley knew it was there because he swept debris away from just inside the door. Mr. Tunstall alleged that there was necessity for the accused man to commit the offence because he had an overdraft of some £80 at the bank. More significant still, Henley called on Mr. And Mrs. Hopper, of 7, Shrubbery Cottages, Dover, on November 30th, and told Mrs. Hopper that he knew of a box with some money in it at the place where he was working and he was going to have some of it. On the evening of the day the offence was committed Henley appeared to be flush with money. He paid 17/6 for a taxi to St. Margaret`s Bay. The taxi driver noticed there was £6 to £10 in Henley`s wallet. Mr. Tunstall said when Henley was seen by the police he denied ever taking the money.

D.C. Crane said on December 3rd he went to the Two Bells public house, where he saw a number of workmen, including the accused. He told Henley he was making enquiries about the £25, and that an anonymous phone call had been received on December 2nd to the effect that the person responsible was a workman living at Dover. Accused denied knowing anything about the money. He said he had a bit of an overdraft but was not hard up. The police officer said he saw Henley again on December 7th and told him he had reason to believe he took the money. The accused replied “I don`t know how you can say that”. When he saw the accused on December 20th he told him that two days before the money was stolen he (Henley) had told Mrs. Hopper that he was going to have some. “That is more of Hopper`s lies”, replied Henley, who maintained that his conscience was clear.

Henley, giving evidence, said in 1950 he went into business on his own as a contracting plasterer. In 1954 he ceased the business because his overdraft at the bank was so big. Since then he had been reducing the overdraft. On December 2nd he was in no graver financial circum­stances than he had been for the previous year or 18 months. The money the taxi driver saw in his wallet was his wages.

Mr. H. Gardener-Wheeler, for the accused, submitted that the evidence for the prosecution was most highly and unsatisfactorily circumstantial.
 

Rose Hotel 1930s -



Folkestone Express 20-5-1933

Obituary

We record, with deep regret, the death of Mr. Frederick Ralph, of Beaulieu, Bouverie Road West, Folkestone, who passed away suddenly at Manor Court Nursing Home on Saturday last, in his 80th year.

Mr. Ralph had been in bad health for a long time; indeed, he had not been able to leave his house for more than eight months, yet maintained his accustomed keen interest in affairs.

Mr. Ralph was born in 1854 opposite old Newgate Prison (now demolished), and he could remember the tolling of the Great Bell of St. Paul`s when the Prince Consort died in 1861, and, as a boy, witnessed the last public execution which took place at Newgate in 1868 or 1869. After occupying various posts in London (he was for a few months in the Temple), he migrated to Hastings, where he met and married his wife, who predeceased him by exactly five years. At Hastings he became a member of the Royal Naval Volunteers, and in carrying out his duties as manager to Messrs. Norton and Townsend he personally supervised, when a heavy sea was running, the loading of the wines on board Lord Brassey`s yacht “The Sunbeam”. From Hastings Mr. Ralph went to Maidstone, where he became proprietor of the Queen`s Head Hotel. Here he organised the first regatta to be held on the Medway.

Leaving Maidstone, Mr. Ralph came to Folkestone over 50 years ago, and bought the Rose Hotel (now no more) in Rendezvous Street. The hotel was, in those days, the recognised rendezvous of the principal citizens; the large hotels further west were not built. As time went on his business interests in Folkestone developed steadily. He was closely associated with the formation of the Pleasure Gardens Theatre Company, and, at his death, he was the senior member of the Board. He was always happy to remember that the late Lord Radnor personally invited him to join the Directorate. He took the greatest interest in theatrical affairs and knew many stage celebrities. For a short time Mr. Ralph was connected with the Victoria Pier. For many years he was Chairman of the Queen`s Hotel, resigning this position only recently owing to failing health. He formed the Folkestone Billposting Company, which developed branches at Dover and Hastings, this business being afterwards amalgamated with Messrs. Partington, Kent, Limited, of which company he was Chairman at the time of his death. He was also Chairman of the Burlington, and for some years was Chairman of the Grand, afterwards remaining as Director.

About 30 years ago, Mr. Ralph formed the Leas Pavilion Company and took a continuously active interest in this business to the last. He was for some years on the Board of the Folkestone Gas Company, and likewise held Directorships in Messrs. D. Baker and Co Ltd., and the Silver Spring Mineral Water Company.

Mr. Ralph was always keenly interested in sport, and in his younger days was a natural athlete, being, in particular, a lightweight boxer of considerable merit, while many will also recall his great skill as a billiards player.

As a businessman Mr. Ralph had foresight and courage. He took endless pains to make anything he was connected with a success, and was outstanding for his high standard of commercial probity. It would not be too much to say that he was far more concerned with other people`s interests, if he felt responsible for them, than he was even for his own. However, his judgement was rarely at fault, and his business ventures were almost uniformly successful.

He was a man of very considerable personality, one with a finely developed sense of humour, and he had an amazing collection of anecdotes, with great powers as a mimic.

His greatest virtues were his sense of justice and his generosity. Throughout his long life he performed kindnesses both small and great, and it is no more than his due to say his passing will be widely regretted. He felt the death of his wife very keenly, and during the last few years he was sorely tried by his inability to lead as active a life as formerly. Nevertheless, his interest in affairs remained unimpaired to the last.

He leaves a son and daughter, Mr. F.H.M. Ralph and Miss Violet Ralph, to mourn their loss.

The funeral took place on Wednesday at the Cheriton Road Cemetery.

Photo from Folkestone Herald


Folkestone Herald 13-1-1945

Obituary

The death of Mr. James Henry Kent, of “The Retreat”, Trimworth Road, Folkestone, which occurred on Tuesday, has caused widespread feeling of deep regret in Folkestone and the neighbourhood. Mr. Kent, who was 69, had suffered from a cold for about two months, but last weekend it was expected that a few days` rest would result in a complete recovery. He was admitted to the Royal Victoria Hospital on Thursday, but he failed to respond to treatment and died from pneumonia and heart failure.

Mr. Kent, a native of Liverpool, had had business and municipal interests in this district for a period of well over 30 years. When a young man he joined the Merchant Navy, which he left at the age of 29 to marry Miss Annie Elizabeth Lord, whose home was near Abingdon, Berkshire. He afterwards entered the licensed trade, and for short periods held the licences of the Prince Albert, at Sydenham, and the Queen`s Hotel, Abingdon.

He came to Folkestone several years before the outbreak of the last war and, apart from his other business activities, he quickly took a prominent interest in cinema undertakings. He was managing director of the first cinema built in Hythe, the old Hythe Picture Palace, which was opened in 1911, and was the forerunner of the much more up-to-date Grove Cinema, in Portland Road. He made similar interests in Maidstone, Reading and Banbury.

His career on Folkestone Town Council started more than 30 years ago when, in the summer of 1912, he was elected a member for the East Ward. His association, however, was quickly broken, and it was not until November, 1927, that he returned to the Corporation as a member for the Morehall Ward, in which he had important business interests. He was unopposed, filling the seat vacated by the late Councillor S. Kingsnorth. He was re-elected in 1930 and 1933, and then when the whole of the Council retired in 1934, prior to the Revision of the Boundaries Election, he went back again, serving until 1938, when he decided to retire from Municipal life. In July, 1941, however, he was persuaded again to offer his services and he was co-opted to the East Ward. Last summer he resigned his seat, a decision which in many quarters met with much regret. For a long period he was Chairman of the Parks Committee, and he was associated with a number of improvements carried out by the department in the pre-war years. The late Councillor Kent was one of the most progressive members of the Corporation and, coupled with his sound business judgement, this made him one of the most valuable members of the municipal body.

In 1927 he sold to the Corporation for £1,500 the licence of the old Rose Hotel, Rendezvous Street, which he had purchased, and despite strong opposition the licence was transferred in March of that year to the Leas Cliff Hall. Later on he played a big part in obtaining the transfer of a licence to the East Cliff Pavilion.

At the election of Mayor last year he made an outspoken protest against the re-election year after year of one man to the Mayoralty.

For many years he was proprietor of the Morehall Wine Stores, an off licence business, and in March, 1939, after several previous unsuccessful applications he was granted an on licence for the premises, the conversion of which was held up by the outbreak of war.

Mr. Kent was a man of varied activities, of which sporting pastimes formed a considerable part. In Berkshire he was well-known as a keen huntsman and shot. He was a skilful bowls player, and for many years had been a member of the Folkestone Bowls Club and other clubs. As an angler he took part in many of the Folkestone Sea Angling festivals, and also, on a number of occasions, visited Ireland for fishing holidays. He was greatly interested in cricket and had been associated with the Folkestone Cricket Festival in pre-war days, as well as with the County fixtures played on the Sports Ground.

At one time he was a member of the Folkestone Rotary Club. He was a Freemason, being a member of the Temple Lodge of Freemasons, No. 558, Folkestone.

Mr. Kent suffered a severe and tragic loss in the summer of 1934, when his wife died during the annual outing of the staff of the Grove Cinema. Mrs. Kent collapsed during the homeward journey and died at New. Romney. There are no children.

The funeral will take place today. The interment will be preceded by a service at Folkestone Parish Church at 11 a.m.

Folkestone Gazette 16-9-1953

Local News

The days when goats and  donkeys roamed the streets of Folkestone, and sea water (3d. a pail cold and 5d. hot) was delivered to hotels in the west end of the town, are recalled by the retirement of one of the town's oldest businessmen, 80-year-old Mr. Alfred Clement Lake, of Cheriton Road, Folke­stone.

Since the last war Mr. Lake and his wife, Trixie, have run the Criterion Hotel and Res­taurant in Cheriton Road, but on September 23rd their busi­ness comes under the auction­eer’s hammer. “People are hard to please these days,” said Mr. Lake, re­calling an August Bank Holi­day before 1914-18 war when he sold over 700 bottles of mineral water at his tea chalet adjoin­ing the Warren Halt Station. Now Mr. Lake is going to take a well-earned rest after 70 years of working 12 and more hours a day. “Hard work never killed any­body”, says Trixie, who despite her 70 years is as sprightly as ever. “I am already looking for another job. Perhaps some­body would like a good cook. That is the sort of work that would suit me”.

Mr. Lake started his working life as a farmer's boy in the days when cattle roamed through the Warren. His em­ployer was the late Mr. Edwin Burbidge, who farmed near the No. 3 Martello Tower on East Cliff, where he kept pigs. Farmer Burbidge’s bullocks and cows grazed on either side of the railway line through the Warren. And young Alfie Lake used to help drive them home to the cowsheds which once stood on the site now occupied by the Savoy Cinema. Next door, where a picture dealer now has premises, stood a shop where Mr. Burbidge sold milk.
They were the days of the old Prince Albert Hotel before it was modernised. Not only did young Alfred Lake have to drive the cows and bullocks to the Warren and to a meadow, known as Jenkins field on the site of Segrave Road, but he had to look after farmer Burbidge’s many don­keys and goats.

In the summer the donkeys hauled bathchairs up the Road of Remembrance from a stand adjoining the old toll house at the foot of the hill.
Small open carriages, drawn by one or two goats, were popu­lar with children who were taken for rides along the sea front. Quite frequently the goats and the donkeys strayed from their stables into Rendezvous Street. The police (there were only five in Folkestone 70 years ago) often called on Mr. Burbidge to round up the straying animals, although they did not constitute a real danger because there was so little vehicular traffic in those days.

Very often the goats would stroll as far as The Rose Hotel on the site of Messrs. Burton’s shop. There some of the prac­tical jokers of the day would ply the animals with beer until they were drunk. “One day”, said Mr. Lake, “they were not content just to get one of the old goats drunk. They painted it all the colours of the rainbow and then turned it loose to find its way back to our yard. Another favourite visiting place for the goats was the corn factor’s shop on the oppo­site side of the street. They had many a free meal before the indignant shopkeeper drove them away”.

Mr. Lake well remembers as a boy delivering milk to the notorious Warren Inn, where drinking out of hours was a special attraction, especially on a Sunday morning. “There were three large rooms at the inn”, said Mr. Lake, “and from an early hour they were crowded with people who walked miles for a drink. There was also a tea garden adjoining the premises”. The inn was closed over 60 years ago.

In the yard in Rendezvous Street Mr. Burbidge installed several big coppers in which he used to boil sea water. “We used to draw the water from the inner harbour”, said Mr. Lake, “carry it in big bar­rels on two wheels drawn by donkeys to our premises and boil it. Then we would set out for the west end of the town to fulfil orders from visitors and residents who liked to take sea water baths. Cold water sold at 3d. a pail and hot sea water at 5d. “When Mr. Burbidge gave up the sea water business it was taken over by the proprietors of the Bathing Establishment, who used an elaborate cart for their sea water round”.

True to the old story, the farmer’s boy married the farmer’s daughter but the first Mrs. Lake died in 1916. Before then Mr. Burbidge had moved to premises in Beach Street where he had a milk shop and continued to run his farm. He died a few years before the out­break of war in 1914 and Mr. Lake carried on the business. For several years before the First World War he had a tea chalet close to the Warren Halt Station. In those days the Warren was a favourite spot with picnic parties. “People used to bring all their own food, tea, sugar and milk”, he said. “I used to supply the hot water, cups, saucers and plates. I always had milk on sale at 8d. a quart because so very often the visitors would slip on the steep paths and spill the milk they were carrying in their baskets. The Warren was a far prettier spot in those days than it is today”, mused Mr. Lake. “I knew every inch of the twisting paths, and so did my pack-poniesmwhich carried supplies to the chalet. I often rode one of the ponies from the Warren Halt to the farm on East Cliff in five minutes. They knew every twist and turn of the un­dulating paths and could travel very fast”.

The outbreak of the 1914-18 war brought an end to the cattle grazing on the chalky slopes of the cliffs between Folkestone and Dover, although Mr. Lake well remembers the landslip at Eagle’s Nest when a complete house slid down the cliff. One of his cows was slightly injured by falling chalk. The War also brought an end to Mr. Lake`s catering activities at the Warren Halt. In 1920 Mr. Lake married again. His bride was Miss Trixie Rush and it was not long before they were back in business beneath the tall white cliffs, this time at the Warren Tea Chalet, built by the Corporation after the Warren had been given to the town by Lord Radnor. They were there for three years, and then followed similar ventures on East Cliff. They had a small tea hut on the site of the East Cliff Pavilion and another at the Roman remains. For nine years before the outbreak of war in 1939 they carried on a business at the Zig-Zag Cafe on the Marine Promenade, but the coming of war saw them catering for thousands of troops and sailors at a cafe in Tontine Street. Nine years ago they took over the Criterion Resturant in Cheriton Road. When the East Cliff Pavilion was opened it was Mrs. Lake who organised the first whist drive and dance at the new building. To this day Trixie is well known in Folkestone as a whist drive M.C. Every week she runs a drive at Oxford House for the East Ward Conservative Associa­tion, of which she is Chairman, and for the past two years she has organised whist drives for the Catholic Church. Mrs. Lake also takes a great interest in the Guildhall Over 60 Club of which she is Chair­man.