Photo from Folkestone Gazette 7-4-1971 |
Folkestone Gazette
5-9-1973
Local News
After more than
40 years as a publican, Reginald Peters sent his last pile of pennies crashing
into a blanket on Thursday. With 16 years as landlord of the White Lion Hotel,
Cheriton High Street, and 43 years in pubs throughout Kent behind him, it was
one of the many things he was doing for the last time. For, on Monday, Mr. Peters hung up his
tankard, emptied his last optic, swapped beer handle for garden hoe and settled
down to retirement in the country. As he spoke on Thursday
of his life behind bars (the kind you don't try to escape from), business went
on as usual. The only difference being
the aforementioned pile of pennies which, incidentally, raised £36.50 for the
Folkestone committee of the Campaign for Cancer Research.
Retirement, I suggested, would perhaps prove more of a wrench for the
63-year-old landlord than it would for most. Pubs have been his life. His parents kept one for
more than 50 years and he was born within singing distance of a glass of
bitter. He reckons
he has seen the best era in the history of the English pub. “It’s become so
different", he
said, nodding in the directions of a fruit machine and juke box. “There’s not
as much fun as there used to be”.
Admittedly wages were much lower, but some of the prices he quoted for 40
years ago were still enough to bring tears to the eyes of all but the strongest
men. Fourpence for a
pint of bitter, sixpence for a tot of whisky, the same for a large (very large)
port, 11½d . for 20 Players - the list goes on and on. But perhaps even worse
than rising prices is the drop In quality. ‘‘Beer today is not nearly as strong as it used to
be”, said Mr. Peters. After so many years working long hours, seven days a week, wasn’t he
going to find time hanging heavily on his hands? “The prospects of all that leisure time
doesn’t really worry me”, he replied. “I like messing around with tape
recorders and things, and I will have a chance to do some gardening”.
Photo from Folkestone Gazette |
South Kent Gazette
28-3-1979
Local News
Police are hunting several men who attacked a barman in
Cheriton on Saturday night. But fears that workmen from the M20 motorway
construction site could be responsible have been scotched by both police and
local landlords. The incident happened at 11.10 p.m. in the Victoria public
house, Risborough Lane, when
barman Brian Brown told customers it was time to leave.
A police spokesman said that Mr. Brown, who lives
in Christchurch Road, Folkestone, received a bleeding nose, cut gums and
facial bruising. “Navvies”
from the Danton Lane, Cheriton, motorway site were blamed for the assault
because the assailants had not been identified and one spoke with an Irish
accent.
However, Police Inspector
Peter Ford told the Gazette “We’ve had no trouble at all from the site. If the
situation with site workers continues as it is then we shall be perfectly happy”.
Mr. Brown was unavailable
for comment at the time of going to press but the Victoria’s landlord said
“This is the first time we’ve had trouble in the pub since I came here three
years ago”.
Speculation that motorway
workers could be a possible source of violence was scotched by landlords at: The
White Lion in Cheriton High Street - “So far they’ve been perfectly well
behaved in here”.; The Morehall, Cheriton Road “Nice lads ... no
trouble whatsoever”.; The Nailbox, Shorncliffe Road – “A bit noisy, that`s
all”.; The Cherry Pickers, Ashley Avenue, Cheriton – “We`ve had a few in, but
they`ve been perfectly O.K.”.
Folkestone Herald
26-5-1979
Local News
Renovation plans at a
Folkestone pub could turn it into one of the town's major entertainment
centres. Nearly £10,000 is being spent on the pub, The White Lion, at Cheriton.
And now new landlord
Bryan Adams hopes he will be able to give the town a top rock and cabaret
venue. Already Mr. Adams, who only took over the pub six weeks ago, has set
about cleaning up its image. Last week he banned motorway construction workers
after a fight outside the premises led to a £400 bill for a smashed window. He
explained “This place has had a rough image in the past, but I am determined to
change all that”.
Plans for the pub
include re-decoration and carpeting throughout and regular evenings of live
entertainment. It is hoped that these will include two rock nights a week,
featuring both established and local bands, and cabaret and club-type
entertainment at the weekends.
Mr. Adams said that
he hoped entertainment at the pub would start in June. “We will try to get
first-class acts down here. With the right acts I am convinced we could become
one of the leading entertainment centres in the town”, he said.
Note: Adams not listed
in More Bastions.
South Kent Gazette
30-5-1979
Local News
Thieves broke into the White Lion pub in Cheriton High
Street on Thursday and stole bottles of whisky and rum, and £140 in cash.
On Friday morning, as he checked his stock, landlord
Bryan Adams told the Gazette “It`s lucky they didn`t take quite a lot more”.
Mr. Adams thinks the thieves, who broke in through the rear of the building,
were amateurs. “They seem to have tried a lot of windows before actually
getting in”, he said. “I am sure if they had been really serious they would
have taken more of my stock”. The intruders grabbed the cash, a handful of spirit
bottles and fled. Mr. Adams thinks they may have been frightened off by his
dog. “I keep him in the office and he obviously must have barked when these
people got in”, he said. “I didn’t hear anything but there are scratch marks on
the door where the dog had tried to get out”.
Note: Adams does not appear in
More Bastions
Folkestone Herald
30-6-1979
Local News
Trouble and violence
are things of the past for the White Lion pub, Cheriton. At least, that is the hope of landlord, Bryan Adams, as he
prepares to open the pub as a new entertainment centre this weekend. In the past the pub has gained a rough reputation. But,
since Mr. Adams arrived as new landlord three months ago, he has been
determined to clean up the bad image. He has
re-decorated and refurnished the premises and last month he banned motorway
construction workers from the bar after a navvy was hurled through a window
during a closing-time fight on the pavement outside. Now the £10,000 face-lift
has been completed and tonight a special evening is being arranged to mark the
start of regular entertainment spots at the pub. Featured act tonight will be
the local group, Denigh, but Mr. Adams says that shows ranging from cabaret to
country and western will be presented. “I know the place has had a bad image in
the past”, he said, “but I am determined to make this a really good
entertainments centre and make sure there is no more trouble”.
Ironically the special
celebrations tonight nearly could not go ahead as planned. Police objected to an application placed before Folkestone
Magistrates for an extension of hours. They claimed that it wasn’t a special
occasion. But the Magistrates decided to
approve an extension until 11.45 p.m.
South Kent Gazette
3-10-1979
Local News
There was a barmaid with a big difference pulling pints
at the White Lion pub in Cheriton. London drag queen Tony La Tour went behind
the bar after his performance in the pub on Thursday night.
A crowded pub had been waiting expectantly for him when
he walked in wearing a long fur coat and carrying his props at 10 p.m.
Most of the women crowded
into the open back room as the men made a dive for the now empty bar. A pool table
was hastily moved aside and the men wandered in clutching their pints and stood
in the shadows at the back. One old regular in a raincoat and cloth cap walked
to the front thinking he was the star of the show. “Get ’em
off”, cried the hopeful locals as the old man unbuttoned his coat. In a blaze
of music in walked Terry with a large wobbling bulge under his long white
dress. To the music of “Yummy, Yummy, Yummy, I`ve Got Love In My Tummy” he did
strange things with the bulge. The old boy in the raincoat still tried
to get in on the act but he gave up when he got a kiss.
Then off came the dress
to reveal a mini skirt and a pair of rubber mounds. A “volunteer”
was dragged from the audience as his cheering mates pushed him forward. Layer after
layer of his clothes were stripped off as the crowd roared. The act ended with
a bang and the man was left in an embarrassing position. He crawled away,
picking his clothes off the floor. Everyone returned to the bar, waiting for
the repeat performance at midnight.
The volunteer, Sammy
Collins, of Cheriton, said he has got used to this sort of treatment. “I used
to work with strippers in London. You just have to let them get on with their
act and you get a good laugh.
Landlord Bryan Adams said
“Folkestone is dead at the moment, so I am trying to bring some life to it. I
will try to get a different artiste down once a month. I wasn`t too sure, but
after Thursday night I know it is right”.
But not all the regulars
were too pleased. “To tell the truth I prefer to sit here with my pint”, one
said. Some members of a local church, All Souls, in Cheriton, are also unsure
about it. Reader and editor of the parish magazine, Mr. K.B. Edwards, said “I
am not particularly prudish, but I am not sure a public house is the proper
place for that sort of thing. We ought to be a little wary about what we call
entertainment and where we hold it”. In the latest parish magazine he said,
about drag and striptease “Is this what is really needed today to provide
“entertainment”, because if it is, then our society is sicker than it realises?
Moral standards have declined. Is this another nail in the coffin?”
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