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?


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Saturday 19 March 2022

Packet Boat (1), Dover Street 1811 - 1832

Licensee
Pierce Horton 1811 1832



Kentish Chronicle 23-8-1808 & Kentish Gazette 26-8-1808

Inquest

Folkestone, August 22nd. An inquest was held at the Packet Boat, this day, before Thomas Baker, esq. Mayor and Coroner, on the body of a young man, named Henry Jordan, servant of Capt. Thomas, of Sandgate, who died last night, of the hurt he re­ceived by a gig running over him on Saturday evening. It appeared in evidence, that as Mr. Cavena, of the Royal Staff Corps, and Mr. Turner, of the 95th Rifle Regiment, were returning from Dover, in a gig, the horse took fright in descending the Folkes­tone hill, and set off at full speed, throwing the gentlemen out; the animal continued to gallop furi­ously down Dover Street, and getting entangled with the panniers of an ass (in one of which sat a young child), they were thrown with great violence in diffe­rent directions, and the child, though much hurt on the head by the fall, was not dangerously wounded. Immediately after, the vehicle coming in contact with a little boy on a pony, in the care of the above-mentioned Henry Jordan, who, with the ut­most presence of mind extended his body to throw the child off the pony, on the opposite side, received a most violent contusion in the chest and abdomen by the horse and chaise passing over his body. He was taken to the Packet Boat, and languished in great agony till eight o'clock yesterday evening. Verdict – Accidental Death.

Note: This gives an earlier date for this house.