Name: Baaa 38
Address: 38 Market Street, Chorley
Baaa 38 opened on 2nd February 2023 and is managed by Meg Robinson. The story behind the pub really starts with the building, no.38 Market Street, one of the oldest retail properties in the town centre, which dates back to at least the 1700s, and is one that’s packed with character and history.
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1861 Census - John Blackledge Silk Draper |
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1871 Henry Cooke Professor of Music |
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1872 Worrall's Directory Henry Cooke Professor of Music |
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1874 Mannex Directory John Halliwell Bootmaker |
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1879 Slater's Directory Henry Critchley Boot Maker |
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1881 Census Henry Critchley Boot Maker |
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1882 Barrett's Directory Henry Critchley Boot and Shoe Maker |
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1885 Slater's Directory Henry Critchley Boot and Shoe Maker |
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1889 Post Office Directory Henry Critchley Boot and Shoe Maker |
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1891 Census Henry Critchley Boot Manufacturer |
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1895 Kelly's Directory Henry Critchley Boot & Shoe Maker |
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1900 Electoral Register Thomas Livesey Alker |
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1901 Census Thomas Livesey Alker Watchmaker |
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1905 Kelly's Directory Thomas L Alker Watch Maker |
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1911 Census Harold & Margaret Stansfield nee Alston |
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1936 Barrett's Directory E.M.Postlewhite Milliner |
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1939 Register Elizabeth M Postlewhite Ladies Outfitter |
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1954 Town & Country Directory Miss Postlewhite Milliner |
As you can see above, over the years the building played host to a wide range of businesses, and during the 19th and early 20th century was home to various clothing businesses, including a silk draper, boot and shoemaker, milliner, ladies’ outfitter and a wool and knitwear shop, and it’s from there that the pub’s name is derived.
Below is a photo of the building when it was home to ‘M Alston’ in the early 1900s.
Margaret Alston was born in Chorley on Eaves Lane in 1882 and was something of an entrepreneur, setting up her own business as a hatter and milliner in the early 1900s.
She married Harold Stansfield in 1910, a surveyor who worked for Chorley Council but it’s her own family history that makes her such a good omen for Baaa 38. In 1891 she was living at the Red Lion Hotel at 8, Market Street, one of Chorley’s most important coaching inns where her father William was the landlord; her brother James followed in his father’s footsteps and went on to run the Horse & Jockey Hotel in Mansfield.
More recently the building has tended to lean toward the catering and hospitality sector and over the past 50 years has been the Thai Smile Restaurant (1970s), Pickwick Coffee House (1980s), Parmesan & Pepper Restaurant (2000s), Skewers Restaurant (2015) and finally Cakes by Ruth, so it seems rather fitting that it's now become a bar for the very first time.
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Clive, Michaela & Meg Robinson, Ruth & Andy Poar (left to rght) |
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