Name: Mason's Arms
Address: 10 Fell Brow, Longridge
10 Fell Brow |
As its name suggests, the Mason's Arms was originally the home of a stonemason, Joshua Parsons and his family and was one of the stone dwellings on the right hand side towards the top of Fell Brow, approaching the junction with Kestor Lane. Joshua was born and bred in Alston and no doubt worked in one of the nearby quarries.
Many of the properties have been demolished over the last century or so to make way for new development but numbers 9 and 10 still stand and are residences to this day. The exact location of the beer house is difficult to pin down due to changes in the numbering on census records, appearing as either 10 or 12 Fell Brow but I suspect number 10 to have been the correct location due to the size of the plot, which at one stage would have included a brewhouse and stables.
9 & 10 Fell Brow (Google) |
This beerhouse was brought into being as a result of the revolution for pubs that was the Beerhouse Act of 1830, which liberalised the regulations enabling anyone to brew and sell beer on payment of a licence costing two guineas. Landlords set up shop, often in their front rooms to supplement their main income.
The intention was to increase competition between brewers, and it resulted in the opening of 56,000 beer houses across the country by 1836; the rapidly expanding industrial centres of the North of England saw their fair share.
It was also hoped that by increasing competition in the brewing and sale of beer, and thus lowering its price, the population might be weaned off their favourite tipple, gin…current trends seem to indicate we are going full circle!
Whilst the act may have been good news for the breweries and increased employment in towns and cities the knock-on effect on public morality was something of much debate in the House of Commons.
'The new beer bill has begun its operations. Everybody is drunk. Those who are not singing are sprawling. The Sovereign people are in a beastly state…indescribable orgies occurred, accompanied by gambling, brutal amusements and licentiousness'
(Sidney Smith - House of Commons 1833)
Another by-product was the “tied-house” system, as landlords had to borrow money from the brewers to make improvements before Magistrates would grant and renew licences. In exchange they promised to buy supplies exclusively from the breweries.
1892 Map Fell Brow |
Listed landlords were Joshua Parsons (1841-53), Jenny Parsons (1853-60), William Parsons (1860-70), John Parkinson (1871-), James Lonsdale (1879-), Betsy Lonsdale (1881-), William Lowe (1889-91), Elizabeth Ann Ogden (1901) and George Tyson Hewartson (1905).
1841 Census Joshua Parsons |
1851 Census Joshua Parsons |
Burial: 6 Mar 1853 St Lawrence, Longridge, Lancashire, England
Joshua Parsons - Age: 42
Abode: Alston
Buried by: W C Bache
Register: Burials 1848 - 1879, Page 16, Entry 127
Rear Garden/Yard 10 Fell Brow |
1861 Census William Parsons |
Preston Herald - Saturday 22 September 1866 |
Preston Herald - Saturday 21 September 1867 |
Preston Herald - Saturday 11 September 1869 |
Burial: 2 Feb 1870 St Lawrence, Longridge, Lancashire, England
William Parsons - Age: 36
Abode: Alston
Buried by: W C Bache
Register: Burials 1848 - 1879, Page 97, Entry 771
1910 Map Fell Brow |
1883 Marriage of Betsy Lonsdale |
In the years after her marriage to John Hindle the couple moved to 23, Edward Street in Preston where they ran the Ashcroft Arms for a number of years in the late 1880s. Further details of this pub can be found on Steve Halliwell's excellent blog link below>>
William Lowe took over behind the bar at the Mason's Arms during the mid-1880s and following John Hindle's death c.1890 Betsy moved to the Bull's Head on Corporation Street in 1895.
Lancashire Evening Post - Saturday 22 August 1891 |
Entrance to "Yard" |
Preston Herald - Wednesday 11 December 1898 |
The 1904 Licensing Act was to have a markedly different effect on the pub scene, reducing the number of licensed premises, in particular the beer houses over the next few decades.
Supported by a surge in the Temperance movement the Act introduced a national scheme where Licensing Magistrates could refuse to renew a pub’s licence if it was considered there were too many pubs in an area or they were not of sufficient quality.
The Great War also added weight to the argument for the sake of national security…
'Drink is doing more damage in the War than all the German submarines put together'
(Lloyd George speech 28 February 1915)
Compensation was paid both to the owner of the premises and the licensee, although typically only about 10% went to the licensee. In the first two decades of the 20th century hundreds of pubs were to close in Lancashire as a result of the new act.
So it was that the fate of the Mason's Arms was sealed in 1907...
The 1910 press cutting below confirms the licence was no longer in place and the property was now being managed as a Temperance House.
Lancashire Evening Post - Monday 19 December 1910 |
1911 Census 10 Fell Brow - John Howcroft |
By 1911 the property had reverted to residential use and the beer house was just a distant memory.
Google c.2016 |
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