Friday 23 August 2019

Sir Charles Napier, Leicester

A little off the beaten track as it is, I'd recommend making the effort to visit the Sir Charles Napier. The pub is a classic inter-war years community local, recently refurbished, but still retaining three separate rooms including a cosy wood panelled lounge, and more functional games oriented bar. The interior is considered of sufficient merit to be included on CAMRA's inventory of Real Heritage Pubs, and more information on this and many other unspoilt classics can be found on the excellent searchable website: www.heritagepubs.org.uk.

Traditional, and some not so traditional games play an important role at the pub. League Dominoes, Darts, and Table Skittles are all popular, and compete for space with the more recent additions of Poker and Quiz nights.



The Skittles Table at the Sir Charles Napier is the somewhat rarer Leicester version, distinctly different to the more common Northamptonshire tables found in the south of the county. The pins and cheeses are the slender hardwood variety unique to the Leicester game, as opposed to the more chunky Boxwood or plastic used elsewhere. This makes for a very different game, one where the higher scoring 'Tips' (Whackups in Leicester) and 'Floorers' (Nine-a-Ball) of the Northants game are much harder to achieve.

The table is turned round and 'parked' in an alcove when not in use. It's a very smart and well maintained table, and the team presumably want it to stay that way. Skittles night is on Wednesday, with play in the South Leicestershire League which covers quite a wide geographical area including Earl Shilton, Syston, and Wigston.


Darts, Dominoes, and Skittles trophies jostle for position in the trophy cabinet.

2019 Update

I recently had the opportunity to revisit the Napier and take a few more photos with the kind permission of the licensee, including a few of the unspoilt and attractive front lounge bar that was just a little too busy to photograph on my last visit. Whilst the pub seems to have had a lick of paint in places since I was last there, it could probably do with a sensitive makeover now with some of the upholstery looking a bit threadbare in places. Nevertheless, it's still well worth the walk out from town, and I found the handful of early-doors locals chatty and welcoming in the more basic public bar. It's not entirely obvious from the Lounge Bar, but two or three real ales are usually available.



Whilst Darts and Dominoes are still played at the Napier, sadly the Skittles team have moved on taking the original table with them. There's still a decent old Leicester Skittles Table in the bar (below), but with an incomplete set of pins it's unclear how much use it gets these days. With the nearby Tudor closed, future uncertain, the traditional Leicester game appears to be struggling in this part of the town.



Wednesday 21 August 2019

Raglan Arms, Rugby, Warwickshire


It seems a very long time ago that a pub with a Northamptonshire Skittles Table featured on this blog. I guess familiarity breeds complacency when it comes to covering your own local pub game, indeed my own village pub has a table that's yet to feature on here. Even then it was an afternoon visit to Rugby and not Northants that led to this post.

Despite a great many trips to Rugby over the years involving numerous good pubs (most of which are still with us I'm pleased to say, though sadly not our old favourite and former Hoskins Brewery house The Peacock), this would be my first visit to the Raglan Arms. A slightly negligent state of affairs you might think given that the Raglan is undoubtedly my kind of pub. But as the current relief landlord explained to me, even though the pub is on the very edge of the town centre, and barely a stone's throw from some of its very best boozers, it seems to get missed by visitors to Rugby, myself included obviously! This is a great shame as the Raglan has an excellent reputation as a friendly and welcoming locals pub, as well as being one of the towns premier destinations for real ale. It's also a pub that opens all-day every-day throughout the week, which as anyone who visits pubs on slow midweek afternoons will know, is an increasingly rare and welcome thing.


The Raglan has recently had a bit of a spruce-up too, reopening in the house style of new owners Black Country Ales, a small West Midlands brewery and pub company that's helped secure the future of many traditional pubs like the Raglan in recent years. In fact the pub very nearly closed for good way back in 2007, with plans submitted to redevelop the site as residential flats. Thankfully the Raglan was rescued on that occasion by local businessman David Hines, revitalising the pub as a popular real ale destination and CAMRA award winner in a town not exactly short of great beer pubs.

From the front entrance there's a separate quiet Snug to the left, before the pub opens out to the main bar with a raised games area at the rear. This is where the Dartboard and Skittles Table are located. Keep going and you'll eventually find yourself in a partially covered beer garden to rear of the pub.

Anyone that's visited one of Black Country Ales more recent acquisitions will recognise the overall look of the pub. Very traditional in appearance with stained wood and brass fittings throughout. It very much reminds me of Black Country Ales pubs the Salmon and Kings Head in Leicester, even down to the televised beer list, a necessary requirement given the number of beers on tap.


The skittles table is a long-term fixture of the pub, although actually owned by the home skittles team and not the brewery. A beautifully maintained WT Black & Son table, it's early history can be found stencilled on the underside (below). Once you realise this information is hidden away underneath the table, it's very hard not to go looking for it, though it's probably wise to explain to the bar staff what you're doing before getting down on hands and knees and crawling around on the carpet for a better view!


The numbers seen here tell us that this would have been the 80th table produced by the Northampton company, and that it was constructed in 1957, probably in September of that year. I believe the other dates refer to a series of refurbishments by WT Black & Son, dated at 1963, 1971, and 1973.

By modern standards these dates might seem unusually frequent. A full restoration of a skittles table today would probably only occur when it was truly worn-out through a decade or more of play. But it has to be remembered that when this table first went into service, it would have been used for league matches several times a week. Add to that a whole host of cup, charity, practice, and casual weekend games, and you can imagine it would have taken quite a hammering in a way that few tables do these days. I've little doubt the table has been refurbished since then as it's in very good condition, but by who is not clear as WT Black & Son ceased business toward the end of the 20th century.


At the time of my visit, the home team were skittling in the Summer season of the local Dunchurch & District Skittles League, but were actually playing their games at the nearby Webb Ellis pub rather than on their own home table. This was an enforced relocation due to the refurbishment of the Raglan earlier in the year, and the team are set to return to the Raglan for the forthcoming Winter season. Darts is played in the Rugby LVA Darts League, though quite why there's a trophy at the pub from the Leicester Inner City League is not entirely clear...

Saturday 3 August 2019

New Engine House, Carlton, Nottingham

The steam engine that gave the pub its name in situ in the 1970's
It's perhaps some measure of the lack of ambition in much of the pub trade, that on those rare occasions when the larger brewers and pub owning companies spot an opportunity to build a new pub, they invariably settle for such dull, utterly characterless, off-the-peg designs. Functional, single-room family dining venues, safe and similar, almost entirely lacking in charm, let alone the kind of local distinctiveness that makes pubs at their best so special. Hasn't it always been this way though?

Certainly breweries have always had their 'house styles' when it comes to new pubs, and it's true that many of the later 20th century estate builds were far from attractive, even by the standards of the most innexpensive post-war architecture and design. But they were always essentially 'pubs' at heart, usually multi-room, and designed to encourage social interaction on many different levels including provision for games and sport of course. Also, there would always be space in the pub for locals to stamp their own identities, interests and personal tastes on, even if it was just a noticeboard for local leagues and societies.

When Nottingham's Shipstone Brewery commissioned The Engine House pub back in the late 60's, a new-build on the site of the former brickworks at Carlton, they clearly followed what was then the house style for many Midlands estate pubs. Red brick, flat-roof, very plain, very functional. But somewhere along the line it was decided that several tons of horizontal steam engine from the defunct brickworks would make a fine and fitting addition to the front of the building, because breweries did that sort of thing back then! The engine was a major feature of the pub that reflected the areas recent industrial past, and was such an ambitious installation that in 1982 when it was eventually removed to the Industrial Museum at Wollaton Hall, it had to be lifted by crane through the roof. These days, a few historical prints on the wall and a plastic ball-pit for the kids seems to be the limit of the architects imagination!

In all honesty, the pub itself is fairly typical of the time, and I've little doubt it would have been regarded as somewhat lacking in character by most pub-goers back then, this at a time when there was still plenty of Victorian and Edwardian splendour to be found in nearby pubs and clubs. A brick-built estate pub like the Engine House would have been entirely unremarkable if it wasn't for the massive steam engine on prominent display. But today, with every closure and subsequent demolition or redevelopment, utilitarian multi-room estate pubs like the New Engine House are becoming rarer, and perhaps that little bit more appreciated by some of us.


Of all the pubs we've lost in recent years, classic 1960's estate pubs have suffered more than most. Victims of a general decline in the pub trade, widespread indifference to their social (and sometimes architectural) importance, and the fact that most were built on substantial plots to accommodate the new trend for car ownership making them prime sites for residential development or conversion to neighbourhood supermarkets. Very few if any from this era of pub building have been granted listed status. Even the nearby March Hare, a wonderful unspoilt boozer recognised as having important heritage status, as well as being an Asset of Community Value by the local CAMRA branch, has no listed building protection. Sadly there's very little, other than strong local opposition, to stop rapacious pubcos from destroying these post-war boozers, so do enjoy and support them while you still can.

The New Engine House has certainly been altered and refurbished over the years, the most recent makeover giving the pub a smarter, brighter, and more attractive interior than has previously been the case. The pub retains a separate room to the left of the entrance for Pool and Darts, a multi-level L-shaped bar where the Wimbledon tennis held customer attention when I visited, as well as another room toward the rear of the pub with Dartboard and older formica-topped tables which would have been used for Cards and Dominoes. Off this room is that rarest of pub-games assets within the urban confines of Nottingham, a fully functioning alley for the local game of Long Alley Skittles.



Whilst Long Alley Skittles is still played throughout much of the East Midlands, in common with many traditional games and particularly those which take up a bit of space at the pub, skittles has practically disappeared from city centre locations. In Nottingham there are perhaps three remaining pub skittle alleys within the wider suburban area, of which the one at the New Engine House is probably the closest to the town centre that's still in regular league use (the Embankment has a recently refurbished skittle alley in the basement which is available for functions, but this hasn't been used for league play for several years now).

The alley is something of a rarity then, and one of only two that I'm aware of in the local league at pubs, most being located at clubs. There were originally two alleys at the Engine House, one located on the upper section of the bar area which has now been removed (I guess it's still there, just covered in carpet and seating), and another which when I first visited the pub some six years ago was an outdoor alley at the rear of the pub. Within a few months of that first visit, the outdoor alley had been covered over and effectively brought indoors in an extension to the rear of the main pub building. Whether one or both of these alleys were included in the original layout of the pub is unclear, but it's highly likely. Another local brewer, Hardys & Hansons, tended to include a skittle alley as standard in their late-20th century pub designs, and skittles would have been very popular at the time the Engine House was built with alleys at several pubs in the area, all of which are now gone of course.

So the pub has changed in many ways, yet remains essentially how it's always been. Skittles is played on Monday nights in Division 'A' of the Nottingham Summer Skittles League, as well as in the smaller Graham Broen Sunday League. Pool and Darts are also played in local leagues, and needless to say the New Engine House is a focal point for televised sport of all kinds.

Perhaps what's helped the New Engine House survive where other similar community locals have been lost is the pub has no car park of its own and occupies a fairly compact site for the size of pub making it less of a development opportunity. The pub would have drawn its custom from a very local area, a walking destination boozer for the residents of the estate which is how it remains today. I doubt whether too many pub or beer enthusiasts take the trouble to visit the New Engine House. It's hidden away off the main road to Carlton, and real ale plays no part in its day-to-day business. I found it friendly, welcoming, and very well-maintained, with plenty of interest for those of us who prefer to drink in proper locals pubs rather than the glorified restaurants that the larger pub owning companies see as the future.