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In 1689 a survey listed 25 inns and taverns in the parishes of Ipswich. [ 1 ] : 5 In 1807 the number of taverns and beerhouses peaked at 313, which included off license establishments. [ 2 ] By 1893 there were 308 establishments, which fell to 277 shortly before the first world war.
The Margaret Catchpole is a pub in Cliff Lane, Ipswich in Suffolk, England. It is named after Margaret Catchpole, a servant of Elizabeth and John Cobbold of the Tolly Cobbold brewery. Built in 1936 by the local architect Harold Ridley Hooper for the Cobbold brewery, it is a Grade II* listed building. [1]
Tollies Follies was an epithet given to a series of pubs built by Tollemache Brewery primarily in their home town of Ipswich. They were designed by the architect John Shewell Corder and modelled on Helmingham Hall, a moated manor house located in Helmingham, Suffolk, about 10 miles north of Ipswich. [4]
Isaacs on the Quay or Cobbolds on the Quay is a pub in Ipswich, in the Ipswich district, in the county of Suffolk, England. The pub itself is a grade II* listed building , listed on 19 December 1951, and is late 18th or early 19th century.
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The brand came to dominate the hospitality industry in Ipswich where traces of their name can still be found on a number of buildings. [ 2 ] Frank Woolnough , formerly the curator of Ipswich Museum , recognised the historic interest of the Cobbold "Inns and Taverns" remarking he preferred such words to the term "public house" which he regarded ...
References to the Falcon go back to August 1728 when the Ipswich Journal announced a shooting competition at "the sign of the Falcon" in St Nicholas Parish, Ipswich. [2] During the eighteenth century, John Curtis has been identified as running the pub, moving there from the Cock and Pye, Ipswich in 1743. He died the next year and John Osborn ...