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The Feathers Hotel is a historic inn in Ludlow, Shropshire. Its imposing half-timbered frontage was constructed in 1619, over an earlier core, for a local lawyer, Rees Jones. [ 2 ] John Newman describes the hotel as a "prodigy" of Tudor architecture and it is noted for its Jacobean furnishings.
The public house is described as "the best surviving medieval inn in Ludlow" and pre-dates the Feathers Hotel opposite. [2] It is a Grade II listed building . [ 1 ] Much of the current three-storey building dates to the 16th century, but the painted stucco front date from the 18th century and the roof tiles from the 20th century.
Public houses in Shropshire. There are currently 599 [1] pubs in the county, which equates to 785 people per pub. The figure fell below 700 for the first time in modern history in April 2006, and below 600 in February 2015.
King's Head Passage (left) and the public house (right) The King's Head is an old public house on the historic street Mardol in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. [1] It was previously known as the "Last Inn" as it was the last inn in Shrewsbury on the route out of town towards Wales (Frankwell historically was a separate entity, outside the borough of Shrewsbury).
At the main crossroads was the "Anchor" public house [1] [2] at 1,266 feet (386 m), the highest pub in Shropshire following the closure of The Kremlin at Clee Hill Village. [3] It had been a pub continuously since at least 1830, until the last landlord retired in 2020, and features in the Mary Webb novel Seven for a Secret (1922) as the ...
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The building is grade II* listed.The first floor is jettied with moulded bressumer and close studding. [1]The Golden Cross is reputed to be the oldest licensed public house in Shrewsbury and records show that it was used as an inn as far back as 1428, some years before the introduction of formal licensing.