Old Queen's Head, Sheffield
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The Old Queen's Head is a public house on Pond Hill in the City of Sheffield, England that occupies the oldest domestic building in the city . This timber framed building is thought to date from c.1475 , although the earliest known written record of it is in an inventory compiled in 1582 of the estate of George Talbot, the 6th Earl of Shrewsbury that included the furnishings of this building, which was then called "The hawle at the Poandes" . As a part of the Earl's estate, it may have been used as a banqueting hall for parties hunting wildfowl in the nearby ponds[4]. These ponds, which formed in the area where the Porter Brook meets the River Sheaf, are now gone, but are commemorated in the local names Pond Street, Pond Hill (formerly Pond Well Hill) and Ponds Forge.
By the beginning of the 19th century the building was being used as a residence. In 1840 a pub called the Old Queen's Head was opened in the neighbouring building, and sometime after 1862 the pub expanded into this building[4]. The building was given Grade II* listed status in 1952. The pub was refurbished in 1993, and is now part of the Tom Cobleigh chain.
The Queen in the pub's name is likely Mary, Queen of Scots who was imprisoned in Sheffield from 1570 to 1584.
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[edit] References
- ^ Harman, R. & Minnis, J. (2004) Pevsner City Guides: Sheffield. p152. New Haven & London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10585-1
- ^ Old Queen's Head Public House. Images of England (accessed 16 July 2005—free registration required).
- ^ Hunter, Joseph (1819). The Township of Sheffield. In Hallamshire. The History and Topography of the Parish of Sheffield in the County of York, p193. London: Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mayor & Jones. This book is out of print but can be purchased on CD-ROM
- a b Olive, Martin (1994). The Ponds. In Images of England: Central Sheffield, pp31–50. Stroud: Tempus Publishing Limited. ISBN 0-7524-0011-8
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