Talk:Warren House Inn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is supported by WikiProject England, an attempt to build a comprehensive guide to articles relating to England on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article associated with this page, or visit the project page, where you can join the project and/or contribute to the discussion.

Second highest?? Hmm The Cat & Fiddle Inn on the A537 Derbyshire/Cheshire boundary above Buxton has an asl of 510m or so.

In my youth it claimed to be the highest pub in England open all year (Because Tan Hill used to shut in the winter I think)

Linuxlad 15:40, 10 Jan 2005 (UTC)

You're probably right! The WHI on Dartmoor has claimed to be the second highest for many years and as far as I know, no one has challenged it. JonC

Well it's 250ft less than Cat & Fiddle (1690 ft) and more than 300ft lower than Tan Hill (1732ft on the Pennine Way near Keld) - I'd have expected there were a few others in that bracket in the peak and pennines (not to mention Kirkstone Pass Inn in the Lakes, 1481ft, I gather).

Might be better to claim 'highest in SW England' :-)

PS highest village is claimed by some to be Flash, Staffordshire at 1518ft.

All asls are from unchecked web sources, but agree with my previous understanding. Linuxlad

+++++++++++

Your suggestion is sensible until someone can prove otherwise! I found a British climber's website that rated the Warren House Inn as the third highest pub in England, but no clues as to how they worked this out. Next time I'm at the WHI I'll ask them for proof of their claims ;-) JonC

I have just found a website listing the highest, and rating the WHI as the FOURTH highest in England: http://www.bondle.co.uk/personal_pages/jon/pubs/topten.html It might be sensible to amend the Dartmoor entry to read: 'believed to be the fourth highest pub in England' or (safer) 'one of the highest pubs in England'. JonC

Looks a good reference. A few points -

a) Mr Bondle gives 1350ft asl for WHI - rather lower than yours, IIRC - should be easy to check
b) I reckon 'highest in SW England', or '... Southern England' reads better :-)
c) Mr Bondle has no excuse for not visiting Cat & Fiddle - it's on the main Macclesfield to Buxton Road and on a 'walkers highway' - part of the dreaded '4 Inns Walk'
d) I've put in a stub on Flash, Staffordshire - which claims to be 'the highest village in England' - another fruitful area for dispute I suspect.

Linuxlad 10:23, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)

-- I added the story about the fire and the shovel. The landlord told it to me, if that counts as a reference. It is probably as 'true' as the other bits of folklore, and is part of the story of the pub, as I see it. Nice article. 22:54, 5 Feb 2005 (UTC)~