Marlborough Crescent, Argyle House Public House
Marlborough Crescent, Argyle House Public House
HER Number
10225
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Marlborough Crescent, Argyle House Public House
Place
Newcastle
Map Sheet
NZ26SW
Class
Commercial
Site Type: Broad
Eating and Drinking Establishment
Site Type: Specific
Public House
General Period
POST MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Victorian 1837 to 1901
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
Shown on Ordnance Survey second edition. Originally called the Shephered Inn and Brewery, worked by Ralph Patton in 1853. He went bankrupt in 1863. The new tenant converted the brewery to refreshment rooms and renamed the inn 'The Flowers'. It became the Argyle House in 1881. In the 1890s the Argyle House was described as 'among the handsomest in the city'. The rooms consisted of a downstairs public bar, adjoining which is a small upholstered snug for better-class customers. Upstairs is a billiard room, a large and well lighted apartment with its attendant bar. The billiard table was described as first-class. Closed in 1905.
Easting
424270
Northing
563770
Grid Reference
NZ424270563770
Sources
Shown on Ordnance Survey Second Edition of 1896; Brian Bennison, 1995, Brewers and Bottlers of Newcastle upon Tyne From 1850 to the present day, p 45, 48; Bennison, B, 1998, Lost Weekends, A History of Newcastle's Public Houses, Vol 3, The West