Drewe Arms | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Grade II listed building |
Type | Public house |
Location | Drewsteignton |
Completed | 17th century |
Renovated | 19th century |
Height | |
Roof | Reed thatching |
Technical details | |
Material | Cob |
Known for | Mabel Mudge (longest serving landlady in the UK) |
The Drewe Arms is a Grade II* listed public house on the north side of The Square in Drewsteignton, Devon.
Built in the 17th century, the building was modernised in the late 19th century. There may have been a public house at the site in the 16th century. The building is made of cob on a stone base, with stone chimneystacks including one of granite. The roof is a combination of reed thatching, corrugated iron and slate. Built in a T-shape plan, the main area holds three rooms, a kitchen, a main room and a bar. There is a staircase at the rear of the centre room. It appears that the original building was an open hall house. The additional blocks were built in the late 19th and early 20th century, and include cellars and toilet facilities. [1]
The interior was largely modernised in the 19th century, but no further modernisation has occurred and some of the 17th century woodwork remains. The deed dates for the Drewe Arms to 1890, when the public house was known as the "New Inn". [1] The name was changed to the Druid Arms, and then to the Drewe Arms in the 1920s. [2]
The building was designated Grade II* listed status on 22 February 1967. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [3]
In 1919 the Drewe Arms was taken over by Mabel Mudge, who ran the public house for 75 years before retirement, giving her the record of the longest-serving landlady in the UK. [4] The pub was subsequently a Whitbread pub, an Enterprise Inns pub, and a Stonegate Inns pub, but successive landlords struggled to make it pay. [5] [6]
In late 2023 the pub was acquired by the local community to be run as a community asset.
Castle Drogo is a country house and mixed-revivalist castle near Drewsteignton, Devon, England. Constructed between 1911 and 1930, it was the last castle to be built in England. The client was Julius Drewe, the hugely successful founder of the Home and Colonial Stores. Drewe chose the site in the belief that it formed part of the lands of his supposed medieval ancestor, Drogo de Teigne. The architect he chose to realise his dream was Edwin Lutyens, then at the height of his career. Lutyens lamented Drewe's determination to have a castle but nevertheless produced one of his finest buildings. The architectural critic Christopher Hussey described the result: "The ultimate justification of Drogo is that it does not pretend to be a castle. It is a castle, as a castle is built, of granite, on a mountain, in the twentieth century".
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