It
was Samuel Johnson who said "There is nothing which has yet been contrived
by man, by which so much happiness is produced as by a good tavern or Inn."
Mine host of the Bell Inn at Stilton near Peterborough, would dearly like his
establishment to justify the sentiment. To
explore the Bell's charm and mystery, we need to delve into the past. The Inn,
and the village itself, thrived in an age when the High Street and North Street
were part of the Great North Road, formerly the famous Roman road called Ermine
Street. The Coaching Era, from the 1630's to the 1840's, was the period of the
Inn's prosperity. Coaches brought people and, significantly, mail. Stilton was
so lucrative a posting-station its innkeepers were willing to accept without pay
the position of postmaster, and even to offer £40 cash down to obtain it.
When Stilton was a major posting stage, it supported as many as 14 public houses
and inns. | The
Bell Inn dates back to 1500 (though its origins could be even earlier, as there
is a record of a local innkeeper in 1437). From 1500 to 1515 Edward Tebald and
his wife Alice owned the Bell. We know that their daughter Margaret and her husband
William Redehede sued her parent's tenant for possession, but little else from
those early days. Today's
building dates from 1642, the date marked on the southern gable, and the year
in which the Civil War began. It was originally built of oolitic limestone and
slates of Colleyweston stone. The
architect's plans for the 1990 restoration are, astonishingly, almost identical
to the plans now lodged in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, for the work carried
out in 1736. They show a similar courtyard enclosed by the projecting wings of
the inn, and a mullion-windowed house, with a central carriageway in the middle
of the front block. |