Pages

Sunday, 26 September 2021

Loughborough Grammar School Tower

Although like many people I often walk along the public footpath, Burton Walks,  through the grammar school grounds, and in the past I've taken my children to the summer activity camps, and myself been to numerous events in the dining hall – railway fairs, collectibles fairs – as well as to numerous band events – concerts and contests – in the Hodson Hall, the opportunity to actually visit some of the school buildings with a view to learning about their history, doesn’t come along very often.

So, last weekend I was lucky enough to be able to visit the Loughborough Grammar School, and as well as learning about some of its history, I was able to take a view of Loughborough that I had not seen before.

When I arrived at the quadrangle, from the Burton Walks side, I had a good look through the open door towards Leicester Road, and looked around the ground floor entrance hallway, where hung portraits of notable LGS alumni – Sir Thomas Abney; George Davys; Richard Pulteney, and William Yates [i], as well as other interesting artefacts. 



I had been in this part of the school before, but I had not, before, been up the tower, so that is where I excitedly went next! In my haste to get to the top, and look at the views, I forgot to count the steps as I went up – and forgot when I came down too! I wonder how it compares with the Carillon?


 

At the top of the tower were some Taylors bells, and some wonderful views! From up here there was a brilliant 360-degree view of Loughborough and its surroundings, and it was fun trying to work out exactly what I was looking at. Some views were obvious because of the buildings that could be seen – the Carillon, with its copper dome, really stands out, and the former Ladybird factory on Beeches Road, with the Leicestershire Wolds beyond, is also pretty distinctive.  The Charnwood Hills form a clear outline, even if my photos don't do them justice!


The former Ladybird factory with the Leicestershire Wolds beyond

The Charnwood Hills in the distance

The Carillon looking tiny in the distance

View towards Leicester Road

View of the quad


The bells on the tower were all made by Taylors, the Loughborough bellfounders. There was a group of 4, bells, installed in memory of the son of a former headteacher, who died during the First World War in 1916. Along with these four bells, is another bell, and, if I’ve understood this correctly, these bells play the Cambridge Chimes, sometimes known as the Westminster chimes.




 

On my way back down the tower, I stopped off in the two classrooms that are off the spiral staircase. Again, some interesting views out, but also some interesting contents, including, in one classroom, the electrified mechanism for the clock.  





 

Once back down on the ground floor, I wandered around, looking at the wonderful old photographs that had been put out for display, along with some of the books that had been awarded as school prizes, and reading the huge amount of information laid out about the actual preparation for the building of the school, around 1852.


Read more about the teacher on the right in the front row in an earlier blogpost


 

Having taken in as much as I could, I made my way out into the quadrangle, having realised how striking the grass was, and noted that the trees which had been planted around the perimeter were in memory of former pupils who had died during the First World War.





[i] A little more information about these people appears in my book, A-Z of Loughborough.

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 26 September 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough Grammar School Tower. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/09/loughborough-grammar-school-tower.html [Accessed 26 September 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne                        

Sunday, 19 September 2021

Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 3

Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 3 



As we saw in last week’s post, the area around the Bull-in-the-Hollow became a notorious accident blackspot. The grandson of one of the people involved in a fatal accident has been in touch, and what follows is the front-page newspaper report from the  ‘Leicester Evening Mail’, of Monday 1st June 1959. It is interesting that the location is given as ‘at Bull-in-the-Hollow’ not ‘at the Bull-in-the-Hollow’ which seems to imply that that part of the road itself was known as Bull-in-the-Hollow – but I might be reading too much into that!!! Anyway, here’s the report in full:

“In collision with 2 motor-bikes CYCLIST DIES IN ROAD TRAGEDY

Whist fan, Mr Reggie Hames (52), of 12, Babbington Road, Barrow-on-Soar, suffered fatal injuries when his cycle was in collision with motor-cycles ridden by two Leicester brothers, who both escaped without injury.

The accident occurred about 10pm on Saturday [30th May] at Bull-in-the-Hollow, the notorious black spot on the A6, near Loughborough.

It is believed that Mr Hames was cycling home after playing whist in Loughborough. “He would go anywhere for a game,” said Mrs Hames.

Mr Hames, a labourer at the Brush E.E. Co. Ltd., Loughborough, was first in collision with the machine ridden by 18-year-old Alan Jones, a soldier in the Royal Engineers, stationed at Devizes, whose home is at Swannington Road, Leicester.

Knocked from his machine, Mr Hames was then struck by a second motor-cycle, ridden by Graham Jones, also 18, of the same address. He is in the Royal Signals.

Pillion Injured.

Mr Hames was taken by ambulance to Leicester Infirmary, where he died.

Riding pillion passenger on the second motor-cycle was Miss Jacqueline Freestone of the Working Girls’ Home [i], Westcotes Drive, Leicester. She was admitted to the Infirmary with a broken collar bone, lacerations and concussion.

Passenger on the other machine was Miss Judith Owen, also resident at the hostel. She was uninjured.

Well-known in Barrow, Mr Hames leaves a widow, two married sons and a son of school age.”

The second motor-cyclist, Graham Jones, and his pillion passenger, Jacqueline [F.] Freestone went on to marry in January of 1960.

Let’s leave accidents now and move on to some different incidents. 

If you’re a fan of the television series ‘Only Fools and Horses’ then you might think that this headline – “No room at the inn for Trigger” – which appeared at the top of an article in the ‘Leicester Evening Mail’ of 17th October 1960, on page 8 - might refer to Colin Ball, aka Trigger, the character played by Roger Lloyd-Pack. But no! This story is about something much closer to home. The subtitle: 

“…SO HORSE AND RIDER BED DOWN IN A GARAGE.

is followed by an article:

… When a modern horseback traveller … arrived in Oadby on Saturday night he found the ‘stables’ at the inn – but they were not for horses. They had been converted into accommodation for ‘horseless carriages.’

That was the situation facing author William Holt, who is riding from London to York, selling on the way the book he has written. [ii]

He was misinformed on the way to Oadby that there were stables at the White Horse.

Rural breath

Yet the problem provoked by the advent of the motor-car turned in the end to his advantage.

A helpful Oadby resident moved his car out into the open for the night and Mr Holt and his grey gelding, Trigger, bedded down in the garage.

Yesterday morning, Mr Holt rode to Leicester to pick up a parcel of books from London Road station to replenish his stock.

And Trigger brought rural breath to the urban scene, lunching from his noseban on the pavement edge, under the watchful eye of a policeman.

Later Mr Holt moved on and after a night in an orchard at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, horse and rider arrived this morning at Loughborough, where there was a slight delay for ‘running repairs’.

Trigger had thrown half a shoe, and there was a visit to the blacksmith[iii] before Mr Holt could move on towards Nottingham. He expects to be in Nottingham tomorrow.”

The Cross Keys today

And finally, several people have confirmed that the road was definitely levelled off in the late 1960s-early 1970s, to make it a safer road to use.


[i] The Working Girls’ Home appears to be a hostel for working girls (!) with information found on a page entitled ‘Children’s Homes’, created and curated by Peter Higginbotham, where this particular home, at 136 Westcotes Drive, is the only one of its kind listed in Leicestershire: http://www.childrenshomes.org.uk/list/WG.shtml Latterly, it was called Bradgate House Residential Home, but has been vacated and vandalised. In November 2018, the artist referred to as Wormsy (well, a nod to the artwork, perhaps not the name of the artist), painted a pink worm on the back to the building which had been sold on and was destined to be converted to flats, although this still hasn’t happened yet.

136 Westcotes Drive, Leicester, 2021


[ii] I think the book in question is the novel, ‘The Wizard of Whirlaw’, because it was written in 1959 (the previous book, also a novel, was published in 1956, so less likely to be part of this promotional tour). Billy Holt, as he was known, seems to have been a polymath, being not only a writer and artist, but also a pioneer of the mobile library service, and the developer of a 'model' farm: Loughborough’s model farm is a topic covered in ‘A-Z of Loughborough’. Trigger, Holt’s horse, was a former rag and bone horse, who was rescued by Holt, and with whom he later travelled across Europe, documenting his travels in a book called ‘Trigger in Europe’ published in 1966, the last book that Holt authored before his death in 1977.

[iii] If Mr Holt was heading towards Nottingham from Loughborough, it’s possible that the blacksmith he visited was Bert Porter, and his son, Brian, who at the time were working out of premises very close to what is now the Phantom, pub, but what was at the time known as the Cross Keys. As well as working from here, the Porters would travel to visit their clients, to shoe their horses. Later, Brian Porter moved his business to Quorn, while his father retired to Wiltshire.        

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 19 September 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 3. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/09/bull-in-hollow-part-3.html [Accessed 19 September 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne      

Sunday, 12 September 2021

Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 2

Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 2

Bull-in-the-Hollow April 2020


Last week we looked at the early history of the Needless Inn/Buffalo’s Head/Bull-in-the-Hollow up until the end of the nineteenth century. This week, let’s travel through the twentieth century – and take care not to have an accident!!

In 1905 a cyclist collided with horses attached to a brake[i] whilst cycling down the Bull-in-the-Hollow Hill between Loughborough and Quorn. She was pitched forward onto her head, and was taken to Loughborough hospital with severe injuries. She and her friends were returning home from visiting Costock.

In February 1908, severe gales hit the Loughborough area, and a large tree was uprooted near the Bull-in-the-Hollow and fell straight across the road. As it fell it broke the whole of the telegraph and telephone wires on the opposite side of the road and traffic was unable to pass, until the trunk had been sawn through and removed.

In the summer of 1910, a couple of accidents occurred, the first of which involved a horse that was being led near the Bull-in-the-Hollow by a Loughborough man. The horse reared and struck the man on his right shin. On being taken to Loughborough Hospital, he was found to have two broken bones in his leg. In the second incident, in July, a young man suffered serious injuries when he tried to cross the road near the Bull-in-the-Hollow, after following a van. As he ventured to cross the road, there was a car coming down the short slope in the direction of Loughborough, and the man was knocked down by the lamp on the front of the car. The occupants of the car took the man to Loughborough Hospital. As it happened, the driver, who was acting as chauffeur to the gentleman passenger, was driving without a licence, it having run out on 6th June and not been renewed.

Two accidents also occurred in 1914, the first in May when on a journey from Sileby to Loughborough to visit the market, people travelling on the brake suffered a serious fright when they reached the Bull-in-the-Hollow Hill, and the horse stumbled, falling, breaking one of the carriage’s shafts as it fell.  Later in the year, two motorcyclists attempted to pass a governess cart [ii] near the Bull-in-the-Hollow close to the lane leading to Woodthorpe, and in so doing one of them clipped the wheel of the cart, causing the motorcycle rider to be thrown to the ground. He was taken to Loughborough Hospital in a passing car, where he was treated for severe head injuries.

In 1915, a driver was fined for accidentally killing a dog, while driving near the Bull-in-the-Hollow, although there was a conflict in evidence presented between the two parties involved. In the winter of 1916, a local policeman was found unconscious on the road at the Bull-in-the-Hollow near Woodthorpe Lane. It appears that some part of the bicycle he was riding had broken whilst he was riding it, and that caused him to fall to the ground. He was taken to Loughborough (presumably to the hospital), where he regained consciousness, and his condition improved.

In the summer of 1919, it was alleged that a horse had been cruelly treated, but the case was dismissed once the evidence had been presented. Apparently, the horse stumbled at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and on being pulled up sharply, went lame, but because the person leading the horse took it to be looked at immediately, this was not deemed to be cruelty.

So, the majority of the accidents that have happened so far have involved either horse-drawn carriages of some sort, horses themselves, cyclists or pedestrians. In subsequent years, the motorcycle becomes more popular and accidents involving these, more frequent.

A couple travelling in a motorcycle and sidecar tried to overtake a char-a-banc [iii] at the Bull-in-the-Hollow near Woodthorpe, in September 1920. As they sped down the hill, a car approached coming the other way, and the couple were dragged for some distance as their cycle and sidecar overturned. They were driven to Loughborough Hospital, and returned home later that day in the borough ambulance.

Pedestrians and cyclists were, however, still vulnerable, as is seen in December 1921 when a lady from Stanford-on-Hill [is this Stanford on Soar??] collided with a pedestrian at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, while she was out cycling with her husband, and sustained head injuries. In May 1923, a car collided with a motorcycle and sidecar at the Bull-in-the-Hollow. All vehicles were badly damaged, and the sidecar passenger sustained a broken ankle, abrasions to the arm, and possible internal injuries. Several lorries were held up on their journey between Loughborough and Leicester.

By 1925, the Bull-in-the-Hollow had ceased to be an inn, and was now a gardeners and craftsmans place. Ted Symes ran the nurseries at the property, and was still doing so into the 1970s. It seems to be around this time that the name of the former Bull-in-the-Hollow Inn seems to have been transposed and applied to the area in which the Inn, and now the nursery, stood.

In August 1926, a man sustained a broken collar bone when his motorcycle hit a large log and he was thrown to the ground, at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and the next month, a car approached the top of the Bull-in-the-Hollow and swerved to miss a parked lorry. In the process the car driver hit a cyclist, who was thrown to the ground. The car driver was fined £2. And in November 1926, a lady was taken to Loughborough Hospital for treatment when she cycled into a ditch near the Bull-in-the-Hollow and broke her thigh bone, during a dense spell of fog. In June 1928 there was yet another cycling accident when a young boy was thrown from his bike at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and sustained serious head injuries.

By now, the area was beginning to get a reputation, and the ‘Leicester Evening Mail’ of 25th October 1929, carried the following report:

“ “Bull in Hollow” mystery. Drivers of motor vehicles coming into Loughborough from Leicester are continually beset in wet or frosty weather by a notorious bugbear known as the Bull-in-the-Hollow. It is a deceptive dip in the road, where numerous skidding mishaps have occurred but the cause seem to be something of a mystery. One theory advanced by a motorist is that an accumulation of oil dropped by passing motors, particularly buses, is carried down the dip on every rainfall. That may be so, but what about frosty weather mishaps?”  

Knowing this was a bit of a dangerous area did nothing to curtail the accidents though. In 1932, a verdict of accidental death was reached when a van knocked down and killed a little boy from Woodthorpe Avenue, Loughborough. A number of accidents were reported in 1935. It is not clear if a lorry laden with bricks skidded near the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and plunged into the garden of a farmhouse, plunged into the Bull-in-the-Hollow farmhouse, or if it were the farm on the opposite side, known as Quorn Lodge. That was in July, a month that also saw a lorry from a Leicester firm [Pridmore] pulled across the road to pass a stationary bus, and in so doing collided with a car that was coming the other way, ripping off its door. The lorry driver was fined for dangerous driving.

In August 1935 the Loughborough Fire Brigade were called out to attend two grass fires in the vicinity of the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and later that same month, two students who were attending the Loughborough College summer school for teachers were in a car that collided with a lorry near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. Both students were treated at Loughborough Hospital for head injuries, having been thrown from the car, which was wrecked.

Thus, by September of 1935, this particular area of the road from Loughborough to Leicester had its reputation cemented as the “Main Leicester Road danger spot known as the Bull-in-the-Hollow” in a report which appeared in the ‘Leicester Evening Mail’ concerning a Loughborough motorist who had a ‘remarkable’ escape when his two-seater touring car skidded, and hit a telegraph pole, before landing overturned in a ditch.

Throughout the mid-late 1930s, accidents continued to happen near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. In both January 1936 and January 1937, snowy weather may have contributed to these incidents, the first when a driver was absolved on the payment of costs, when charged with driving a lorry without due care and attention. It was snowing and while the driver saw the car coming in the opposite lane, he didn’t notice the cyclist until he was very close to it, and thus drove into the back of the cycle, knocking its rider off, when descending the slope near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. In the second accident, a lady cycling to work at Quorn, from Loughborough, fell off her bike near the Bull-in-the-Hollow and broke her arm.  

In June 1937, a three-month-old passenger escaped unhurt, but the other passengers in the motor car were treated for cuts and abrasions at Loughborough hospital when their vehicle collided with a lorry at the Bull-in-the-Hollow. By November 1937, the area was not just a danger spot, but now a 'notorious' one, according to a report of a crash involving a car and a lorry in the ‘Leicester Evening Mail’.

In 1938, William Dakin was the farmer at the Bull-in-the-Hollow farm: I doubt he’d have been surprised that in August of that year there was a crash when a cyclist from Woodhouse Eaves collided with a bus at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, “a notorious Loughborough danger spot.” He suffered concussion and was treated at Loughborough Hospital. I’m pretty sure though, that Mr Dakin would not have expected there to have been an aeroplane crash in the area! A half-buried plane fuselage in a ditch near the Bull-in-the-Hollow caused a delay to hundreds of motorists as they were stopped by a traffic policeman. Luckily, this was not a real accident, but a staged event for the Loughborough College Rag Week, and motorists who were stopped dug deep into their pockets to make a contribution to the rag fund which was in aid of the Loughborough Hospital.

More real accidents, did, however, follow in 1939, when in April a motorcyclist died when he fell from his bike near the Bull-in-the-Hollow whilst travelling back to Derby, and the bike fell on top of him, and in the same month when a lorry driver, dazzled by the headlights of an oncoming car, crashed into a cyclist. Later, in August, a lorry skidded and left the road, plunging into a ditch near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. One occupant of the lorry escaped unharmed, but the other sustained a cut to the forehead and was treated at Loughborough Hospital.

In May 1941 a car crashed into a stationary lorry near the Great Central Railway Bridge, close to the Bull-in-the-Hollow, but in March 1946 an accident happened at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, which was described in a report in the ‘Leicester Evening Mail’ of 2 March: “four cars were piled up last night, rendered temporarily useless by the snow and weather conditions. A mantle of snow covered the whole of Charnwood Forest area, and trees and hedges presented a Christmas card appearance as a result of a ‘silver thaw’ – that is, a temporary thaw followed by a severe frost. Snow was from two to three inches deep in many places.” And in the same month, a motorcyclist from Sileby was killed at the Bull-in-the-Hollow when his machine skidded. His passenger escaped unhurt.

1947 and 1948 also saw a variety of accidents at the Bull-in-the-Hollow. In January 1947 a motorcycle collided with a lorry at the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and both rider and passenger were taken to hospital with injuries, and in August a car collided with a lorry at the Bull-in-the-Hollow. The car driver was taken to Loughborough hospital for treatment. In August 1948, a motorcycle ridden by a student of Loughborough College collided with a lorry at the Bull-in-the-Hollow; the rider sustained multiple injuries.

The toll of accidents just goes on and on …

In April 1955, a pig strayed into the road near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. A motorcyclist fell from his machine, and sustained head injuries as the pig was hit. The rider was taken to Loughborough Hospital for treatment, but the pig died in the collision. In April 1959, an accident at the Bull-in-the-Hollow saw a car smash through an iron rail, and uproot three concrete posts, before overturning into a ditch. Luckily, the occupants were unhurt. In June 1959, a cyclist died when his cycle was in collision with two motorcycles. A passenger on the motorbike sustained a broken collar bone, various lacerations and concussion.

In July 1963, opening batsman, Harold Bird, missed playing in the match between Leicestershire and Hampshire at the Brush sports ground, because on his journey to the match, he swerved to avoid a dog at the Bull-in-the-Hollow and crashed his car in the ditch, and suffered with concussion.

With all these accidents taking place at or near that notorious ‘Loughborough danger spot’ the Bull-in-the-Hollow, it was surely about time the road was made safer, somehow. Now, I’ve read somewhere that the dip in the road was actually levelled out a bit, sometime in the 1960s, but I can’t remember where I read that and I can’t find the reference again, so, forgive me, this is just dredged up from my memory. If you can shed any light on the truth, or otherwise of this, I’d be pleased to hear from you!

Bull-in-the-Hollow in pictures:

December 2020


May 2021



July 2021


August 2021

September 2021



[i] A brake is a type of four-wheel, horse-drawn carriage, sometimes with a hood. The seats face to the front and to the back, so that passengers face each other. There are a variety of brake types, like the shooting break, and the waggonette break.

[ii] A governess car can be seen at Calke Abbey. Basically, it is a small two-wheeled horse-drawn cart, with a tub-shaped body, which led to them being nicknamed ‘tub carts’. It could carry two people, who would sit facing each other. If one of these people was the driver, they would sit sideways on, so they could see where they were going and direct the single horse. 

[iii] A char-a-banc was pulled by four horses, and initially was used to carry shooting parties, before becoming a mode of public transport. It was open to the elements, and passengers sat on side-facing benches, with luggage stored underneath the seats, which were removable.

Sunday, 5 September 2021

Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 1

 Bull-in-the-Hollow Part 1

Last week, in a post about the boundary marker at Woodthorpe, which used to be on the boundary at the A6, I mentioned the Bull-in-the-Hollow – several times!!! Today, this is a house with land, and more recently was an archery base for Merlin Archery, which moved to Great Central Road a few years ago. The Bull-in-the-Hollow is now the location for the Archery and Airgun Club. However, the history of the building goes back many years … 



The first reference I’ve been able to find is for the Needless Inn, when in 1756 it was recorded that the plant ‘knotted trefoil with round beads’ was found in the fields opposite the Inn. A further mention of Trifolium Glomeratum – the round-headed trefoil, more commonly referred to as clustered clover – growing in the field opposite the Needless Inn was made in James Dugdale’s ‘The New British Traveller, vol. 2’ of 1819.


On 27 December 1823 John Garner, son of Samuel, victualler, and wife Mary of the Needless Inn near Loughborough, was baptised at the Loughborough parish church by the curate, the Reverend Clemertson [Clemerson, perhaps?]

By 1840, however, Samuel Langham was landlord of what was now called the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and by August of that year Langham was charged with allowing persons other than travellers to drink on his premises, on a Sunday during churchtime, for which he was charged £1 plus costs.

The name of the premises again changed, and according to a report of October 1846, Samuel Langham was now landlord of the Buffalo Head Inn as well as being a florist and seedsman. At the time he had a quantity of white turnips – twenty of which weighed 97lbs, and another twenty which were 16 inches in circumference.

In October 1847 in a report in the 'Leicestershire Mercury' for 23rd October, there is no mention of the Buffalo Head Inn, but of both the Needless Inn and the Bull-i’-the-Hollow in a report about a ploughing competition that took place in Woodthorpe. The farmers taking part were tenants on the Beaumanor estate, and W. Herrick, Esq., was offering £5 to the plougher of the best field. Of course, it wasn’t that simple, so, £3 would be given to the farmer who ploughed with two horses abreast and without a driver, while £2 would go to the successful farmer using 3 horses and a driver. Well, actually, it was more complicated than that!!! Every entrant had to pay 5s, as a sweepstake for the person coming second in the double ploughing, and 2s. 6d. for the second best in the 3 horse, 1 driver category. The field to be ploughed was a ‘stiff’ one opposite the Needless Inn, which was located about 1 ¼ miles from Loughborough. It seems many people took part, and many people watched! After the event, Mr Herrick paid for all the competitors to have dinner at the Needless Inn. The judging was done after dinner, and proved quite troublesome. In the end, Mr Cumberland and Mr Harvey shared the £3 prize, and James Pepper and Mr John Reynolds shared the £2 prize. Mr Bramley received the sweepstake for the double ploughing, and Mr Woodford for the single.

In 1858 the Buffalo’s Head was the venue for an inquest into the death of Ann Smith, wife of Richard Smith, gardener, at which the verdict reached was death from apoplexy. In 1868, Thomas Potter, on a ramble from Loughborough to Quorn, mentions the Needless Inn, which follows mention of Southfields, The Elms, the Victoria Grounds, Searlesthorpe (which is now Shelthorpe), and precedes mention of Quorn Villa, so pretty much pinpoints this as being the Needless Inn/Buffalo Head Inn/Bull-in-the-Hollow Inn.

In the following February, the Sixth Leicestershire Rifle Volunteers undertook their first drill of the year which took place in the town centre, before they marched to the Bull-in-the-Hollow where they were served “good old nut-brown” [I’m assuming this was Offiler’s Ale, from the Derbyshire brewery of that name], after which they marched back to the Market Place and were dismissed. Later this same year, in July, the Bull-in-the-Hollow provided flowers and plants at the Wesleyan fete and bazaar, which was held at “Pocket Gate” and “Hanging Stone Rocks”, and was a fundraiser to pay off the debt of £100. The land was loaned by Mr Henton, and an admission fee was charged. The band of the Loughborough Rifle Volunteers played, and the marquees and tents were filled with something to suit everyone – small animals, birds, farming implements, sacks of flour and malt, Stilton cheese, and various wooden furniture and planters. Luckily, more than the necessary £100  was raised.

It seems that a Mr Langham is still at the property in November 1871 when a horse who was made to travel from the Bull’s Head in Quorn (now, I believe, the Quorndon Fox) to Mr Langham’s Bull-in -the-Hollow for a bet between 4 men, died of congestion of the lungs.

In August 1878, a young man, son of Mr Cartwright of the hosiery firm, fell over the front wheel of his bicycle while ascending the hill near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. He bruised his head and face and cut his forehead and was taken to the Dispensary on Baxter Gate, where he was treated. This is the first report of this kind of accident that I’ve found, but there are sure to be more …

In June 1882, a couple of poachers, one who hid in a plantation near the Bull-in-the-Hollow, were fined for using a gun to take game from somewhere in Quorn.

The innkeeper in October 1888, appears to be a Mr Draycott. A market gardener called George Haddon, bargained for some apples at the Bull-in-the-Hollow Inn, but wasn’t successful so appears to have beaten his wife in his frustration, on their way home. He was imprisoned for 21 days, and ended up paying £1 a week maintenance to his wife for the upbringing of their two children.

In July 1899 a person was charged 15s. for riding a bicycle without a light, although he claimed it had gone out near the Bull-in-the-Hollow. He was caught near the cemetery, and when his lamp was inspected, rather than be warm, as would be expected, in support of his claim, it was, rather, stone cold.

So, by the end of the nineteenth century, the building known previously as the Needless Inn and the Buffalo Inn, or Buffalo’s Head Inn, was still known as the Bull-in-the-Hollow, and it is into the twentieth century that the Bull-in-the-Hollow really takes on a different name. Up until around 1895, according to Bill [i], the land around the A6 was very flat and was a popular area for spring racing. In Part 2, we shall see that things appear to have changed and the area is no longer so flat. Perhaps this is something to do with the coming the Great Central Railway, which arrived in Loughborough in 1898: I’m guessing here, but could it be that the road was raised near the cemetery, to allow for a bridge to be built over the GCR, thus making a downward slope into the town centre, but also a downward slope towards the Bull-in-the-Hollow?


End of Part 1


[i] Wells, Bill (2013). Billy’s Book of Loughborough Boozers. Loughborough: Panda Eyes. 9780957102712