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Home > Cumberland >
Whitehaven > Red Flag
Red Flag
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Picture source: Fred
Long |
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The Red Flag
was situated on Harbour View.
This grade-II listed pub
closed in 1904 and is
now in residential use. |
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Listed
building details: |
House. c1700 and c1800. Red
sandstone rubble with some modern brick patching, pebble- dashed, slate
roofs. The building is in three sections, two of which appear to be more or
less contemporary and one a later addition. South-west section is
c1700.T-shaped range but both roofs are contained within a single rectangle
One storey and attic. East front has a modern door and window. South front
has a single-light window over a two-light, modern casement. West front has
a plain sash. North front has a plain chamfered door with a two-light window
with chamfered surround and mullion above. Both these features appear to be
original. Coped gables with kneelers. Replacement roof with single-gable
stack. Interior has suffered a fire. Stone spiral stair. Extremely rough
beam spans the kitchen. The roof has been replaced with some survivial of
fire-damaged timbers and the top of the stack has been removed. This range
has had some rebuilding as is evident from the squared stones with
herringbone tooling, a C19 repair on the south-east quoin. North range. This
appears contemporary with the first section, but has a lower roof line. Two
storeys. West front has a doorway with decayed, moulded surround flanked by
small blocked openings. Above are four C19 sashes in chamfered surrounds.
These appear to be original openings, perhaps with dropped sills. This range
otherwise featureless. Interior. The lower room has a fireplace with an ogee
mould shelf, above is an early C19 hob grate with a plain stone surround.
The roof has been replaced, but retains one original pegged truss with
halved apex and trenches for purlins. This appears to be late C17. The lower
room was the beer cellar when this was a public house. East range might be
late C18 or early Cl9 and shows patching to the walls. Doorway with plain
stone surround on south end. One modern window to each floor on north end.
These have chamfered surrounds. The interior is featureless. It is evident
that this is one of the oldest surviving buildings in Whitehaven and
predates the main development of the town in the early C18. It is certainly
the same building clearly seen in the Matthias Read drawing of 1738 and
other contemporary pictures. It is not, however, very likely that it is the
house stayed in by the infant Jonathan Swift, who, it is claimed, lived
there 1668-1671. During the C18 it was an inn known as Bowling Green House
and later Flagstaff House and Red Flag. The walled enclosure of the bowling
green, now much damaged, survives to the northwest of the house. |
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