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Salford > Black Friar
Black Friar
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Picture source: Peter Ashworth |
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The Black Friar was situated on Blackfriars
Road. A grade-II listed pub |
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From Architects Of Greater Manchester: |
The Black Friar, was a rebuilding of The Old
School Inn on King Street following the creation of Blackfriars Road in the
1880's. On left side is a tall chimney corbelled from first floor and
breaking the eaves, has a stone plaque at its base inscribed "Rebuilt AD
1886. An oriel window at first floor similar to that at the Smut Inn has a
band on the corbel with the words: "You May Go Further And Fare Worse."
Additional carved stone panels depict a friar displaying a banner with the
words "The Black Friar" and a shield with corn sheaves and bees, lettered
below reading "My Old School". – presumably a reference to the previous
public house. |
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Listed
building details: |
Public house. Dated 1886 on left side; by
William Ball of Manchester. Red brick with red sandstone dressings and some
tile hanging, slate (plain tile) roof. Vernacular Revival style. Modified L
plan. Exterior: 2 and a half storeys over cellars, 3 bays, the first and
third gabled; chamfered plinth, 3 string courses, steeply pitched gables
with oversailing verges, the upper parts tile hung with small pentices over
the attic windows, Ground floor has a broad lintel band to the first and
second bays, each of which has an entrance with moulded surround, flattened
ogee head, that in the second bay with a swan necked pediment over. The
first bay has one window to the left, the second bay has 2, and the third
bay has a tripartite window, all sashed. At first floor the second bay has a
canted oriel of stone with mullions and transom, and a band on the corbel
with the words: "You May Go Further And Fare Worse"; the first and third
bays have tripartite windows, each with an extrados of red brick and carved
stone tympanum, that to the left depicting a friar displaying a banner with
the words "The Black Friar" and that to the right including a shield with
corn sheaves and bees, lettered below "Blackfriars" "(My) Old School". The
gables of the outer bays have 3 light mullioned windows; the centre has a
flat roofed 4 light dormer. Left return wall has a tall chimney corbelled
from first floor and breaking the eaves, with a stone plaque at its base
inscribed "Rebuilt AD 1886". Interior: some original fittings and plan
elements. Entrance lobby with door to left to vault, ahead door with cut and
etched glass. Hall has altered curved bar and a Jacobean style stair.
Parlour has 2 altered lobby screens, fixed upholstered seating, bell pushes
and fireplace, vault has simple fixed upholstered seating and a modern
opening to remodelled area to rear. |
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