Showing posts with label Stag Inn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stag Inn. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 April 2023

Hastings Jack in the Green Weekend & May Day

Yesterday morning I wandered into Hastings Old Town to take some photographs helping to map out how the 40th anniversary Hastings Jack in the Green procession develops, which I wrote about in a blog on Friday. Tomorrow, May Day, the main event kicks off when Jack is released from Hastings Fishermen's Museum (website) in Rock-a-Nore Road at about 10.15 usually. Jack is welcomed, there's a wee bit of music and dancing and twirling around, then the procession begins by heading westwards; see their website for further details of the event.

I am using specific landmarks, including the museum, which I've chosen as pubs en route that are using the Hastings Old Town Cup, as I mentioned in my blog, as a decent attempt to be more environmentally friendly this year, hopefully with significantly fewer plastic cups being thrown away. The first such pub the procession passes will be The Dolphin Inn, 11-12 Rock-a-Nore Road (website).

After passing by, the procession will then turn right and proceed up All Saints Street, where it will pass The Crown, 64-66 All Saints Street (website).

The procession continues up the street and reaches The Stag Inn, 14 All Saints Street (website), just before turning left to cross The Bourne; remember that much of the Old Town will be shut off to traffic for a while to enable the safe crossing, and the safety of the procession and the many members of the public who will be watching/following.

The procession will then continue down the High Street, passing The First In Last Out, 14-15 Hugh Street (FILO - website) before reaching...

The Jenny Lind Inn, 69 High Street (website), where by now participants will need a rest, and a few ales, with about a 45 minutes break at 11.30-ish. Following the break the procession then continues down and turns right to head up Swan Terrace, passing by St Clements church (blog) on the right, and then up Croft Road, heading for the top of the West Hill. Once there, partying continues, music, food and drink (bar run by the FILO), craft wares, including the event T-shirt, and, by now, necessary facilities for those who have already been drinking, phew!

By now you may have realised, not only did I not carry on up the hill yesterday, but that I'd actually been heading in the opposite direction all the time, whilst taking my photographs. I'd decided to have a couple of drinks out of a Hastings Old Town Cup (blog), just to provide you with a relevant image. The things I do for research. 😉


Oh yes, there was dancing around the old town and at the Stade, as I suggested (blog), for example at Winkle Island yesterday (website), above image. And similar today, also drums, and much more happening too (website).


Enjoy the rest of the weekend, and tomorrow's procession folks, which will look something like the photograph above! 👍


Thursday, 16 March 2023

Paddy's Night in Hastings

A few pubs will be celebrating Paddy's Night around Hastings this Friday 17th March. 

From 8.30-11.00pm, Garry Blakeley and Bear Lucas will be fiddle-dee-deeing at the Stag, 14 All Saints Street TN34 3BJ (Blakeley website).

From 9.00pm, The Twitten Revellers will be playing an acoustic set at the Crown, 66 All Saints Street TN34 3BN (website).

From 8.30-10.30pm, there will be more fiddlin' and jigging as Sistie Moose play at the Jenny Lind, 69 High Street TN34 3EW (website).

In the town centre, near the station, the 17th and 18th promises a Paddy's Day (or 2) Party at the Seadog, 32 Station Road TN34 1NJ (facebook), with music, rugby and "having the craic" - well the landlord is an Irishman, so to be expectedsláinte!

Up on the West Hill, at the Plough, 46 Priory Road TN34 3JJ (facebook), Fire in the Meadow will also be playing fiddle-dee-dee music from 8.30pm, many thanks Rebecca. 

And at the Tower, 251 London Road TN37 6NB (facebook), there will be music, but apparently not Irish music. However, all weekend they're selling pints of Guinness at £2.99 a pint, can't be bad.

Anyway, enjoy as you wish, sláinte!


Thursday, 11 August 2022

Loggets World Championship at the Stag Inn on Sunday!


Indeed, the Loggets World Championship is being held this Sunday, the 14th of August (Sussex World), I kid you not! The game of Loggets (or Loggats) has been around since the 14th century at least, when King Edward III proclaimed that, on Feast Days, every able-bodied man should practice using bows and arrows/bolts/pellets, specifically forbidding many games, including Loggats, on "pain of imprisonment" (James Masters), So, it wasn't a rarely played game by 1363, although very rare now!

So what is Loggets? Traditionally, it's a game where you throw sticks at a stake in the ground (Free Dictionary); on Sunday it will be throwing pieces of wood, or loggets, at a figurine called The Tom. Each team member will have 3 loggets to throw.

Accordingly, on Sunday, in the back garden of the Stag Inn, 14 All Saints Street TN34 3BJ (website), from 2.00pm, the Loggets World Championship 2022 begins. Apparently, they're very welcoming to 'newbies' to the game, that is, in teams of 2, and the entry fee costs £2 per team member; with proceeds being donated to the RNLI, a very worthy cause indeed, nice one!

I think you shouldn't fear imprisonment for playing Loggets these days, so feel safe to enter the Loggets World Championship and good luck to all that enter!


Sunday, 1 May 2022

Jack in the Green Procession and Old Town Pub Crawl plus!


I decided to tour the old town yesterday to take photographs for this blog, with pubs and other buildings dressed in greenery, ribbons and wreaths...

Of course the Hastings Traditional Jack in the Green Procession 2022 won't start in a pub, although many, including Bogies and attendants, may already have had a few pints of ale, but tomorrow's event (Monday the 2nd of May 2022) begins when the Jack is released from Hastings Fishermen's Museum (website) at 10.15 am. Bogies and attendants will gather around the Jack outside the museum, as he starts the dancing off, and their will be many dancing, and the procession will then start to form behind him and proceed westwards along Rock-a-Nore Road...


The first pub the procession reaches is the Dolphin Inn (website), 11-12 Rock -a-Nore Road TN34 3DW, which will have already been open for a couple of hours, and there will be a good audience outside on its balcony. The Dolphin Inn dates back to at least 1798, but was rebuilt in 1851 after, I believe, it had been damaged by fire, and further altered and extended in 1930. Situated opposite the local fishing industry beach, net huts, and fish market, and down the road from a large car park, means that it garners many passers by, and its south facing balcony is very popular, as will be witnessed tomorrow! Just past the pub the Jack meets up with the Giants and other musicians and dancers, and there will be drums and dancers aplenty!


The procession should be up to full length by now, and turns right into All Saints Street just after acclaimed seafood restaurant Webbe's (website), 1 Rock-a-Nore Road TN34 3DW. Oh yes, and Webbe's is situated in a Grade II listed Georgian property.


Almost immediately on its left, as the procession heads up All Saints Street, is the back of the Grade II listed Lord Nelson pub (facebook), 1 East Bourne Street TN34 3DP. The 2 buildings that merged and became the Nelson have deeds dating back to the 1740s, and the pub received its first licence by 1830, now a traditional local pub.


As the procession continues up All Saints Street it soon reaches The Crown on the right (website), 64-66 All Saints Street TN34 3BN. This was a coaching inn from 1794, but reduced in size at the beginning of the 20th century, and destroyed by fire in 1921, consequently needing to be rebuilt that year. Following refurbishment in 1985 it became a Harvey's tied house, but more recently became a popular freehouse.


A little further up on the left the procession will reach the Cinque Ports Arms, 105 All Saints Street TN34 3BE. This pub was formerly known as the Chequers dating back to 1642, but has not been a pub continuously since that time. It was first licenced as the Cinque Ports Arms in the early 19th century, but following a fire in 1925 it was rebuilt with its now 'mock Tudor' frontage and interior, indeed a very cosy pub.


The last pub you reach in All Saints Street is up, and raised up, on the right, the Stag Inn (website), 14 All Saints Street TN34 3BJ; you may have noticed that the house numbers aren't as per usual streets as they're not odds one side and evens the other side, but start up at the top on the east side with numbers 1, 2, 3 etc., coming downhill, then continuing back up on the west side of the street! The Stag is one of the oldest pubs in Hastings (see blog), in an interesting Grade II listed timber-framed building dating back to the 16th century, and is now a Shepherd Neame Brewery tied house.


At the top of All Saints Street is All Saints Church (blog), one of the old town's 2 stone built Norman churches, and which was rebuilt between 1417 and 1430 following 14th century French raids on Hastings. Across from here is where the Jack in the Green procession will cross The Bourne into the High Street.


The procession will carry on down High Street, passing many interesting buildings on the way, including this house, where the Rossetti family stayed in 1836 (including the Pre-Raphaelite artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti and poet Christina Rossetti when they were children - blog). Oh yes, and the numbers of houses run continuously down the east side, continuing back up on the west side of the street, as in All Saints Street.


But the next pub the procession will reach, now down on the left, is the First In Last Out (FILO - website), 14-15 High Street TN34 3EY, a pub with its own brewery, which used to be contained within the pub itself, but is now just a short distance away up Old London Road. The building is from the 16th century, but did not become a pub until it was licenced in the 1870s, now a genuine freehouse.


A little further down on the left is the Grade II listed Duke of Wellington, 28-29 High Street TN34 3EY, which was converted from 2 houses, and opened as a pub in the 1870s. The Duke of Wellington AKA Major General Sir Arthur Wellesley, had lived in Hastings when commanding a brigade from here, indeed, he brought his bride back to live with him in Hastings when he married her in Dublin in 1806.


The procession will carry on down High Street and usually has a break for about 45 minutes outside the Jenny Lind Inn (website), 69 High Street TN34 3EW, with more music and merrymaking. The Jenny Lind was built on the site of a much older pub that dated back to the early 17th century, The Bell, but with a gap whilst not a pub of 200 years, before the Jenny Lind started trading in the 1850s. It's named after the Swedish Nightingale, the famous opera singer who, under the wing of the German composer Felix Mendelssohn, became widely followed throughout Europe, including by Queen Victoria; she moved to England in 1855, where she lived until her death in 1887.


When the procession continues on its way again, it will continue down High Street, soon turning right up Swan Terrace, by Hastings second Norman church, the Church of St Clement (blog), then bending to the right behind the church into Croft Road, and upwards to the West Hill, passing no more pubs along the way. However, on the West Hill festivities will continue, including a craft and food fair, more music and dancing, and I believe the FILO will have a licenced bar up there too (website). 

Then, between 4.00 and 4.30 pm, the Jack is slain to release the spirit of summer...

Enjoy your day!

Friday, 3 May 2019

Hastings Jack in the Green begins...


So, Hastings Jack in the Green begins at 8.00pm this evening (Friday 3rd May, see website) with a 'raucous' Folk Session in the Stag Inn, All Saints Street. Then continues tomorrow from 12.00 noon with (Morris) Dancing on Winkle Island, more folk music from 2.00pm at the Stag Inn with Rattlebag (though they will have already been 'busking' around the old town from 11.00am), and from 8.00pm a Ceilidh at St Mary in the Castle, Pelham Place, and a Magpie Lane folk concert at St Clements Church, High Street. And so much more to come Sunday and Monday!!

Sunday, 17 March 2019

St Patrick's Day Live Music in Hastings 2019

There's plenty of live music this St Patrick's Day, Sunday the 17th of March 2019, starting at the Stag Inn, All Saints Street, 4.30-7.30 pm, will be the Ballyregan Boys celebrating the day, familiar faces, and Irish folk music (HastingsFlyer).


Down the hill at the Dolphin Inn, Rock-a-Nore Road, 5-7.30 pm (facebook) sees Urgent Orange playing. As I'd seen the group Agent Orange (out of The Chords) play live in the 1980s, I suspected not oirish music, and I was correct, more new wave/punk/mod, eg covers of The Jam, Clash, Buzzcocks...
A wee while earlier, and back round the corner, and up the High Street to Porters, 4-6 pm, will be Gary Blakley & Bear (website), don't be surprised to see musicians playing at more than one venue by the way! 😉


Along George Street and the seafront westwards, and The Gary Blakeley Band are playing at The Albion, 6-9 pm, definitely oirish (HastingsFlyer).

Enjoy the craic!

Friday, 4 May 2018

Jack in the Green Preparation. Mainly Photographs!


A wander along George Street and Rock-a-Nore Road today, beautiful blue sky, Spotted the Jack in the Green peeps putting up greenery, here at the Dolphin Inn.

Webbes

The Standard

 Bob decorating!

Another Home

End of George Street

The Albion, George Street 

T'other End of George Street

Oh yes, the Jack in the Green Festival is soon to start, if you hadn't noticed, with a music session this evening in the Stag, All Saints Street, from 8pm (website).

Enjoy the weekend!

Friday, 16 March 2018

St Patrick's Day


In the Albatross Club (RAFA) in Bexhill, the St Patrick's Day decorations are already up (see above), as they are in many other places too, for example in the Tower, London Road, which is selling Guinness at £2.69 a pint from today until Sunday! But, what other St Patrick's Day specific events are being held on Saturday 17th March, well, not forgetting that many pubs and clubs will be showing the England versus Ireland 6-Nations Rugby Union match during the afternoon...


From 3pm to 5pm, the well know local Gary Blakeley Band will be playing a St Patrick's Day Afternoon Session at The Palace, Palace Court (see website), and from 6pm to 8.30pm there will be 'shenanigans' with the Wessex Pistols at the Jenny Lind in the High Street, Hastings Old Town (see website); the music is advertised as being hillbilly style Irish punk, so a wee bit more than a traditional ceilidh!


Then, from 8.30pm to 11pm, the Stag Inn, All Saints Street (see 1066 Country website), is holding a St Patrick's Day Special with Shamrockanore! Now, I've never heard of Shamrockanore, though it sounds very Irish and Hastings at the same time... Oh yes, and if you still have energy to keep on partying, The Brass Monkey, Havelock Road (website) is holding The Big St Patrick's Day Party from 10pm!

Whatever you do, enjoy the craic... and maybe snow!

Saturday, 17 June 2017

Moving the 'Ghost of Dunkirk'


Jonathan Mendenhall sharing the history of the Cyril and Lilian Bishop, the 'Ghost of Dunkirk', with us before her final journey...


Judy Rogers, Mayor of Hastings, gives her account...


Michael Foster, ex-Member of Parliament and Deputy Lieutenant of East Sussex, and Hastings' resident all his life ("I've never stayed away from Hastings for more than 2 weeks, all my life", though he did attend the University of Leicester, so I'm guessing he included that as living in Hastings...), joins in!


I was surprised that All Saints Street was actually empty of parked vehicles by 10.00, well done folks!

The stewards do a typical steward thing and push people out of the way as if we are children, give someone a high viz jacket and the think they're God!



Despite listing to starboard for a short while, there was little problem with hauling her up through the narrow early part of All Saints Street.



Then, she sat outside the Crown for 20 minutes whilst the bar was overwhelmed!

Coming up to the Cinque Ports Arms


 Sitting outside the Stag Inn

More singing - She's arrived! 


Well done Hastingers, the Cyril and Lilian Bishop docked below All Saints Church.