When the Old Dog Inn was the New Dog

With urgent work now being carried out by the owner to preserve at least the frontage of the Old Dog on Church Street, Preston, I thought it might be worth looking back to its early history and to the original Dog Inn that preceded it in the 17th-century.

The Old Inn, Preston - facing demolition
Rescue work being carried out at the Old Dog Inn to save it from collapse. Image: Blog Preston

The proper name of the original inn was the Talbot, but it was commonly known as the Dog.

It was much frequented by the 17th-century Preston diarists Thomas Bellingham and Lawrence Rawstorne, at which time its landlord was William Atkinson, as witness Rawstorneโ€™s entry for 29 March 1688 in which he records being at โ€˜Will Atkinsons the Talbotโ€™.

Preston in 1685, showing the site of the Talbot/Dog Inn
Preston in 1685, showing the site of the Talbot/Dog Inn

A Wm Adkinson is listed at a property on the south side of Church Street next to the present Blue Bell on the 1685 plan of Preston and this was probably the location of the inn. In October 1683 and October 1687 a William Atkinson is listed in the court leet records as one of the two โ€˜houselookersโ€™ for Church Street.

The diarists also have him as the landlord of the Dog, as for example in their entries for 13 March 1689 in which Bellingham records staying late at โ€˜ye Doggโ€™ with a friend from Ireland and Rawstorne describes being at โ€˜Will Atkinsonโ€™sโ€™ with Bellingham and โ€˜an Irish Gentโ€™.

The Talbot and the Dog were one and the same establishment. A talbot is an extinct breed of hunting dog and inns named the Talbot would display a painted sign featuring a dog. Entries in the diaries of Bellingham and Rawstorne show that the Talbot was more usually known as โ€˜Ye Dogโ€™.

This has caused some confusion. For example, Stephen Sartin in one of his books has Thomas Bellingham drinking at the present Old Dog in 1690. But there was no inn on the site of the present pub at that date. Bellingham was referring to the original inn further down Church Street.

Steve Halliwell on his website suggests that the original Dog, which was across the road from Patten House, was destroyed in the fighting in the town during the 1715 Jacobite rebellion and relocated to the site of the present Old Dog further up Church Street.

However, the original Dog or Talbot was still in business more than 20 years later. At a court leet in February 1739 the town bailiffs were presented โ€˜for neglecting their duty in their Offices of Bayliffs in not repairing the Streets in several parts of the Town particularly near the Talbot โ€“ before the house late in possession of the Earl of Derbyโ€™, which would refer to Patten House in Church Street, across from the Talbot or Dog.

For more on the history of the present Old Dog, see Steve Halliwell’s entry in his encyclopaedic Preston’s Inns, Taverns and Beer Houses website (listed below). Steve is currently updating the site to include information from the 1921 Census.


Sources
Bellingham and Rawstorne diaries
Blog Preston:ย https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/…/old-dog-inn-to-see…/
Preston Court Leet records:ย https://www.wyrearchaeology.org.uk/…/areas…/preston…
The 1685 plan of Preston:ย https://prestonhistory.com/…/prest…/church-street-lower/
Steve Halliwellโ€™s website: https://pubsinpreston.blogspot.com/2012/03/old-dog-inn-church-street.html


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