Neptune Inn, Ipswich

Neptune Inn is an historic public house located in Fore Street, Ipswich, Suffolk, England.[1] The building was originally built around 1490.[2]

Neptune Inn in 1841


History

The building was bought by John Cobbold in 1845. He renovated the building, selling the old fixtures – such as linenfold panelling, an internal canopy, and carved beams – to William Burrell, a Glaswegian antique collector, who added them to the Burrell Collection, where they are to this day.[2]

In 1947 the building was bought by George Bodley Scott, the managing director of W. S. Cowell Ltd..[2] He commissioned the Royal Archaeological Institute to conduct a survey to establish the history of the building. This was conducted in 1951 and extracts appeared in a booklet published by Scott in 1970 entitled The Old Neptune Inn.

A tavern clock dating c.1740 is still in existence, although the movement was replaced in 1950.[3]

gollark: What's easier to read?
gollark: Go making all loops `for` (WHY DOES IT DO THAT) doesn't make it much simpler, since you still have to *know* all the weird ways to use it and so does the compiler.
gollark: I mean, that's not a thing of *keywords*, just of... more language features, really.
gollark: More keywords → more complexity in the language/parsing/whatever, more stuff programmers have to know.
gollark: For all (values of) f there exists a (value) g such that f (x, y) = (g x) y. In other words, you can convert any function which takes two values as a tuple or something to a curried one. I think.

References

  1. Scott, George Bodley (1970). The Old Neptune Inn (PDF). Ipswich: W. S. Cowell Ltd.
  2. Norman, John (2017). "Ipswich Icons: The history of the former Neptune Inn in Fore Street, Ipswich" (23 July 2017). Ipswich Star.
  3. Snowden, Phil. "Ipswich Historic Lettering: Neptune clock". www.ipswich-lettering.co.uk. Borin van Loon. Retrieved 2 January 2020.

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