Date:1840 - 1843 (c.)
Description:A pencil and coloured wash by John Whessell. This drawing captures Red Lion Square in about the early 1840s. The coaching inn, The Three Tuns, can be seen on the left hand side, which had occupied this building since the early 1790s. Unfortunately the building was demolished in the 1950s. St. Giles' church can be seen in the background. At this time the church would have been that built in the Georgian style by William Smith, that was completed in 1721. In 1876 St. Giles was to be rebuilt in the Gothic revival style by Sir George Gilbert Scott, giving us the church which still stands today.
The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.
This is Newcastle-under-Lyme’s oldest surviving charter. A charter is a formal ...
Watercolour by James Hulse of a view looking from Red Lion Square towards the High ...
A pen ink and coloured wash by John Whessell of the Rutland public house, Red Lion ...
Advert for Rimmel's grocers, the building later became Wain's Chemist. St Giles' ...
Taken in 1895 this photograph shows the shops that lined the junction between Red ...
Cyril Bayley at work in the print shop of Bayley Brothers. Bayley's had been in ...
Ink and wash view of Newcastle-under-Lyme High street produced by R.M. Metcalfe ...
Painted by artist Alf Fallows in 1981 this watercolour depicts Red Lion Square in ...
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Donor ref:PAC 44-88 (22/4576)
Source: Brampton Museum and Art Gallery, Newcastle under Lyme
Copyright information: Copyrights to all resources are retained by the individual rights holders. They have kindly made their collections available for non-commercial private study & educational use. Re-distribution of resources in any form is only permitted subject to strict adherence to the usage guidelines.