Admiral Lord Rodney, 88 Short Street
| Alternative Addresses: | 88 Much Park Street | ||
| These premises have been known by different names during their history: | FROM | TO | NAME |
| c1781 | 1893 | Rodney's Head | |
| c1851 | 1997 | Admiral Lord Rodney | |
| 1997 | 2018 | Rainbows | |
| 2018 | Glamorous | ||
There appears to be some ambiguity about the timing of the name changing for this pub. From the 1851 Board of Health map onwards it is labelled ADMIRAL LORD RODNEY. However, until as late as 1893, the the newspapers were still referring to this pub as the Rodney's Head.
In 1983 it was described as 'a gem of a back-street local with waiter service in the lounge'.
Part of the outside rendering fell off at this time, exposing the original timber frame of pre-1550. Restoration was undertaken and the frame was left visible on the end exterior wall. The licensee of the day also found part of the city wall in the cellar, and the Department of the Environment placed a preservation order on the place, making it Grade II listed.
That didn't stop the owners painting it a garish red colour and renaming it RAINBOWS.George Brydges, Lord Rodney (1719-1792), had a distinguished naval career and is remembered especially for the victory over the French at the Battle of the Saintes in 1782, in the West Indies, which led to better peace terms with the French after the American Revolution. | |||
LICENSEES:1840 - 1870 Dorothy Nightingale (widow of William) 1870 - 1891 Elizabeth Day Nightingale (died 29th June 1891, daughter of Dorothy) 1891 James Lenton (Jul to Oct - married Dorothy Nightingale's daughter, Ann Dorothy, in 1850) 1891 - 1897 George Bonnick 1897 - 1900 Thomas Bailey 1900 Charles Walton Woodcock (applied for bankruptcy Dec 1900) 1900 - 1901 Jack Tasker (late of Coventry F.C.) 1902 Roland Labram 1902 - 1905 Jesse Wright 1905 - 1919 Harry Freeman 1920 - 1940 George Nightingale 1940 Harry Hobbs 1952 -1962 Beatrice Anne Hobbs (1956 B. Gilmore & W. Mumford) 1974 - 1982 Richard Morrisey 1982 J. Bradley 1990 G. Ford & T. Lindsay | |||
OWNERS:to 1812 William Bromfield, maltster, died 1812 from 1812 Sarah Bromfield, daughter of above 1874 Thomas Tibbits Bloxley of Burton on Trent 1898 Ebenezer Brown of Attleborough, Nuneaton. Let to Mitchells & Butler 1940 James Eadie of Burton-on-Trent taken over by Bass in 1933 from 1990 G. Ford & T. Lindsay | |||
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There appears to be some ambiguity about the timing of the name changing for this pub. From the 1851 Board of Health map onwards it is labelled ADMIRAL LORD RODNEY. However, until as late as 1893, the the newspapers were still referring to this pub as the