Reasons for Designation
The Beehive Public House, Stoneleigh Road, Tottenham is designated at Grade II, for the following principal reasons:
* For its now rare survival of the interior of a medium-size 1920s urban 'improved' pub , including off licence and function room
* Notable original internal features including glazed office, stained glass door signs, fireplaces, imitation Tudor panelling, bar counter, brass light fittings and probably unique Customs and Excise door numbering system
* Characteristic 'Brewers Tudor' exterior with an unusual terrace to the rear.
Details
This list entry was subject to a Minor Enhancement on 14 February 2024 to amend the description to ehance the general historic background
800/0/10135 STONELEIGH ROAD
17-DEC-09 The Beehive Public House
II
Public house. 1927 replacing a Victorian public house on the site. Architect and brewery unknown.
PLAN: Main frontage to Stoneleigh Road. From the west; public bar; off licence (no longer in use); lounge bar (originally partitioned from the single storey luncheon room facing the garden to the rear); panelled passage from front of the building through to a single-storey function room (known as the Self Service Room) at the east rear.
EXTERIOR: Designed in the Olde English Style often referred to as 'Brewers Tudor' and which was at its height of popularity in the 1920s and 30s. This was designed to reflect romantic notions of 'Merrie England' and was applied to pubs in town and country throughout England. Two storeys with attic. Half-timbered first floor, front elevation with large central gable and dormer to the east. Tall, red-brick, chimney stack piercing the tile roof to the west with exposed diaper brickwork. Square-headed timber casement windows throughout, those to ground floor with dimple-glass lights. Metal bracket to pub sign with date of 1927. Ground floor with tiled front (now overpainted). Doors with multi-paned lights above and with stained glass signs. The treatment to the rear is unusual with the saloon bar extended as a single storey towards the beer garden with a battlemented brick balustrade to a terrace (probably private although reached by an external metal stair) above French windows and a tower-like projection containing toilets.
INTERIOR: The interior is notable for the extent of survival of original features. The rooms all have the original Tudor-style small-square panelling to picture-rail height (this is an interesting imitation wooden panelling with an applied textured surface on a plywood base used to reproduce a Tudor effect without the cost of real wood) and lead-paned windows. Vernacular style brick chimney pieces, that in the Luncheon Room having herringbone brickwork and a brass hood decorated with a Tudor rose. The public bar retains its original L-shaped panelled counter, mirrored bar back, three original benches and two cased-in dart boards. Off-licence has a small serving counter. The lounge bar/luncheon room has its original brass light fittings, panelled bar counter, most of the original glazed bar back, imitation beams and the glazed upper part of the sliding screen separating the saloon from the luncheon room. The stained glass skylight is probably of more recent date. The doors to the 'Public Bar', 'Off-Licence', 'Saloon & Lounge', 'Luncheon Room' and 'Self Service Room' all have original stained glass signs. A very rare feature of the doors is that all seem to have been numbered (several of the brass numbers survive). Numbering of individual rooms within a pub was standard practice for Customs & Excise control purposes until the 1960s but this is the only known example of numbering for each door. The glazed office behind the public bar is another rare survival.
HISTORY: Inter-war ‘improved’ or ‘reformed’ pubs stemmed from a desire to cut back on the amount of drunkenness associated with conventional Victorian and Edwardian public houses. Licensing magistrates and breweries combined to improve the facilities and reputation of the building type. Improved pubs were generally more spacious than their predecessors, often with restaurant facilities, function rooms and gardens, and consciously appealed to families and to a mix of incomes and classes. Central, island serveries with counters opening onto several bar areas allowed the monitoring of customers and also the efficient distribution of staff to whichever area needed service. Many, although not all, of the new pubs were built as an accompaniment to new suburban development around cities, and a policy of ‘fewer and better’ was followed by magistrates both in town and on the outskirts. A licence might be granted for a new establishment on surrender of one or more licences for smaller urban premises. Approximately 1,000 new pubs were built or existing pubs re-built in the 1920s – the vast majority of them on ‘improved’ lines - and almost 2,000 in the period 1935-39. Neo-Tudor and Neo-Georgian were the favoured styles, although others began to appear at the end of the period.
There is reputed to have been a public house called the Beehive on the block off Tottenham High Road, on the north side of Stoneleigh Road (until the middle of the C20, this was Balthazar Road), since the late 1870s. It first appears in the 1881 census when a Mr Evans lived there with his wife and eight children, with the address given as 'Stoneley South' (Stoneleigh Road then joined Balthazar Road at the junction with the High Road)and it appears on the 1894 Ordnance Survey map. The present building dates from 1927 according to a date on a metal bracket adjoining the pub sign and first appears on its present footprint in the 1936 OS map. The pub was extended to the north and east at this date with the enlargement of the saloon bar, creation of the beer garden and addition of the 'Self Service Room'. The building was originally flanked to the east by a row of four houses extending to Circular Road which ran north-south slightly further east of the current north-south section of Stoneleigh Road (and slightly west of its route today). These buildings were presumably demolished following damage from a parachute mine which fell in September 1940 and destroyed much of the area immediately south and east of the pub, necessitating the new post-war road layout. The remains of the chimney of the adjoining house can be seen behind the post-war garages.
SOURCES:
Pubs - Understanding Listing (English Heritage booklet - 1994)
Brandwood, G, Davison, A, and Slaughter, M, - 'Licensed to Sell: the History and Heritage of the Public House' (2004)
Brandwood, G, and Jephcote, J, - 'London Heritage Pubs: an Inside Story' (2008) pp.113-114
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The Beehive public house is designated at Grade II, for the following principal reasons:
* For its rare survival of the interior of a medium-size 1920s urban 'improved' pub, including off licence and function room
* Notable original internal features including glazed office, stained glass door signs, fireplaces, imitation Tudor panelling, bar counter, brass light fittings and a probably unique Customs & Excise door numbering system
* Characteristic 'Brewers Tudor' exterior with an unusual terrace to the rear.