Queens Arms Find!

I've lifted this from Rob Illingworth's fantastic pub literary link - thanks for guiding us to a great site fellow Detective...

Josephine Tozier, the American travel writer made visit a in 1904 to the Queen's Arms, Selborne. Arriving at Alton station after telegraphing ahead, she found the host of the Queen's Arms, sitting on the box of his wagonette waiting for her. In her evocative and very humorous Among English Inns Josephine describes the Queens Arms in great detail. "We reach our bedrooms and our long narrow sitting-room by an antiquated staircase, shut off with a door at the bottom from the neat old-fashioned bar. At the Queen's Arms the bar, true to its name, is a broad shelf of wood, lifted or put down at the will of the innkeeper's pretty daughter, when she serves cider, or more potent drinks, to thirsty customers. To be invited into the family parlour, behind the bar, is the privilege of only the chosen few".


The present Queens Arms was built on the site of an earlier inn called the Compasses soon after Queen Victoria came to the throne. Stormy meetings were held at the Compasses where the local small farmers met to discuss their grievances. In 1803 a serious riot ensued and the inn that Gilbert White knew was burnt down.

15 October 2009 from Angela Hicken

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