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The Eagle at Weeton

Coordinates: 53°48′18″N 2°56′12″W / 53.805019°N 2.936607°W / 53.805019; -2.936607
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The Eagle at Weeton
The building in 2024
Map
Former namesThe Holy Lamb
The Eagle and Child
General information
TypePublic house
AddressSingleton Road
Town or cityWeeton, Lancashire
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°48′18″N 2°56′12″W / 53.805019°N 2.936607°W / 53.805019; -2.936607
Completed1585 (439 years ago) (1585)
Technical details
Floor count2
Website
eagleweeton.co.uk

The Eagle at Weeton (formerly the Eagle and Child) is a public house in Weeton, Lancashire, England. Dating to 1585, it is one of the oldest public houses in the county[1] and in north-west England.[2] A set of steps in front of the property date to the 18th century, and are listed.[2]

Situated on the former estate of Lord Derby,[3][4] the building was once a courthouse. Judge and Puritan activist Michael Livesey, who signed the death warrant for Charles I, is believed to have presided there.[1]

Matthew Anderton was the pub's landlord in 1851.[5]

The pub was known as the Eagle and Child until it underwent a £750,000 renovation in 2019, at which point its name reverted to its 16th-century name, the Eagle.[6] It has also been named The Holy Lamb.[1] The building had a thatched roof until a fire in the 1960s.[1][7]

Star Pubs and Bars, a subsidiary of Heineken, is the owner of the establishment.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Here are 6 ghostly pubs in Lancashire... that go bumb in the night!"Lancashire Post, 31 October 2019
  2. ^ a b "Eagle and Child Inn, Weeton". Red Rose Collections from Lancashire County Council. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
  3. ^ Clarke, Allen (1933). Windmill Land; Rambles in a Rural Old-fashioned Lancashire Countryside, with a Chat about Its History and Romance. W. Foulsham. p. 52.
  4. ^ "Builders swoop in at Fylde pub Eagle and Child for £750,000 revamp"Blackpool Gazette, 13 March 2019
  5. ^ History, topography, and directory, of Westmorland; and of the hundreds of Lonsdale and Amounderness in Lancashire ... by Mannex & Co. authors. 1851.
  6. ^ a b "The Eagle at Weeton: First look inside one of the Fylde coast's best known country pubs after £750,000 refurbishment"The Gazette, 18 June 2019
  7. ^ "Pubs, windmills and scenes from Fylde's past"Blackpool Gazette, 2 October 2020
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