A beerhouse was a type of public house created in the United Kingdom by the Beerhouse Act 1830 (11 Geo. 4 & 1 Will. 4. c. 64), legally defined as a place "where beer is sold to be consumed on the premises".[1] They were also known as "small" or "Tom and Jerry" shops[2] Existing public houses were issued with licences by local magistrates under the terms of the Retail Brewers Act 1828 (9 Geo. 4. c. 68), and were subject to police inspections at any time of the day or night.[3] Proprietors of the new beerhouses, on the other hand, simply had to buy a licence from the government costing two guineas per annum,[4] equivalent to about £150 as of 2010.[a] Until the Wine and Beerhouse Act 1869 (32 & 33 Vict. c. 27) gave local magistrates the authority to renew beerhouse licences, the two classes of establishment were in direct competition.[6]
The Ordnance Survey conventional sign for beerhouses is BH.[7]
Notes
editReferences
editCitations
edit- ^ Stroud (2003), p. 72
- ^ "Wisbech". Norwich Mercury. 25 December 1847. p. 4.
- ^ Steinthal, S. A. (1868), "The Licensing Laws, And Proposals for their Amendment", Transactions of the Manchester Statistical Society, vol. 1867–1868, Manchester Statistical Society, pp. 29–46, retrieved 11 December 2012
- ^ Putnam (2004), p. 36
- ^ Officer, Lawrence H. (2009), "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1270 to Present", MeasuringWorth, archived from the original on 24 November 2009, retrieved 25 November 2012
- ^ Sigsworth (1967), pp. 25–26
- ^ OS MasterMap real-world object catalogue, v1.0 (PDF). Southampton: Ordnance Survey. November 2001. p. 49.
Bibliography
edit- Putnam, Roger (2004), The Beer and Breweries of Britain, Shire Books, ISBN 0-7478-0606-3
- Sigsworth, Eric M. (1967), The brewing trade during the Industrial Revolution, St. Anthony's Press, ISBN 0-900701-31-5
- Stroud, Frederick (2003) [1890], The judicial dictionary of words and phrases judicially interpreted, Lawbook Exchange, ISBN 978-1-58477-263-7