Time to continue our tour of Wiltshire pubs that contain interesting things. From Avebury, let us journey further west (just under 15 miles by road) to
Lacock. This village (or is it a town? It was given a market charter in the
Middle Ages, which would technically make it a town even though there’s no
longer a market) has remained unchanged for many years, with most of the
buildings dating back to at least the eighteenth century. Lacock’s remarkably unspoiled appearance has made it a
favourite with the makers of TV costume dramas, and it has appeared in plenty
of those – Cranford, two versions of Pride and Prejudice, Moll Flanders and Tess of the d’Urbervilles (to name but a few) were filmed here,
while the stately home, Lacock Abbey (“the birthplace of photography”, for that was where William Henry Fox-Talbot took the first photograph, in 1835), was Wolf
Hall in Wolf Hall as well as being used as
part of Hogwarts School in the Harry Potter films.
Lacock, which is almost entirely owned by the National Trust, has several pubs, including another Red
Lion, but the one we’re interested in here is the George. As a pub name,
the George also has more than one origin – either from St
George or King George. The former has been recognised as the patron saint
of England since the fourteenth century, although veneration of him in England
goes back further. As for kings, there have been six of those but crucially that was the name of every King of Great Britain between 1714
and 1830 (starting with George I and ending with George IV), which is why the
eighteenth century is sometimes known in this country as the Georgian period.
Inside the George in Lacock, we have our second unusual or interesting thing. In one of the rooms, there’s an old fire-place and in front of that is
displayed an old spit or roasting-jack, as used for turning big joints of meat in front of open fires in the days before ovens. What is unusual
about this one is that it was dog-operated, for it is linked by way of a pulley
system to a large wheel in which a small dog was placed – the dog would run in the
wheel, and that would in turn power the spit.
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