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About the Jolly Sailor
Built in 1894, it retains a cosy, olde worlde
feel but with modern comforts. We have a good clientele, with clubs,
societies and business people frequenting here.
The pub has the modern concept of separate smoking
and non smoking bars with many coming just to relax with friends
for a drink in a smoke free atmosphere.
We have a range of games behind the bar, so why
not enjoy a pint whilst you play your friends at Jenga or Scrabble.
Our bars offer plenty of choice including four
real ales and three draught lagers, along with a range of wines.
Food is available daily both during lunchtimes and early evenings.
We have Sky Sports and if you enjoy watching
a game in good company the Jolly Sailor is the place to come.
Everyone is welcome here and we look forward
to seeing you soon.
History of 'Snatchup Alley' on Stonecross (by
Kate Morris, 2006)
Snatchup Alley on Stonecross - The
northernmost tip of the ancient Borough of St Albans
What's in a name?
The name Snatchup Alley in St Albans, now re-acknowledged with a
street nameplate, has defied research. We can only speculate on
why, from at least the 17th century, the lane behind the Cricketers’
and Jolly Sailors’ public houses has had this name. It is
not unique; there is a Snatchup still in Redbourn and one in King’s
Langley. The presence of two public houses and a track record of
criminal disturbances from time to time supports the notion of a
den of thieves or worse, where ‘snatching’ was commonplace.
But there is no evidence of this scenario before the 19th century
and it is unlikely that the good citizens of St Albans would have
named a street for such activities in official documents.
Sometimes referred to as Snatchup End, or Snatchups Row, or even
Snatchhops, it is the thoroughfare on the west side of the spur
of land, which is the northern tip of the ancient Borough of St
Albans. It would have been the natural route for those leaving town
on the left hand side of St Peter’s Street at the top of the
town. The return on the east side of the six plots on this spur,
widened in the 19th century to accommodate vehicular traffic, gradually
became the High Road to and from Sandridge.
The name Stonecross later came to refer to that stretch of the
High Road alongside these plots as ‘atte’ or ‘nere’
the Stone Cross. There may have been a cross at this northernmost
point of the Borough.
What went on at Snatchup?
The plots at Snatchup were held of the Manor
of Newland Squillers, which was in medieval times owned by the Abbey
of St Albans. After the disclosure of the monasteries, it came to
the Robothams, who lived in the 17th century, in the manor house
on the New Lane, now Hatfield Road. But in the early 18th century
they sold the manor to the Duchess of Marlborough. Such manorial
plots were usually held copyhold, a system of tenure, which was
abolished in the 1920’s. It meant that a ‘customary
tenant’ held the right to the plot, under the Lord of the
Manor, against payment of a small sum of money and some item in
kind, for instance ‘a fatt henn on St Thomas Day’ each
year (and whenever the plot changed hands by sale or inheritance).
Each party to the transaction had a copy of the document, which
recorded the ‘surrender’ or ‘admission’
at a Court Baron. Many of these title deeds survive for Newland
Squillers.
Most of the Snatchup plots were occupied
by a row of tenanted cottages and it was rare for ‘customary
tenants’ to live there themselves. The cottages were usually
in the occupation of artisans who moved relatively often. In 1841
the census shows Snatchup Alley was home to 23 families. There was
a chimney sweep, a general dealer, a brewer’s man, two journeyman
carpenters, a lace worker, two bricklayers, two brickmaker’s
labourers, a gardener, a schoolmistress, and several agricultural
labourers, apart from the publican. Daniel Groom and his family
of seven children, originally from Hitchin, were agricultural labourers.
His widow, Hannah, was still living there in 1861, working as a
charwoman, whilst her daughter Jane, by then 15, had become a silk
winder. The Findells, Wallers, and Hedges all lived for many decades
in this locations.
The Lord of the Manor, or the Steward on his behalf, would hold
a Court Baron each year to collect fines, or fees, from his ‘customary
tenants’ and to hear grievances, when someone was ‘presented’
for, for instance, ‘the ruinous state of his barn’.
This was the fate Edmond How in 1685. And the penalty was usually
another fine. In the 18th and 19th centuries this Court was usually
held in the house of a member of the ‘homage’ or jury
of the customary tenants who administered local affairs of the manor.
The manor house had been demolished but the Duchess and her descendants
lived elsewhere.
The Water Company
Edmund How’s barn was on the third
plot from the south, in the centre of Snatchup. A barn remained
there, owned for many years by the Kinder family, until William
Bennett, a builder and brickmaker, bought the plot in the 1930s.
He lived on St Peter’s Street and was Mayor of St Albans in
1851. He demolished the barn and replaced it with six cottages.
However, this situation was short-lived, as he sold the plot in
1854 to Thomas Haden Oakes, ironmaster from Derbyshire, who was
providing a water supply to the town through cast iron pipes. He
drove deep boreholes at this, the highest point in the town to extract
water from the chalk aquifer.
As the town developed, demand for water grew and the business established
by Oakes was incorporated as the St Albans Water Company. The Company
gradually took over more land, including part of the Cricketers’
plot, now Devdas, for huge cast-iron storage tanks and towers and
for engines and pumps and a house built for a resident engineer.
The building, which now houses St Albans Photoprint, was the Motor
House; No 1 Stonecross, St Albans Business Centre, was the engineer’s
house. The gate onto Snatchup Alley at No. 1 reminds us that the
houses fronted west until the main road was widened for modern-day
traffic and their back gardens and sheds were lost. The new tank
installed in 1883 had a capacity of 466,000 gallons, but water was
by then drawn from the River Ver via the Holywell pumping station
as well as the boreholes at Snatchup. The removal of the water tower
and subsequent sale of the land originally part of the Cricketers’
plot with planning permission in 1977, allowed residential building
on the site again – the three townhouses at Stonecross Close.
The Cricketers
A substantial house, with cottages adjacent, probably stood on the
site where Devdas Indian Restaurant now stands. The little garden
now at the front may have been the site of Upper Cock pond referred
to in local histories. In 1815 Thomas Clarke was admitted at the
Court Baron in respect of this plot, after William Wells surrendered
it. Later Clarke’s son lived there and there were a further
five dwellings on the site. By 1841 Isaac Nicholls, a blacksmith
was the principal tenant. He was also a beer seller, but it was
not uncommon for artisans in those days to have multiple occupations.
The resident owner of the house continued to hold a liquor licence
and, in 1896, it was sold to J W Green, brewer of Luton, who rebuilt
it as The Cricketers’ public house. The name reflected the
cricket ground, which was beyond the site on Bernard’s Heath
and had already been adopted by 1884 when Joseph Seabrooke was the
landlord of The Cricketers’ Inn. It was substantially rebuilt
in its present style in the 1930’s.
The Jolly Sailor
The Jolly Sailor has been a public house since the 1820s, when it
was acquired by Francis Searancke’s Kingsbury Brewery. The
publican was John Kilby, whose family remained there until after
1889, when it was sold, and rebuilt in 1899, fronting the High Road.
The sale particulars published in the Herts Advertiser described
it as ‘ a very good house, occupying an excellent position
at the junction of Sandridge-road and the Sandpit-Lane’, and
‘the nearest public house to the St Albans Cricket Club’.
Until the 1960s two cottages remained to the north of the pub, but
they are now demolished and the pub is now the last building on
the way out of the old Borough. Benskins, brewers, took that opportunity
to extend. They were followed as by Ind Coope. Charles Wells’
new tenant, Paul Egerton, has given the pub a huge face-lift. He
has reintroduced the provision of food and has great plans for its
future.
There are few maritime links with St Albans, which begs the question:
why is it called The Jolly Sailor? It is likely that this reflects
the popularity of Prince William, Duke of Clarence, who became William
IV in 1830. With a long naval career behind him he became known
as The Sailor King. His bride in 1818 was Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen.
She was similarly honoured by the naming of the public house on
St Peters Street (now the mobile phone shop and Café Roma)
and the newly developed Adelaide Street in the late 1820s.
Snatchup Today
Snatchup Alley is nowadays a convenient shortcut
for pedestrians on their way to and from the city centre. It still
marks a boundary – that between Marshalswick South and Clarence
wards of the modern City and District. The new street nameplate,
posted 2006, gives recognition to this old route and will make maintenance
and reporting easier and more effective.
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