Lomond Tearoom: Difference between revisions

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| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | [[File:Lomond Tearoom.JPG|300px]]
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | [[File:Lomond Tearoom.JPG|300px]]
|-
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| style="width:50%"| '''Name''' || Lomond Tavern
| style="width:50%"| '''Name''' || Lomond Tearoom
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| '''Address''' || Horsemarket, Falkland
| '''Address''' || Horsemarket, Falkland
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| '''Postcode''' || KY15 7BFG
| '''Postcode''' || KY15 7BFG
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| '''Other na,es''' || Lomond Tavern
| '''Date''' || 1819
| '''Date''' || 1819
|-
|-

Revision as of 13:56, 30 March 2022

Building summary
Name Lomond Tearoom
Address Horsemarket, Falkland
Postcode KY15 7BFG
Other na,es Lomond Tavern Date 1819
See map Map D (53)
OS grid ref NO 25284 07301
Latitude & longitude 56°15′08″N 3°12′27″W

The Lomond Tavern is a former public house in Horsemarket, Falkland. After being closed for some months, it reopened in march 2022 as the Lomond Tearoom and Chocolate Shop.

HES listing details[1]
Reference: LB31319 Date: 12/01/1971 Category: C
Address/Site Name

Lomond Tavern, Horsemarket

Description

Dated MB 1819 at panel with boot over lintel. 2-storey 3-window (ground floor windows altered to bipartite) painted rubble with painted margins, pantiled.

Statement of special interest

Re-categorised as C(S) from B for Group (2006).

Former residents

Mr and Mrs Kennoway.

Further references

"An application was received from John Kennoway, miner, East Wemyss, for transfer of certificate for the Lomond Tavern. The clerk read a petition signed by a number of influential residents in Falkland objecting to the granting of the licence.[2]


"Desirable licensed premises for sale. These premises known as Lomond Tavern. All particulars can be obtained from Gibson & Spears, solicitors, Kirkcaldy."[3]


"At the death of Mr Kennoway in October last year, the certificate was transferred to his widow, and from that time the business had been managed by the applicant, Mr Herd, who was Mrs Kennoway’s uncle. Mr Herd had been engaged in the trade all his life. ... The late Mr Kennoway paid £950 for the house, and it kept him and would keep his widow in comfort. There had never been a complaint as to the way in which the house was conducted."[4]


"On the site of the Lomond Tavern car park stood a 2-storey building which, during the Napoleonic wars, housed a number of French prisoners. The Napoleonic Boot now above the Lomond Tavern's door was rescued by the owner a few years ago when the building opposite was demolished."[5]

Notes

  1. HES record for LB31319
  2. Fife Herald, 17 April 1907, quoted in Playfair and Burgess, page 184.
  3. FA, 1 March 1913, quoted in Playfair and Burgess, page 399.
  4. St Andrews Citizen, 19 April 1913, quoted in Playfair and Burgess, pages 406–7.
  5. The Big Book of Falkland, page 7.

Further images