Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Going to see a man about a dog
The document outlining the reasons for making Hackney Road a conservation area is well worth a read as it contains some fascinating information about the history of various buildings as well as the origins of the phrase 'Going to see a man about a dog'....
Apparently it is first recorded in a melodrama from the early 1900s about a racehorse called The Flying Scud. See below.
The Flying Scud at No. 137 Hackney Road is a mid-Victorian public house with rooms above. It is highly visible, sitting on a corner site, and is a good example of a handsome, single-bar pub, typical of mid 19th-Century East end pubs. It dates from c.1860’s, and stands a very tall three storeys, making the most of this narrow site. The ground floor has a period shopfront with brick piers, a double-height timber fascia with traces of its original pub signs still surviving.
The frontage was overlaid with white tiling, probably c.1910 when the ‘beer house’ was re-modelled for Messrs. Truman, Hanbury and Buxton. The upper floors are faced in London stock brick and still retain their original 4-over-4 timber sash windows, which are set into fine, red-brick, rubbedsurrounds with ‘gauged’ arches over.
The original Flying Scud was a sailing-ship of the 1850’s. It was also the name of a successful race horse of the 1870s. In 1901, there was a major West End hit called “The Flying Scud,” a racing drama, featuring a live horse on stage. [The play coined the phrase ‘going to see a man about a dog’.]
Formerly run by Truman’s, this pub closed in 1994.
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2 comments:
...closed in 1994 and was demolished two weeks ago, unfortunately.
Soon after this blog entry was written, the Flying Scud was demolished. I have written to the council planning dept twice about this and have had no reply. Was this demolition legal, did it require planning permission, if so was it granted and why?
I fear that the owner read the draft conservation area document and decided to act quickly...
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