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The pub started out as a country inn, located just by a toll-gate which stood at the top of Bolton Lane. Visitors to Ipswich were charged a toll for their carriages and carts. However, many farmers avoided the fee by stabling their horses at the stables provided by the Woolpack, with their vehicles parked in Westerfield or Tuddenham Road. [3]
The 1689 list of pubs in Ipswich was a seventeenth century list of inns and taverns in the Borough of Ipswich and surrounding areas. The list identified 24 pubs according to their parish . The largest number were to be found in the St Mary le Tower Parish. [ 1 ]
There have been a large number of pubs in Ipswich. The term covers a number of different sorts of public houses , including coaching inns , beerhouses , taverns hotels and alehouses . [ 1 ] : 3 However, many of the distinctions which existed between these words have sometimes been lost as the terms became blurred.
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The Margaret Catchpole is a pub in Cliff Lane, Ipswich in Suffolk, England. It is named after Margaret Catchpole , a servant of Elizabeth and John Cobbold of the Tolly Cobbold brewery. Built in 1936 by the local architect Harold Ridley Hooper for the Cobbold brewery, it is a Grade II* listed building. [ 1 ]
Tollies Follies was an epithet given to a series of pubs built by Tollemache Brewery primarily in their home town of Ipswich. They were designed by the architect John Shewell Corder and modelled on Helmingham Hall , a moated manor house located in Helmingham , Suffolk , about 10 miles north of Ipswich. [ 4 ]
Isaacs on the Quay or Cobbolds on the Quay is a pub in Ipswich, in the Ipswich district, in the county of Suffolk, England.The pub itself is a grade II* listed building, listed on 19 December 1951, and is late 18th or early 19th century.