Chequer Inn

{{Short description|Public house in West Sussex, England}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}

{{Use British English|date=June 2020}}

{{Infobox historic site

| name =

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| image = Chequer Inn, Steyning - geograph.org.uk - 3355311.jpg

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| type = Public house

| locmapin = West Sussex

| coordinates = {{coord|50|53|19.1|N|0|19|46.9|W|type:landmark_region:GB|display=inline,title}}

| gbgridref = TQ 17590 11218

| location = Steyning

| area = West Sussex

| built = 15th century

| architect =

| architecture = Timber framed

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| designation1 = Grade II

| designation1_offname = The Chequers Inn

| designation1_date = 15 March 1955

| designation1_number = {{Listed building England|1180557}}

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The Chequer Inn is a historic 15th Century coaching house (believed to date from around 1440) in the Conservation Area of the old market town of Steyning, in the Horsham District of West Sussex, United Kingdom.{{cite book|author=Simon Fraser|title=Reports of the Proceedings Before Select Committees of the House of Commons, in ... Cases of Controverted Elections: Heard and Determined During the First [and Second] Session[s] of the Seventeenth Parliament of Great Britain|url=https://archive.org/details/reportsproceedi01frasgoog|year=1793|publisher=J. Murray|pages=[https://archive.org/details/reportsproceedi01frasgoog/page/n236 410]–}}{{cite book|title=The General Evening Post: 1761|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y3xMAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA21|year=1761|pages=21–}} English Heritage has listed the building at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance.{{NHLE|desc=The Chequers Inn|num=1180557|accessdate=18 July 2020}}

History

The Chequer Inn is timber-framed. The western half is a Crown post cross wing. The heavy sooting, seen on a plastered division within the roof is often an indication of a mediaeval open hall. Some decorative, combed plasterwork can also be seen. This part of the building was probably built in the 15th century, or possibly a little earlier.{{cite book|author=Janet Pennington|title=The Chequer Inn, Steyning: Five Centuries of Innkeeping in a Sussex Market Town|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UfxqXwAACAAJ|year=1990|publisher=Lancing Press (J. Pennington?)}}

Over the years, apart from supplying accommodation and a change of horses for passenger or mail coaches,{{cite book|author1=Michael Leapman|author2=Roger Williams|title=DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Great Britain|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dUYRCsKZOroC&pg=PA174|date=1 March 2013|publisher=DK Publishing|isbn=978-1-4654-0831-0|pages=174–}} the Chequer Inn also acted as a court house, gaol, auction room, post office, coroner's inquest office, trading post and an important local meeting place.{{cite book|author=Arthur Beckett|title=The Sussex County Magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ul9NAQAAIAAJ|year=1950|publisher=T.R. Beckett.}}

In the 19th Century, the Inn had eight bedchambers, ranging from gentlemen's rooms with curtained four-post beds to the drovers' quarters containing straw beds or palliasses. About six servants also lived in the inn.

There was a 25-foot mahogany dining table in the first floor dining room where meals of mutton, beef, pigeon, and pheasant were served.

Architecture

The Chequer Inn has a white painted frontage comprising two splayed bays, which are timber framed and faced with mathematical tiles. The timbered, flat roofed main entrance canopy is supported by circular timber columns, built off a large Horsham stone step. Evenly spaced sash windows and a parapet complete the main frontage. Behind the parapet is a wide back gutter serving the large hipped roof of plain tiles, and two brick chimneys. To the rear there are three pitched roof wings, connected at their bases by wide valley boards.

The building is an example of a triple bay oak timber-framed building having “daub and wattle” interior walling fitted within the oak timber frame. Only the North wing (Saloon Bar and Dining Room) of the building still retains the oak framing and original features on the ground floor. Many of the older timber-framed walls are visible upstairs.

A carriage entrance was created, probably in the 17th century, by removing the north-west ground floor of room 39 and raising the first floor. This was needed because the Chequer Inn was a coaching inn and posting house with stabling for about a dozen horses, and there would have been a busy traffic in and out of this entrance. A separate Ostlers Cottage and a horse stable block stand at the back of the Inn.

The Inn's timber-framed street frontage was destroyed when the Inn was enlarged in 1799. The addition provided extra rooms, and a brick front in keeping with 18th century fashion. The then tenant, John Stoveld the Younger, a Steyning brewer, was presented at the Manor Court of Charlton for contravention of local planning laws, in that he "made an encroachment on the High Street… Causing the Checker Inn, which hath in a great measure been rebuilt, to be brought considerably forward into the High Street."West Sussex Record Office, Wiston MS. 5200 He was fined six shillings and eight pence (6s 8d) for this misdemeanor, but got away with the rebuilding.

By the end of the 18th century a Saloon was added; this was a room where for an admission fee or a higher price of drinks, singing, dancing, drama or comedy was performed and drinks would be served at the table.

The stable yard is now a car park; at one time the town fire engine was housed there.{{cite book|author1=Louis Francis Salzman|author2=T. P. Hudson|title=The Victoria History of the County of Sussex|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kupVAAAAYAAJ|year=1980|publisher=A. Constable}}

=Checker sign and light=

In 1393 King Richard II created a law stating that "Whosoever shall brew ale in the town with intention of selling it must hang out a sign, otherwise he shall forfeit his ale." This was to make alehouses easily visible to passing inspectors, borough ale tasters, who would decide the quality of the ale they provided. The signs were illustrated so as to be identifiable to the mostly illiterate population.{{cn|date=February 2025}} The name "The Checkers" or "The Chequers" originated from the design on the pub's sign; the design originated in ancient Rome, where a chequer board indicated that a bar also provided banking services. The checked board was used as an aid to counting and is the origin of the word exchequer.{{cite book|author=George Hugh Recknell|title=Steyning, Sussex: history and descriptive survey|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ly7oAAAAMAAJ|year=1965|publisher=Steyning Society}} In the 17th-century, ale houses and inns were required to hang out lanterns to help illuminate the street. In Steyning the hook at the end of the Chequer sign bracket was used to support the town lamp.

Historic references

In 1653 the poet, John Taylor, who had travelled from Petworth to Steyning, wrote:

:August the 18, twelve long miles to Steyning

:I rode, and nothing saw there worth the Kenning.

:But that mine host there was a jovial Wight.

:My Hostess fat and fair, a goodly sight:

:The sign, the Chequer, eighteen pence to pay.

:My mare eat mortal meat, good Oats and Hay.Caldecott, J.B. John Taylor’s Tour of Sussex in 1653. SAC 81 (1940) p. 24.

References

{{Reflist}}

  • {{cite book|title=Country Life|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eJFMAAAAYAAJ|year=2003|publisher=Country Life, Limited}}
  • West Sussex Record Office MS. 5201.