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Although only 440ft (135 metres) long,
Waterbeer Street runs through
the
three ancient parishes of St Pancras, St Petrock and St
Kerrian. The line of the street, parallel with the High Street,
may go back as far as the Romans, and the discovery of Roman artifacts
and a mosaic floor indicates the possible site of the Roman seat of
justice or Prætorium on the site of the looking Forward bronze.
The established meaning of Waterbeer Street is as 'water-bearers street' and was first recorded in 1253. It may well relate to the ecclesiastical office of bearer of holy water. However, there is a possible alternative meaning originating from the wool trade. Weavers used to refer to nineteen ends of yarn running together out of a trough of water as a beer. It was speculated that such troughs existed in Waterbeer Street, giving it its name. It is a less likely explanation, if the street was first named in the 13th century, before the woollen industry was established. Another possible source of the word beer is the 11th century berge, meaning hill, which in Devon is corrupted to beare as in Aylesbeare and Dunsbeer, and hence Water Berge (Hill) Street
In 1694, a water engine was installed on the
leat,
just below Head Weir, to pump water into the city. A lead lined
cistern, known as the Back Grate measuring 28 ft by 18 ft was
constructed at the rear of the Guildhall, over the cells to hold the
water. The water company was required to ensure that the gaol
beneath the tank was maintained for the custody of prisoners, although
they did suffer from leaks. The street really did earn its name when
the cistern was built.
In 1735, the Exeter Theatre, the first purpose built theatre in the
city, was opened in Waterbeer Street, roughly on the present day site
of the 'Looking Forward'
bronze in the Guildhall Centre. This theatre presented productions
between October and April each year, seldom repeating a play, giving
a huge variety of entertainment for the local population. The street
was named Theatre Lane for a while, but reverted to Waterbeer Street
after the theatre closed.
The foundation stone of Exeter's central police station and court house was laid on 13 July 1887 by Arthur Burch, the Mayor. The building, on the same site as the Exeter Theatre, was completed in 1888. Designed by J M Pinn and costing £4,750, it had a distinctive round tower on the corner with a conical roof. A Roman mosaic floor of the Prætorium was discovered and preserved at the foot of the Court staircase. When the building was demolished, the mosaic floor was removed to the Royal Albert Museum, only to be lost when a new curator thought it to be Victorian in origin. Although designed for the exclusive use of the police and courts, until 1901, the building was shared with the town clerk and his staff. Up until 1919, council wages were paid from the police station, resulting in upwards of 50,000 callers per year for their pay-packets. In 1959, the police vacated the building and moved into new premises at Heavitree Road.
A building on the opposite corner of Pancras Lane was a former Danish Bacon factory, that was also used by the police service for parades. The bacon factory had formerly been occupied by the Western Morning News up to 1934 and Frederick Algar, ironmonger up to 1925.
A well known business in the street was Brookings, who ran a jewellers, a second hand shop and a pawnbrokers. The shop with Eclipse and the clock in the photograph, right, was the centre of the three shops. Mr Brooking held the certificate for testing the accuracy of police stop watches that were used to time a car travelling between two set points, to see if it were speeding - consequently, before the Road Traffic Act of 1964, there was a stream of coppers in and out of Brookings, having their watches checked.
When the coroners court was sitting, a policeman was sent out to find people to sit on the jury - he would take people off the street, often men from Garton and King. Eventually, agreement was made that they would not use Garton and King employees on days that they were casting. Oddly, there was also the French Consul in Waterbeer Street.
Rowe Bros and Co at No 3, paint manufacturers and
plumbers, and
Garton and King at No 4 and 6, iron and brass foundry, were located
right in the
centre of the city, just where the modern Trichay Street crosses
Waterbeer Street. The first Garton and King foundry in the street was
destroyed by a fire in October 1826 and a new foundry built on the site
of the Episcopal Charity School. On days that Garton and King were
casting, a pall of smoke from the chimney high above, would descend
onto the street like a fog. Both the foundry and Rowe's had cranes
attached to the front wall of their buildings, and the unloading and
loading from lorries and carts in the street would often cause a
blockage in the narrow street. Rowe's also sold sheet lead, which they
would unroll in the street to measure and cut to size, leaving only
enough space for pedestrians to squeeze past.
Rowe's moved out to a new building in the 1920's on the site of the
old
Victoria Hall in Queen Street,
while Garton and King relocated to a new foundry in Tan Lane, Haven
Banks, after the foundry was compulsorily purchased in 1939 to make way
for the area to be redeveloped as a new Civic Centre. The war
intervened to prevent the development, and it wasn't until the 1970s
that the Golden Heart project saw the building of the Guildhall
Shopping Centre.
This is a list of the businesses that were located in Waterbeer
Street
in 1897.
Waterbeer
street 46 North street to Goldsmith street.
NORTH SIDE.
1 Raddon Thomas R. draper
2 British Workman Provident Temperance Hall (Wm. Braund, manager)
3 James (Edward), Rowe & Co. oil &c. merchants
Garton & King,iron & brass founders
7 & 8 Algar F. & Co. wholesale ironmongers
9 Lendon S. & Sons, wholesale provision merchants
10 Hearn Fredk. leather mer
Oliver Brothers, wholesale fruit merchants
Oliver William Henry, vice consul for France
...... here is Pancras la......
Court Ho. & Police Station
Pengelly J. Isaac, clerk to the magistrates
Shorto George Roberts, solicitor & town clerk
Short John, chief constable
11 Pennington Jn. dairyman
11 (back of) Cann Mark, boot maker
12 New Market inn, Charles Edward Young
SOUTH SIDE.
13, 14, 15 & 16 Munk Edwin I. wholesale ironmonger
17 Turk's Head P.H. William Henry Morton
17 McWilliam & Co. travelling drapers
18 Gove Daniel, cabinet ma
19 Guest JohnC. piano wareho
20 Jeboult H. P. & Son, glass dealers
22 Criterion P.H. Ernest Courtenay
24 Puddicombe Albert, paintr
38 Edwards Chas. hat manufr
Also see
Waterbeer
Street in the 1930's
Waterbeer Street in the 1920's

The three shops in Waterbeer Street
that were Brookings.
Waterbeer Street with the Looking Forward bronze and flowerbed on the
site of the police station and the Guildhall with cells on the ground
floor.

The police station in Waterbeer
Street in 1935 - it is thought the car
may be one of the first police cars in the city. Still from Holladay
family film.
Angel Inn - in September
1814 a fire was recorded at the inn, with the stables,
brew house, and the outhouses destroyed. The report noted that the
premises had 'been on fire three
times within the space of twelve months'. It became the Commercial Inn in June 1823.
The Criterion - No 31(thought
to be next to Parliament Street) - only
listing in
1889, although a lease from the Well Park Brewery to James Pulsford the
drapers, was
signed in 1903. Pulsfords
were still going strong in the 60s. They were a sizeable
shop, more
wholesale than retail, where they sold children's clothes in the
main, but
also shirts etc.
Half Moon - on the corner of
North Street it was mentioned in 1791, and listed in 1850.
New Market Inn - No 19 - on the
corner
with Goldsmith Street, it was listed between 1844 and 1940. Norman and
Pring purchased it in 1897 and leased it to William Tucker.
Plymouth Arms - trading
in 1853 - there was a lease dated 1872 to Thomas Raddon. On the corner
of North Street.
Chair - circa 1768 to 1830, it
became the Smiths Arms.
The Turks Head - rear entrance
Union Inn - listed between
1816 and 1850.
Musical
corner
John C Guest, the piano dealer in 1897 became Moons, a
firm from Plymouth. By the 1960s, they were a television shop at the
High Street end of the premises, where they used to sell records and
had a booth where you could go to listen to the record before you
purchased. The back of the shop was the piano showroom, and beyond
that there was storage and a loading bay in Waterbeer Street. They did
brisk business hiring pianos. Until the mid sixties, if you ran a
dance in a hall, you had to hire a piano for the band, which you
got from Moons - every band had to have a piano in them days before
electronic beat groups! So Friday and Monday were busy days, taking out
and bringing back pianos.
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