Donate SIGN UP

What are crickets

Avatar Image
sigma | 08:55 Wed 22nd Sep 2010 | History
8 Answers
Near where I live close to the Derbyshire Leicestershire border is a pub called the Crickets Inn. It appears on a map dated 1791. To what is the name referring
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by sigma. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
too early for Buddy Holly and probably a bit early for the sport as well. Could it just be local insects?
Certainly not too early for the sport. Cricket is also a dialect word for a small stool. Might of course just be a family name.
yes, you're right about the sport, mike, though it was another century before Derbyshire CC was founded. I'm not sure about what 'a cricket' would be in the context of a pub name, though; I'd have expected 'The Cricketers'.
If it's the one I'm thinking of it's spelt with a double t - Cricketts.
If you go in thereask them, many pubs have records or know of their history
if it's this one

http://www.crickettsinn.com/

it only lays claim to 1863 on the website
Trade directories from the C19th covering the Netherseal parish tend to name the establishment as "Cricket Inn" until 1863.

Pigot's Commercial Directory of Derbyshire, 1835:
Cricket Inn, Helen Hutchinson, Stretton-in-le-Fields

White's History, Gazetteer & Directory of Leicestershire & Rutland, 1846:
Talbot Andrew, vict. Cricketers Inn

Slater's Directory of Derbyshire, 1850:
Cricket, Richard Street, Nether Seal

Post Office Directory of Leicestershire, by Kelly & Co., 1855:
Newbold Thomas, Cricket inn (also listed as Wheelwright)

Commercial Directory of Leicestershire, by E.S. Drake & Co., 1861:
Nichols John, vict. Cricket Inn

History, Gazetteer, and Directory of the Counties of Leicester and Rutland, by William White, 1863:
Cricketers' Inn, Robert Lees

Postal & Commercial Directory of Leicestershire, by J.G. Harrod & Co., 1870:
Brotherhood -, Cricketts inn

Directory of Leicestershire & Rutland, by Kelly & Co., 1881:
Brotherhood John, Crickets inn, Acresford

Directory of Leicestershire, by C.N. Wright, 1887-88:
Brotherhood John, v. Crickets’ Inn

Directory of Derbyshire, by Kelly & Co., 1899:
Brotherhood John, Crickets inn

http://freepages.gene...rett/seal/seal_td.htm
-- answer removed --
Question Author
The entry "Trade directories from the C19th covering the Netherseal parish tend to name the establishment as "Cricket Inn" until 1863. " refers to the inn
Still no wiser but thanks

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Do you know the answer?

What are crickets

Answer Question >>