The Camp public house
This week's post features the Camp PH on the centre of the top row
of the book's first volume cover.
Striking out through the East End from Hatfield to St Albans we would pass by, or call in at, the Comet Hotel, the Three Horseshoes PH, the Bunch of Cherries (now the Speckled Hen PH), the Rats' Castle PH (now the Old Toll House PH), the Crown PH (formerly hotel), the Mermaid PH, the Peacock PH – at which the turnpike road began or ended – and the final pair, the Cock PH and the Blacksmith's Arms PH both guarding the entry to St Peter's Street. All but the final four are firmly within the limits of our East End. The arrival of the Midland Railway produced the Hatfield Road Bridge which produced in turn the extension of the built-up town in the East End.
The traditional names of the remainder were related to their locations: The Comet Hotel signalled the de Havilland Aircraft Company on it new site in the 1930s; the Three Horseshoes located the farrier's trade, the restaurant how very much a part of the blacksmith's shop; the Bunch of Cherries was built immediately after the Second War adjacent to the cherry orchard leading towards Winches farm homestead; the Rats' Castle was named after the sobriquet of the previous toll house on the site; and finally, although there was no Crown nearby, the hotel/PH was able to locate here because of the transfer of its license from its earlier site in Holywell Hill of today's Abbey Court.
The illustrator's imaginative mind of Camp Hill some two centuries too late and
out of geographic area!
COURTESY HALS
One public house – on two different sites – were situated to the south of Hatfield Road and one to the north of that road, even though neither is now trading: the Camp PH and the Baton PH. The photograph on the front cover is the hanging sign which was taken outside the former. Its picture depicts a tented camp scene, and so we should look back to discover more of its location. We enter the Camp story at its end, for the public house has now closed. It was at the corner of Roland Street and Camp Road. Ah! Camp Road; that's definitely a Camp, then?
The Camp PH until its demolition c 2016 on the corner of Camp Road and Roland Street
| The Old Camp Beer House nearby at the top of Camp Hill; closed c1914. |
| The social scene at the New Camp PH included darts and football teams, and outings. COURTESY ALISON MANN |
| The Ordnance Survey's First Edition 1830 map marks a single building at Camp Hill. Camp House, near the top of this extract. |
The pub, initially titled the New Camp PH, definitely moved from the top of Camp Hill where there had been a watering hole named the Old Camp Beer House. But if searching older maps of this little corner at the top of the hill we will first of all discover a squarish building named Camp House. That might have given the impression of a domestic premises at the junction of Camp Road and Cell Barnes Lane. And a dwelling it may have been. The field on the Cunningham side of the road had been the extensive site of a military training camp during the period before there was a national standing army. It is presumed that the only available building appropriate for provisioning large numbers of men for short periods of time was the the camp house as named on maps of the 19th century maps. The last occasion on which training manoeuvres are known to have taken place here was at the beginning of World War One, and the tents used were conical in shape – just like those on the pub sign.
A postcard photograph of a tented village at the lower, London Road, end of the Springfield
training ground early in the 1914-18 war. The illustrator used similar designs for his
"Roman" scene.
But where does the centurion, also depicted on the sign, come into the story? Well, of course, it doesn't. The illustrator's imagination and historical knowledge of Roman Verulamium are definitely mis-aligned. Soldiers and their officers would have no business being billeted at the top of a hill some way beyond there Roman city; no town of St Albans then.
The fact that a modern commercial building halfway up Camp Hill gave its name to the recent flats and has been named Centurion Court is also a distraction and no link at all to our story. But no verifiable information about a field at Cunningham, otherwise known as Springfield, being used for military training nearly two millennia ago. But there is, of course, nothing wrong with combining imaginative events.
This image earns its place on the cover of Volume One of St Albans' Own East End simply because it combines fact and fiction and is part of the local story of our part of St Albans.
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