Re: The Custard House, Blake Lane
Yes, Colin, you're quite right. We established in Post #34 that "
the (Martin's Custard )
apple is (was?)
much grown in the orchards conterminous with Northamptonshire and Leicestershire". Please see :
https://web.ukonline.co.uk/suttonelms/martins-custard.html
If the custard apple was so diffuse in Northamptonshire and Leicestershire, why not in Warwickshire?. In fact “conterminous” means
“bordering” so Warwickshire would be a county in which the custard apple was “much grown”.
The doubt we're working on now is the true position of the original Custard House. I don't believe the orchard was in Blake Lane - although I personally, in the late '50s, can well remember there having been apple trees in the pub's "garden". I think it's beyond doubt that the pub took its name from a tavern which was in the same position on at least two 19th century maps. I believe the original Custard House was 300 yards away,
in the corner between Yardley (now Yardley Green) Road and Hobmoor Road and its name was “recycled” when the first Custard House was demolished in about 1900.
It's likely that the Custard House
near the corner between Yardley Road and Hobmoor Road in turn took its name from the Custard House Farm; or did it? Why wasn't the farm called simply “Custard Farm”? Having thought this through, I think it's far more likely that the Custard House Farm was named after a house which had been called the “Custard House” even before the farm bore the name.
So now – for the above logic – I maintain that the name was reused several times:
Custard House [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]→Custard House Farm→Custard House (corner)→Custard House Tavern→Custard House (pub)[/FONT]
We know that the building wasn't
on the corner between Yardley Green Road and Hobmoor Road because in 1883/84 the house which occupied that position was called “The Laurels”.
Kind regards, David