Introduction

The Pubs

one of ... Britain's Real Heritage Pubs

This pubs is taken from the National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors, CAMRA’s pioneering effort to identify and help protect the most important historic pub interiors in the country

DERBYSHIRE - Kirk Ireton, Barley Mow

National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors Part One

Main Street, Kirk Ireton, Ashbourne, DE6 3JP

Tel: 01335 370306

Listed Status: Grade II*

View this pub on a local map


One of the finest unspoilt pubs in the whole of the UK. A three-storey, stone building, listed at grade II* and dating from the seventeenth-century with mullioned windows and a heavy raised door surround to the main entrance. It proudly displays two gables to the street and has a sun-dial under the eaves in the centre bearing the date 1683. It became an inn some 200 years ago and the layout has remained undisturbed partly because the previous landlady Mrs Ford spent all of her 89 years here and refused all things modern such as VAT and ‘going decimal’. When she died in 1976 her relatives firstly sold the contents – the fixed seating in the public bar remained - and then put the pub on the market. Present landlady Mary Short bought it with the intention of retaining its unspoilt qualities so she purchased traditional furnishings to match the interior with a result that the pub looks like it hasn’t changed in over a 100 years.

The small low beamed public bar has a wonderful, unspoilt atmosphere with the old bench seating round the walls, slate-topped tables (from a three quarter sized billiard table – hence the holes in the corners!), quarry tile flooring and a huge fireplace with log fire. Service is via an ancient small counter which is more like a hatch – even the shutter is still there held open by bolts and is still occasionally used to close the bar! Most of the shelves in the servery are old but the bar top is modern. Casks of beer are lined up on a stillage behind the bar and served straight into the glass. One beer, usually Hartington IPA from Whim Brewery, is kept in the cellar and is served via a jug. Through a pair of narrow doors is a passage, which lead to the toilets brought inside in c.1980. Off to the right is the small ‘Parlour’ which has historically always been a public room. It has a polished oak parquet floor, cast fireplace in a 19th century wooden surround and wall cabinet. The corner pews and antique settle are items brought in by Mary Short. The exterior ‘half’ doors and the original path into the building are no longer in use.

On the right hand side of the servery is a stable door with glazed half doors through which you are served and up the short flight of stairs is the former kitchen which is brought into use only when the pub is busy. It has a quarry tiled floor with, unusually, stripes of black and red tiles running diagonally across the room. The original Georgian fireplace remains and again traditional furnishings are items added in 1976. Beyond that there is a further quarry tiled room only used by residents for meals. On the left of the driveway is Kirk Ireton Village Shop created from an outbuilding of the pub. It is run by the community and no rent is charged by the pub. All the profits are re-invested in shop improvements.

Barley Mow, Kirk Ireton
Exterior and shop
Barley Mow, Kirk Ireton
Former Kitchen
Barley Mow, Kirk Ireton
Parlour
Barley Mow, Kirk Ireton
Public Bar
Barley Mow, Kirk Ireton
Servery