THE GRAYSHOTT AND DISTRICT REFRESHMENT ASSOCIATION,
LIMITED
THE "FOX AND PELICAN," GRAYSHOTT,
HANTS
Date opened
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Estimated Population of Village
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August, 1899
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600
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THE experiment made in 1898 by the Grayshott and District
Refreshment Association, Limited, of which Sir Frederick
Pollock, Bart., is the president, marked in some respects
a new departure in the attempt to apply the principles of
the Gothenburg system to the management of the liquor traffic
in this country. In all previous attempts a benevolent despotism
had been present to assist either in the promotion or the
management of the undertaking, the owner of the estate or
the local clergyman being responsible for the licence. The
Grayshott experiment began on strictly co-operative lines,
the villagers themselves taking up many of the shares. It
was also the first house in England (The Hill of Beath
tavern in Fifeshire was an earlier instance. The Elan village
canteen, although established much earlier than the Grayshott
experiment, was not an ordinary public-house.) to receive
a new licence for the express purpose of an experiment on
Gothenburg lines.
The history of the experiment is clearly set forth in a
statement issued by the Committee of the Grayshott Association
in 1899, from which a few facts may be quoted. In the winter
of 1897-8 the rapid growth of the village of Grayshott and
the surrounding district forced upon the attention of residents
much interested in its welfare the question of public-house
accommodation, as it was felt that very soon application
would be made, from one quarter or another, far permission
to open a fully licensed house. Some time previously, when
the place was much smaller, an off-licence had been granted,
but it seemed to the large majority of those interested
that, if a fully licensed house were to be opened in the
village, it would be in every way desirable that it should
be one in which no prominence should be given to the sale
of alcoholic drinks, but rather a refreshment-house in which
alcoholic liquors of the best quality should always be obtainable,
but where food and non-alcoholic beverages of good quality
and at moderate prices should also be freely provided and
their consumption encouraged.
" Preliminary meetings were therefore held, information
from various quarters procured, the assistance of the People's
Refreshment-House Association enlisted, and, as a first
practical step, the purchase of the plot of land on which
the "Fox and Pelican" stands secured. Subsequently
the Grayshott and District Refreshment Association, Limited,
was registered under the Industrial and Provident Societies
Act, 1893, with a capital of £2,500, and subscriptions
solicited.
" So sympathetic was the feeling as to the importance
of the project that liberal applications for shares were
speedily received, and, in preparation for the licensing
sessions of the Alton Bench of magistrates in September,
1898, plans of a house suitable for the business contemplated
were prepared. At those sessions, on September 6th, the
application was heard, preceded by an application by an
Alton firm of brewers for a similar licence for a house
to be erected on a plot of land adjacent to that belonging
to the Association. The magistrates, after hearing evidence
in support of both applications, decided to grant a licence
to the Association and to refuse one to the Alton firm,
and in due course the licence was confirmed by the County
Licensing Committee.
"Thereupon building operations were proceeded with
as speedily as possible, and early in July, 1899, the building
was practically ready for occupation. After some slight
delays incidental to the starting of a new business, the
house was formally declared open by Mrs. Eandall Davidson
(in the unavoidable absence of the Bishop of the Diocese),
at an afternoon reception on Wednesday, August 23rd, 1899,
and on Monday, the 28th, business commenced."
The whole of the capital (£2,500) was subscribed
either locally or by friends of residents, and the full
amount has been practically absorbed by the purchase of
land, erection of house and stables, furnishing, etc. The
Articles of Association expressly provide that no dividend
exceeding 4 per cent, per annum shall be paid to shareholders,
and that, while making provision for a reserve fund not
exceeding in amount 25 per cent, of the Company's capital,
the balance of profit shall be applied to such charitable,
educational, or other legal purposes as the shareholders
at a general meeting may from time to time decide upon.
The house is artistically designed and thoroughly well
built, and is fitted and furnished throughout in excellent
taste. In addition to the bar (the passage of which is said
to get crowded at night) there are several good rooms, including
a tap-room, smoke-room, coffee-room, and (upstairs) a well-furnished
ladies' sitting-room. The tap-room is a comparatively plain
room, about 18 ft. by 16 ft., furnished with fixed wall-benches
and a table. The smoke-room is about the same size as the
tap-room, but with superior appointments and fittings. Draughts
and dominoes are provided, and there is also a good library.
Only the better-class liquors are served in this room- The
coffee-room, which has a separate entrance, is a fine room,
33 ft. by 15 ft. in size, and well and tastefully furnished.
It is chiefly used by cyclists and tourists. The rooms as
a whole entirely justify the claim made by the Association
that " the accommodation provided for all classes is
the result of much thought and care on the part of the architects
and committee."
The principles upon which the house is conducted are very
similar to those adopted by the Bishop of Chester's Association,
upon which, indeed, they are avowedly based. The manager
is paid a fixed salary, and receives no commission upon
the sale of intoxicants. He is, however, allowed the whole
of the profits on food and one-half of the profits on mineral
waters, in addition to all profits on tobacco and cigarettes.
The proportion of food sold is small, and is much less at
the present time than it was under a former manager, who
was accustomed to sell as many as twenty sixpenny dinners
a day in the tap-room. The sale of non-alcoholic beverages
is also comparatively small, although those responsible
for the management of the house are clearly eager to encourage
the sale of such drinks. It is probable that in these respects
the experiment has suffered from the frequent changes in
management, which have prevented strict continuity of policy.
The " off" sales are also .small, and development
in this direction is evidently discouraged. No credit is
given, and no provision is made for clubs, etc. It is also
an interesting circumstance that the committee have been
able to introduce a lighter beer than that sold in other
houses in the district. Indoor games, such as draughts,
dominoes, etc., are encouraged, but they are not used to
any great extent. A few newspapers are also provided. In
connection with this feature of the management it should
be pointed out that there is at present no reading-room
or social institute in the village; but a village hall is
about to be built, and this, when ready, will make such
provision on the part of the Refreshment-House Association
as unnecessary, as, in the judgment of the present writers,
it is undesirable. In view of the efforts needed to break
what has become a dangerous and tyrannous national habit,
the association of games and other recreations with the
sale of intoxicants is surely to be deprecated and discouraged.
No effort is made to establish bye-laws in advance of the
present statutory regulations, although an attempt was originally
made to reduce the Sunday hours by closing at 8 p.m. This
effort, however, was resented by a portion of the population,
and the new rule was quickly abandoned. Similarly, a tentative
experiment was made some time back to establish a "
Black List" (i.e. a list of persons of notoriously
drunken habits), but it was not found to answer in practice,
and was therefore discontinued. There are, however, a few
persons whom the manager is instructed not to serve. The
general position assumed in reference to these and similar
reforms by those responsible for the house is that, where,
as in Grayshott, the liquor influence is strong and active,
and everything in the nature of an innovation is eagerly
seized upon and used to arouse prejudice and hostility against
the movement, it is risking too much to impose regulations
in advance of the licence law. It is necessary to remember
that the Association has not a complete monopoly of the
local traffic, but only of the " on " trade (The
nearest fully licensed house is a mile away). In addition
to the " Fox and Pelican " there is an "
off " beer-house in the village, as well as two grocers'
licences, while it is a not unimportant fact that the site
adjoining the " Fox and Pelican," for which a
full licence was sought by a firm of brewers at the time
the Association was formed, still remains in the possession
of the brewers who applied for the licence.
These facts, together with the additional fact that the
district appears to contain a somewhat unusual proportion
of lawless spirits in its population, must be carefully
borne in mind in estimating the success of the Grayshott
experiment. That it has not realised all the expectations
of its promoters they themselves freely acknowledge. The
experiment has been handicapped throughout by a not always
scrupulous opposition on the part of the least reputable
portion of the inhabitants; and the committee has, moreover,
been singularly unfortunate in its managers. But the intention
that underlies and governs the experiment is unquestionably
single and sincere, and when all limitations and imperfections
are allowed for, it is incontrovertible that the interests
of temperance in the district are much more securely safeguarded
than they could have been if an ordinary public-house had
been allowed to be established in the village.
The situation is well expressed in a letter which the Rev.
J. M. Jeakes, a member of the committee, addressed to one
of the present writers in May, 1901. Mr. Jeakes " I
am very glad that you have seen the " Fox and Pelican."
The conditions under which this experiment is made are,
I think, exceptionally difficult; but the difficulties we
have passed through do not at all alter my conviction that
we are, in the main, on the right track, and that we did
the best we could do under the circumstances, in view of
the great probability of a tied house entirely out of our
control." Looked at from this point of view simply,
the efforts of Sir Frederick Pollock and his colleagues
are completely justified.
On its commercial side the experiment has been entirely
successful. The financial statement for the first thirteen
months (i.e. August 28th, 1899, to September 30th, 1900)
showed a balance of profit on trading account of £213
11s. 3d Of this sum £99 14s. Id. was set aside for
depreciation of furniture and buildings and one-third share
of preliminary expenses, leaving a net balance of £113
17s. 2d. Of this amount £99 9s. 7d. was absorbed in
payment of a dividend of 4 per cent, on the paid-up capital
of the company, leaving a final balance of £14 7s.
7d. to be carried forward to next account.
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