Page 4 - Wokingham's Closed Pubs and Breweries as A5 booklet
P. 4

The Queens Head has been recorded as a public house since at least 1740.
    However, this Grade II Listed Building is considerably older and probably
                       th
    dates to the early 15  century. What makes this building unique is its timber
    frame, called a Cruck construction which in this case is basically of similar
    appearance to a capital “A”. The long uprights are formed with a curved
    trunk split along its centre and coupled together at the top. The strong shape
    provided the framework onto which the roof was supported and alongside
    which the walls were built. The use of the Cruck frame has been identified as
    having a regional bias and Wokingham lies to the very edge of that area.
    There are only seven buildings with this form of construction known in
    Berkshire.

    For a short time in the 1870s and 1880s the pub was called the Welcome
    Home, possibly due to the unpopularity of the queen following her self-
    isolation after Prince Albert’s death. About 1883 the pub regained its old
    name.

    Turn right when leaving the pub and walk to: -

    2 The Anchor, 37 The Terrace 1777 – 1910, now a private residence.

                                       The Anchor Inn opened in 1777. In 1901
                                       it was just six doors away from The
                                       Queens Head. The inn closed in 1910
                                       and is now a private house. It is a Grade
                                       II Listed Building.





    Walk back along the Terrace and into Broad Street, straight ahead of you,
    keep on your left hand side:-


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