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List of Illustrations

Figure 14 Bevendean History Group, Geoff & Norman Stevens pushing roller Bevendean hotel (1960) [online] < http://www.bevendeanhistory.org.uk/estate/ bevendean_hotel-1.html> [accessed 23 March 2021].

Figure 10 BBPA 2019 Table E5 in Niamh Foley, Pub Statistics (House of Commons Library, 28 May 2020).

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Figure 12 Clough, Rose and Trev, The Rose & Crown, Upperby (March 2008) [online] <geograph.org.uk/p/6006324> [accessed 23 March 2021]

Figure 3 Cumbria Image Bank, The Golden Lion, Botchergate, façade before state management. [online] <https://historicengland.org.uk/research/current/discoverand-understand/military/the-first-world-war/first-world-war-home-front/whatwe-already-know/land/state-control-of-pubs/> [accessed 23 March 2021]

Figure 4 Cumbria Image Bank, The Golden Lion, Botchergate, façade after state management. [online] <https://historicengland.org.uk/research/current/discoverand-understand/military/the-first-world-war/first-world-war-home-front/whatwe-already-know/land/state-control-of-pubs/> [accessed 23 March 2021]

Figure 8 Cumbria Image Bank, Figure 19: The working girls’ café on the first floor of the Pheasant, Church Street, Carlisle, circa 1917 (ct41190 © Cumbria Image Bank) in Howard.

Figure 11 Fig 5 - The Rose and Crown, Upperby, Near Carlisle in Basil Oliver, ‘English Inns’, Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, 1932, 545–67.

Figure 13 Google Maps (Image capture: Jul 2018) [online] < https://goo.gl/maps/ j8Z5GSa1YpPjKxWJ9> [accessed 23 March 2021]

Figure 1 Gretna Township, Clayton Greens in Sarah Harper, The Gretna Bombing: When War Came to Gretna 7th April 1942 (The Devil’s Porridge Museum: Eastriggs and Gretna Heritage Group (SCIO), 2018).

Figure 15 Homegrown Films, The Bevy: Blood, Sweat and Beers (Brighton, UK: Homegrown Films, 2014) [online] <https://vimeo.com/109565457> [accessed 23 March 2021].

Figure 16 Homegrown Films.

Figure 9 Plan 7a. The Apple Tree, Lowther Street, Carlisle in Basil Oliver, The Renaissance of the English Public House (Faber & Faber, 1947).

Figure 6 RIBA Collections, Gracie’s Banking, Annan: the picture theatre (1916) [online] <https://www.architecture.com/image-library/RIBApix/image-information/ poster/gracies-banking-annan-the-picture-theatre/posterid/RIBA60229.html> [accessed 23 March 2021].

Figure 2 Ridealgh, Joseph, Map of locations of all public houses acquired or built by the Central Control Board and State Management Scheme between 1916 and 1973 in the Carlisle and Gretna Districts, based on data plotted by Petra Wade in Clare Howard, Countering the ‘Deadliest of Foes’: Public Houses of the Central Control Board and the State Management Scheme, 1916-73, Research Report Series (Historic England, 2018).

Figure 5 Ridealgh, Joseph, Axonometric studies of Redfern pubs, 2021.

Figure 17 Ridealgh, Joseph, Map of community owned public houses in England and Wales, 2021, based on data from CAMRA, ‘Community Owned Pubs’.

Figure 18 Ridealgh, Joseph, Carlisle Garden Village counterproposal - Pub Wards, 2021.

Figure 19 Ridealgh, Joseph, Carlisle Garden Village counterproposal - axonometric view of central pub in context, 2021.

Figure 7 6.12 A photograph published in The House of Whitbread in 1930 showing the main garden area of the Robin Hood pub in Becontree, London in Cole, The Urban and Suburban Public House in Inter-War England, 1918-1939.

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