First pub named after Princess Charlotte opens

Blackleaf

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Drinkers can raise a toast to Princess Charlotte in the first pub ever named after the Royal toddler.

The bespoke boozer in Colchester, Essex, has just started serving punters and has proved a hit with regulars.

It was hoped the bar staff could pop a cork of champagne when the the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's second child was born - but it was hit with a two-year planning delay.


What WOULD great-granny say! Drinkers are raising a toast to Princess Charlotte in the first ever PUB to be named after the Royal toddler, two

Drinkers in Colchester, Essex, can enjoy a tipple in The Princess Charlotte pub
Owned by McMullen's Brewery, it is the first pub named after the Royal toddler
Supposed to open shortly after her birth, it was hit by a lengthy planning delay
The brewery owners plan to invite Catherine, William, Charlotte and George


By DIANNE APEN-SADLER FOR MAILONLINE
4 January 2018

Drinkers can raise a toast to Princess Charlotte in the first pub ever named after the Royal toddler.

The bespoke boozer in Colchester, Essex, has just started serving punters and has proved a hit with regulars.

It was hoped the bar staff could pop a cork of champagne when the the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's second child was born - but it was hit with a two-year planning delay.

McMullen's Brewery, who own the pub, said it would invite Catherine, William, Charlotte and George to see what's on offer.


The Princess Charlotte in Colchester, Essex, is the first pub named after The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's second child


It was due to open just after she was born but was hit by a two-year planning delay


Princess Charlotte has a busy month ahead as she is due to start nursery today. Luckily, owner McMullen's Brewery said it would invite William, Catherine, George and Charlotte along to visit


The pub is the second named after a royal baby with The Prince George recently opening in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire

Managing director Heydon Mizon said: 'We aim to treat every guest like royalty at The Princess Charlotte and this would of course include the Princess herself.

'The pub had been due to open shortly after Princess Charlotte was born. The baby wasn't at the mercy of a lengthy planning delay and so arrived on time. The pub, however, was significantly overdue.'

The pub is the second named after a royal baby with The Prince George recently opening in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire.

He added: 'McMullen's have been brewing beer, operating pubs and looking after our pubs for over 190 years.

'With this in mind, we try to select names that are interesting, relevant to the time or place that a pub is built and that will stand the test of time.'

Sporting a regal pub sign inspired by the Royal Coat of Arms the establishment stocks traditional English ales.

Despite its high-class name the humble new-built boozer serves classic pub grub like burgers, chicken and curry.

Local Dave Smith said: 'I'm not a Royalist, but I've certainly raised a glass or two in there.'

The history of Royal pub names



Naming pubs after royalty has a long history in the UK

From 1393 pubs were ordered to hang a sign outside to make them easily visible. Many chose to hang signs with symbols on, as most people were illiterate. One of these signs was the white hart, the personal badge of the king at the time, Richard II

Others adopted the crown symbol as it meant they would not have to change their sign with the death of each ruler - and The Crown is now the second most common pub name in the country after The Red Lion

Another popular name (third) is The Royal Oak, which is named after the tree Charles II hid inside to escape from Oliver Cromwell's forces during the Battle of Worcester in 1651. Naming a pub after the royalty was a way of demonstrating loyalty - particularly after the restoration of the monarchy

Other Royal names include The Prince of Wales (with many pubs being renamed to The Princess of Wales after Diana's death), The Queen Victoria, The King's Arms, The Queen's Head, and The Prince Regent



Managing director Heydon Mizon said: 'We try to select names that are interesting, relevant to the time or place that a pub is built and that will stand the test of time'


He added: 'We aim to treat every guest like Royalty at the Princess Charlotte and this would of course include the Princess herself'


The tot is due to start at the Willcocks Nursery School where fees are £9,150 a year for morning sessions and £5,400 for afternoons


With so many pubs named after royalty, it's no surprise some members of the family are partial to a good pint. Here the late Queen Mother enjoyed a pint in The Queen's Head pub in London


During a visit to the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin in 2011 the Queen eyed up a pint poured by Master Brewer Fergal Murray


Here His Royal Highness Prince Charles pours a pint while visiting Poundbury, Dorset, in 2002


Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, enjoy their pints at the Old Western Saloon in 2005 during a visit to Point Reyes Station in California

Princess Charlotte gets an Essex pub named after her | Daily Mail Online
 
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Hoid

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Trump has plenty of pubs named after him. More pubs than anyone ever - lots of people say that all the time.

 

Blackleaf

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Hey maybe the Queen Charlotte Islands can get their real name back now.

Change their name to The Slug and Lettuce Islands.



The Queen Charlotte Islands take their name from the ship Queen Charlotte, which in turn was named after Queen Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, King George III's wife: Princess Charlotte's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother.
 

Hoid

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the name it was known by when princess charlottes family was living in a cave
 

Blackleaf

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the name it was known by when princess charlottes family was living in a cave

Do you realise that renaming the islands from a modern, progressive name like "Princesses Charlotte Islands" to something like "QajunpaQHeylIjmo’ batlh DuSuvqang charghwI" is like renaming York "Eboracum" or London "Londinium"?
 

Blackleaf

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Its true what I say, though. Place names get changed all the time by newcomers. The Romans founded York in 71, naming it Eboracum, after Eborakon, Britonnic for "place of the yew trees". Then along came the Anglo-Saxons, who changed its name to Eoforwic, meaning "home rich in boar." Then the Vikings arrived there, calling it Jorvik, which gradually became York.

So, if we were to do the same to York what you dafties have done to poor Prince Charlotte Islands then York would become known as Eboracum again.
 

Danbones

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hmmm "prince" charlotte eh?
;)
being so cute, shouldn't those be named islettes?
 

Hoid

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Do you realise that renaming the islands from a modern, progressive name like "Princesses Charlotte Islands" to something like "QajunpaQHeylIjmo’ batlh DuSuvqang charghwI" is like renaming York "Eboracum" or London "Londinium"?

the only renaming ever done was modern times by white people from somewhere else.

the real name was being used there 5,000 years before the roman's showed up in Britain. You had no name for the place because you were not culturally developed enough.
 

Hoid

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What do you mean "we," subject of the Crown?



You're uglier'n a mud fence and too dumb to pour piss out of a boot, you know that?

Go worship a 90-year-old woman. Gawd told you to.
careful what you say about the old whore.
 

Blackleaf

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the only renaming ever done was modern times by white people from somewhere else.

1) The colour of the skin of the people is immaterial and pointing it out is rather racist;

2) It's no different from what happens all over the world when settlers arrive in an area. They change the name of the place, as the Anglo-Saxons did when they settled in Roman-founded York, and then as the Vikings did when they settled there. Istanbul was first known as Byzantium, which was given the name by settlers from Megara in Greece in 650BC. The Romans then came along and changed its name to Constantinople. Then it was the turn of invading Ottomans, who settled the city and changed its name to Istanbul. Istanbul is what it's still called to this day and, as far as I'm aware, there's no PC clamouring to have the city's name changed back to Byzantium.