Draft:Seven Stars, Bilston

  • Comment: I'm sorry, the sources don't prove this passes the WP:NBUILDING criteria. Qcne (talk) 18:07, 7 October 2023 (UTC)

Seven Stars
The Seven Stars during October 2023
Seven Stars, Bilston is located in West Midlands county
Seven Stars, Bilston
Location within the West Midlands
Former namesYe Old Seven Stars Inn, Reyners, Direct Furniture Bilston
General information
Address22 High Street, Bilston WV14 0EP
Coordinates52°33′56″N 2°04′27″W / 52.5656°N 2.0741°W / 52.5656; -2.0741
Opened
  • Unknown (Ye Old Seven Stars Inn)
  • 1934 (Seven Stars)[1]
  • Between mid 1970s-2004 (Reyners)[1][2]
  • After December 2009 (Direct Furniture Bilston)
Closed
  • c. 1934 (Ye Old Seven Stars Inn)[3]
  • Mid 1970s (Seven Stars)[2]
  • After December 2009 (Reyners)
Owner
  • Edward Beebee? (early 19th century?)[4]
  • Old Dickison (until c. 1934)[3]

The Seven Stars, formerly known as Ye Old Seven Stars Inn, Reyners, now known as Direct Furniture Bilston, or also known as 22 High Street, is a former public house in Bilston, West Midlands, England.[5][2]

History

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Edward Beebee, who was a victualler and stonemason extant between 1811-12, supposedly owned a public house named The Seven Stars along High Street, Bilston during the early 19th century.[4]

The original Ye Old Seven Stars Inn building, which was owned by Old Dickison, was demolished shortly after October 1932,[3] and the current Seven Stars was built in a mock timber frame style in 1934.[1] It operated as a public house until the mid 1970s,[2] and before 2004, the building had become a nursery known as Reyners[1] (which has since moved to 15 High Street), and sometime after December 2009,[2] the building became occupied by Direct Furniture Bilston; the upstairs of the building has also seemingly remained vacant since the 1970s.[2]

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Former Seven Stars public house". Wolverhampton's Locally Listed Buildings. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "BILSTON URBAN VILLAGE, Wolverhampton" (PDF). Wolverhampton.gov.uk. December 2009. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  3. ^ a b c "High Street, Bilston". Black Country History. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Staffordshire Bilston Edward Beebee Penny 1812". Simon Monks Professional Numismatist. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  5. ^ Thompson, Steve. "Seven Stars, Bilston". The Lost Pubs Project. Retrieved 6 October 2023.