Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Cheers to King’s Head!

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was a First Class waiting room.

“In 1949 there wasn’t a posh roof like there is now. Beer was around nine pence a pint. There were no toilets.

“I have been coming in for 67 years. I have always enjoyed coming in.

“Before Bruce took it on, his predecesso­r Wilber Cox put carpets on the floor covering up the intricate mosaic design.”

The King’s Head, a former grand ticket hall and waiting room, next door to the Grade I listed station, won the category of the Great Western Railway Craft Skills Award for the National Railway Heritage Awards 2017.

The awards, which are in their 38th year, encompass all sectors of the railway industry in the UK. The brief for entrants was railway structures, of which the obvious ones are stations, but railway-built structures can encompass goods sheds, signal boxes, viaducts, bridges, tunnel portals, level crossings and rare historic pointwork.

The criteria for entering a project was it must have heritage interest and value. The emphasis was on overall quality and thoroughne­ss in approach, sympatheti­c treatment, awareness of conservati­on practice, attractive­ness to the public and regard for the local environmen­t.

The panel of adjudicato­rs numbered 11, and included Robin Leleux, chairman (author and historian), Prof Marilyn Palmer, Emeritus professor of industrial archaeolog­y, Leicester University, and John Ives, chartered architect.

The awards were presented by Mark

I was 17-and-a-halfyears-old when I had my first pint here. It has changed a lot recently

Wild, managing director of London Undergroun­d and the plaque commemorat­ing the achievemen­t now has pride of place in the pub.

The work, which cost £200,000, has been aided by modest grants from the Railway Heritage Trust.

Mr Leleux said: “I have judged various improvemen­t works at Huddersfie­ld Station in recent years so it was a pleasure to go out and view this project. I was not disappoint­ed.

“When one sees and hears close up just what had to be done, such as removing the extraordin­arily low false ceilings, recreating the decorative plasterwor­k ceilings, repairing the floor tiling and creating a new and attractive bar, the sense of achievemen­t is all that much greater.

“A bold imaginatio­n, a sound plan of what can and should be done, and an eye for detail are essential for a scheme such as this to succeed; all are there so it has done, excellentl­y.”

Bruce, who worked in the legal profession in Halifax for many years before becoming a landlord more than 14 years ago, said he was really pleased with the award and added: “It’s a proud achievemen­t.” CHECK OUT OUR SOCIAL MEDIA FOR MORE INFO

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