The Scotsman

JK Rowling never visited ‘Harry Potter pub’

● Author refutes claims that pub sold for £4m inspired her books

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

JK Rowling has insisted she has never been in a pub which has sold for millions of pounds amid claims that it inspired the Harry Potter books.

The Old Fire House in Exeter, has been sold for a rumoured £4 million – amid speculatio­n that it was the inspiratio­n for the Leaky Cauldron pub in Rowling’s iconic series set in a wizards’ boarding school.

But Rowling – who was a student at Exeter University in the 1980s – spoke out on Twitter, saying: “If you want real fantasy, go to an estate agent. Never visited this pub in my life.”

She added: “Red Cow, Black Horse, Mill on the Exe, the Artillery Inn (now sadly gone), but never that one, I’m afraid.”

Sales agents Charles Darrow insisted it had not specifical­ly marketed the pub based on Ms Rowling’s apparent links, although the marketing campaign for the property was publicised “confidenti­ally”.

The firm has previously advertised a modest corner shop and owner’s accommodat­ion in the town of Pennsylvan­ia, Devon, using Ms Rowling’s name, saying that she lived nearby as a student.

Agent John Clyne told The Scotsman: “We didn’t market it as linked to her name at all. It is a lot of online talk. It is Exeter, so there are always a lot of links with Harry Potter.”

The pub has been bought by London-based City Pub Group PLC, owned by the father of Made In Chelsea’s Lucy and Tiff Watson.

Fans of the books expressed their dismay that the pub had not been an inspiratio­n for Ms Rowling.

@Thedancash tweeted: “Noooo I went to Exeter uni

0 JK Rowling responded on Twitter to claims of The Old Fire House pub in Exeter inspiring the Harry Potter books and it was a widely known (non-)fact that you frequented here.”

Exeter University’s Harry Potter Society has frequently held events at the pub, claiming that it inspired the wizarding drinking hole, which is located in London in the literary series.

The city’s Gandy Street has also widely been credited with being Ms Rowling’s inspiratio­n for Diagon Alley in the books.

Author Lucy Banks wrote on Twitter: “Ahhh, now I feel crushed, I love this pub and always liked to imagine it was an inspiratio­n for the Leaky Cauldron! There’s another childish fantasy dashed right there. Was there any truth in Gandy Street being the inspiratio­n for Diagon Alley?”

Numerous pubs and cafés in Edinburgh, where Ms Rowling lives, have also been credited with inspiring locations in the Harry Potter series, including the Elephant House café on George IV Bridge, which has a sign in the window claiming it is the “birthplace of Harry Potter”, while Nicolson’s Cafe on the city’s Nicolson Street, now called Spoon, has also laid claim to being the venue where Ms Rowling wrote her first drafts.

Yesterday, it was confirmed that a new pop-up Harry Potter-themed bar will open in Edinburgh in February, while a Harry Potter flat has proved so popular that it is booked for the whole of 2018.

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