East Bay Times

Fire at a popular pub being probed as arson

- By Pan Pylas

Police in central England said Wednesday they were treating a weekend fire at one of Britain's quirkiest pubs as arson, two days after it was demolished before an investigat­ion into the blaze had even been completed.

Staffordsh­ire Police said in a statement that following an assessment from a specialist fire investigat­or, they believe the fire on Saturday at the 18thcentur­y Crooked House pub in the village of Himley, 130 miles northwest of London, “may have been started deliberate­ly.”

The outpouring of anger among residents following the blaze was compounded on Monday when the shell of the pub — widely revered as “Britain's wonkiest” as a result of its slumping foundation and sloping walls — was flattened by a mechanical digger.

Given that the cause of the fire, which occurred two weeks after it had been sold by pub and hotel operator Marston's to a local firm, had yet to be determined, questions have been raised over how the pub ended up being flattened.

“We understand the significan­ce of this muchloved building and the upset and anger felt by many, so want to reassure you we're doing all we can to understand more about what happened, and who was responsibl­e,” said Detective Chief Superinten­dent Tom Chisholm, head of specialist crime at Staffordsh­ire Police.

The local South Staffordsh­ire Council has said it was investigat­ing potential breaches of the law over the pub's demolition.

Chisholm said that there's “lots of misinforma­tion circulatin­g within

communitie­s and online and this is unhelpful” and that police are in contact with fire colleagues and with the landowner.

The pub was originally a farmhouse when it was built in 1765 and subsequent­ly began sinking on one side as a result of extensive coal mining in the local area, which is part of the central England region widely known as the Black Country, in reference to its industrial and mining heyday in the mid-19th century.

Around 1830, it became a pub and was called The Siden House — siden meaning crooked in the local dialect.

In the 1940s, the pub, which had been subsequent­ly renamed the Glynne Arms, was condemned as unsafe and scheduled for demolition. The forebear of Marston's then purchased the pub and made it safe.

It then became known as The Crooked House and has been a tourist attraction since, with visitors admiring how the building stood the test of time, given that one end of it was a little under four feet lower than the other.

Andy Street, the mayor of the West Midlands, said local authoritie­s will “get to the truth” and that he will continue to “keep the pressure on for a rebuild” of the pub.

 ?? JACOB KING — PA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A look at the burned-out remains of The Crooked House pub near Dudley, England, on Monday.
JACOB KING — PA VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A look at the burned-out remains of The Crooked House pub near Dudley, England, on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States