By
Rob
With the taste of great food still in our mouths, we headed over to the
next pub on our tour. Moving from one well-heeled suburb to another,
we found ourselves in Totley, one of the city’s more winsome
environs. Teetering on the very edge of Sheffield’s border, this
quasi-rural paradise is home to a number of pleasant-looking pubs, including the Shepley Spitfire.
The pub was built in
1978 by a Nottinghamshire brewery.
Needing a name for their venture, they launched a competition to
find the best suggestion. The winner was a man called Seymour
Shepley, who lived in the nearby Woodthorpe Hall.
The
Shepley family arrived in the area back in 1926, bringing with them
four sons and a daughter. When war broke out in Europe, it sadly
claimed the lives of three of the brothers. The third and final of
these tragedies occurred in the summer of 1940 when Douglas Shepley,
a Spitfire pilot in 152 Squadron, was shot down over the English
Channel. His body was never recovered.
After
losing so much, the grieving family decided to do something positive,
and so they began raising money to purchase a new Spitfire. The
people of north Derbyshire and South Yorkshire pitched in, throwing a
whole host of different fundraising events. Within 15 weeks the money
had been raised and a new plane, aptly named Shepley,
joined the ranks of the RAF.
So
it was that, decades later, when the only surviving son – Seymour –
suggested naming the pub in recognition of this extraordinary story,
the owners found their winner.
Fast-forward
another handful of decades and, in the first century of the next
millennium, two young adventurers clambered out onto the pavement and
headed for the entrance.
Once
inside the pub, we were a little surprised by what we found. For
whatever reason, we’d been expecting a cosy little countryside taproom with a wood-beam roof. Instead, we
walked into a very modern, light and airy establishment. In truth, it looked
more like a restaurant than a public house.
That’s
not to say that it wasn’t nice; it was simply lacking in character.
The other thing it was lacking in was customers, as the spacious
interior was made even more spacious by the fact that the pub was,
unbelievably, almost empty. While the Coach & Horses and The Castle Inn had gone to great lengths to offer food and fun for the local beer festival, the Shepley Spitfire had made absolutely zero effort.
At
the bar, we observed that the pub was selling a beer
called Shepley Spitfire. Knowing that we were unlikely to see
this particular pint anywhere else, we opted for one each.
As
the barman began to pour our drinks, we had one of those
moments in which we both intuitively knew, right then, just what we
had to do. It was another wordless conversation, played out only by
our eyes. But in order to make sure that we were on the same page, we
then had the discussion using our mouths.
After a brief chat, it was decided that a new regulation had just
made its way into the Pubquest rulebook:
The
pint-with-the-same-name-as-the-pub rule!
“Wherever
a public house is offering an alcoholic beverage that is clearly
named after the pub in which it is being provided, then all permanent
members of Sheffield Pubquest are required, by statute, to purchase
that product and consume it in its entirety.”
Secure
in the knowledge that our habit of impulsively legislating would make
us terrible politicians, we headed to the beer garden to
enjoy the last few hours of sunshine.
Naturally,
the last few hours of sunshine appeared to be on fast-forward and we
soon found ourselves grumbling about the sudden drop in temperature.
After just ten minutes of outdoor living, we retreated to
the pool table.
Racing
through three games on the baize, Andy won the day by two frames to one. We finished our pints of Shepley Spitfire, which was surprisingly refreshing, and headed off to re-join the rest of my family.
Sadly,
the next pub we visited was, much like the Coach & Horses,
beyond the boundaries of our beloved city and so it won’t feature
on this blog. Maybe when we’ve written about every pub in Sheffield
we can start to worry about those in places like Dronfield. However,
when that time comes I suspect there will be other things for us to
worry about, such as our grandchildren.
Shepley
Spitfire pool score: Andy 2-1 Rob
Pubquest
pool score: Andy 37-27 Rob
Pub:
Shepley Spitfire (Mickley Lane, S17 4HE)
Pint: Shepley Spitfire
Brewery: Shepley Spitfire (are you sensing a pattern?)
Rating: 5/10
NEXT UP: Childhood traumas, at The Roebuck...
Pint: Shepley Spitfire
Brewery: Shepley Spitfire (are you sensing a pattern?)
Rating: 5/10
NEXT UP: Childhood traumas, at The Roebuck...
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