1891 Princes Street / Coronation Street
Leo Francis Dorrell, licensed victualler
Email from CS (March 2022): Leo Francis Dorrell was born in Liege, Belgium in 1836, the son of an English father and Dutch mother who met and married in Amsterdam. The father was a copper and iron founder, and there was a lot of work in the Netherlands and Belgium for British workers who were bringing metallurgical technology to the continent. Leo’s father and his family returned to England in 1849 and Leo became an iron and brass founder like his father and brothers. He established his own foundry in Barking, outside of London. But in the late 1880’s, he had an affair with a married woman (Mrs. Catherine Puplett) and they left Barking with her two younger children and moved to Cambridge to run a public house. Leo obtained the license for the Ship Inn on April 24, 1891, but by September 28, 1891, he had given it up to William Henry Joyce. Apparently, he had lost all his money in the venture. He reconciled with his wife and by 1893, they were living together again in Barking.
William Henry Joyce, licensee
1901 Ship Inn 21 Princes Street
Frederick William Rust, 44, publican, b Hunts
Mary Jane, 46, b St Ives
Mabel, 11, b Northants
Barbara, 4, b Cambridge
Frederick, 1, b Cambridge
1911 The Ship Coronation Street
Joseph Chambers, 43, publican, b Bedford
Maud, 35, b Bedford
Hilda, 16, b Turvey
Evelyn, 12, b Turvey
Audrey, 8, b Turvey
Harry, 5, b Turvey
Elizabeth Goodall, 38, cousin, manageress of railway refreshment rooms, b Bedford
1913 The Ship
J Bolton
1962 The Ship
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