TeeJF
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During our south of England soirée the other week TJ and I had a spectacular fail at Graylingwell asylum where we walked straight into the site manager! On the way down the A3 we had spotted a potentially interesting explore literally at the side of the road just past where they have built some new road tunnels around Guildford. So we cut our losses and headed back up to see if it was worth the bother.
It's been a little bit difficult to find any absolutely 100% concrete information on the place although with all the bits and pieces we have seen it appears very strongly that this sad building was originally an innl called the Seven Thorns. The A3 was little more than a single track road back then but it's certainly not any longer!
We mooched the net and came up with some interesting bits and pieces about the place... apparently from 1818 to 1841 a family by the name of Butler ran the inn and Mrs. Oliphant, a Victorian novelist, wrote a book called 'Cuckoo in the Nest' in which much of the action was set in a mythical inn using the Seven Thorns as the inspiration. There was mention made on one forum of there having been a highwayman who operated in the area called "Captain Jack" who had some form of link with the inn, and of body snatchers secreting bodies in the cellar of the inn before moving them on to their prospective buyers! A further intriguing story concerns the band Fleetwood Mac who apparently used to practise in an outbuilding behind the inn, probably the barn, before they received due recognition in the late sixties. Little remains now of any of the outbuildings, but we did find the remains of an air tight car painting booth in one. Perhaps the fans of the band should campaign for a blue plaque while there is still a wall left standing to hang it on!
In the 1950s a Mr. & Mrs. Dennis owned the inn and the bar was run by a Polish chap called Helmith. During that period one member of staff recalls working in the buffet selling sandwiches, tea and coffee, to coach parties en route to Portsmouth or to London, so it would appear that the inn had diversified into providing the services more normally associated with a traditional road side cafe by this time - indeed another person tells of a large cafeteria being built on to the side of the inn. Army, navy and RAF personnel frequented the bar regularly, particularly at weekends, and inevitably there were messy drunken brawls associated with same, many resulting in the protagonists spilling out and fighting in the middle of the A3! At some point a sunken dance floor was built in the large hall attached to the side of the inn, possibly what had originally been the cafeteria, and it began to operate as a nightclub called "The Spaniard". There appears to have been a name change at a later date though because the remains of the name "Ravens" is still clear on the side of the building at this time.
It is not clear when the club closed though even that has an interesting and rather tragic story attached to it - someone else had this to say, "The pub itself was given an extensive makeover and shortly after it reopened there was an altercation between two customers and when the owner stepped in to settle the problem he had a heart attack".
Late in the 1980s, or possibly early in the 1990s, a serious fire devastated the building and it's generally thought that this was down to arson for insurance purposes if comments on numerous forums are to be taken as red. What the owners used the insurance money for is anybody's guess but one thing is for sure, they've not spent a bean on resurrecting "The Spaniard"!
The exterior of The Spaniard as seen from the A3 near Guildford...
The sunken dance floor within the nightclub part of the building. We think this was originally the cafeteria extension in the 50s and 60s before conversion...
The bar section, originally part of the old Seven Thorns Inn. Gutted by the fire...
Open plan living!
Within the kitchens...
Where The Spaniard stored his doubloons...
Open plan living Pt. 2...
Off the wall heating...
Reception...
Everything was painted blue in the nightclub including the gents...
Peeling metallic paint...
The view across the A3 from the lounge...
The Spaniard became "Ravens"...
The support for the old inn sign...
And finally, if this works, this should be a link to a panorama taken at the front of the site from the A3...
http://360.io/ze3gtK
Hope you enjoyed it... I know it's not Graylingwell but hey! You have to have a fall back site on every explore dontcha!!!
It's been a little bit difficult to find any absolutely 100% concrete information on the place although with all the bits and pieces we have seen it appears very strongly that this sad building was originally an innl called the Seven Thorns. The A3 was little more than a single track road back then but it's certainly not any longer!
We mooched the net and came up with some interesting bits and pieces about the place... apparently from 1818 to 1841 a family by the name of Butler ran the inn and Mrs. Oliphant, a Victorian novelist, wrote a book called 'Cuckoo in the Nest' in which much of the action was set in a mythical inn using the Seven Thorns as the inspiration. There was mention made on one forum of there having been a highwayman who operated in the area called "Captain Jack" who had some form of link with the inn, and of body snatchers secreting bodies in the cellar of the inn before moving them on to their prospective buyers! A further intriguing story concerns the band Fleetwood Mac who apparently used to practise in an outbuilding behind the inn, probably the barn, before they received due recognition in the late sixties. Little remains now of any of the outbuildings, but we did find the remains of an air tight car painting booth in one. Perhaps the fans of the band should campaign for a blue plaque while there is still a wall left standing to hang it on!
In the 1950s a Mr. & Mrs. Dennis owned the inn and the bar was run by a Polish chap called Helmith. During that period one member of staff recalls working in the buffet selling sandwiches, tea and coffee, to coach parties en route to Portsmouth or to London, so it would appear that the inn had diversified into providing the services more normally associated with a traditional road side cafe by this time - indeed another person tells of a large cafeteria being built on to the side of the inn. Army, navy and RAF personnel frequented the bar regularly, particularly at weekends, and inevitably there were messy drunken brawls associated with same, many resulting in the protagonists spilling out and fighting in the middle of the A3! At some point a sunken dance floor was built in the large hall attached to the side of the inn, possibly what had originally been the cafeteria, and it began to operate as a nightclub called "The Spaniard". There appears to have been a name change at a later date though because the remains of the name "Ravens" is still clear on the side of the building at this time.
It is not clear when the club closed though even that has an interesting and rather tragic story attached to it - someone else had this to say, "The pub itself was given an extensive makeover and shortly after it reopened there was an altercation between two customers and when the owner stepped in to settle the problem he had a heart attack".
Late in the 1980s, or possibly early in the 1990s, a serious fire devastated the building and it's generally thought that this was down to arson for insurance purposes if comments on numerous forums are to be taken as red. What the owners used the insurance money for is anybody's guess but one thing is for sure, they've not spent a bean on resurrecting "The Spaniard"!
The exterior of The Spaniard as seen from the A3 near Guildford...
The sunken dance floor within the nightclub part of the building. We think this was originally the cafeteria extension in the 50s and 60s before conversion...
The bar section, originally part of the old Seven Thorns Inn. Gutted by the fire...
Open plan living!
Within the kitchens...
Where The Spaniard stored his doubloons...
Open plan living Pt. 2...
Off the wall heating...
Reception...
Everything was painted blue in the nightclub including the gents...
Peeling metallic paint...
The view across the A3 from the lounge...
The Spaniard became "Ravens"...
The support for the old inn sign...
And finally, if this works, this should be a link to a panorama taken at the front of the site from the A3...
http://360.io/ze3gtK
Hope you enjoyed it... I know it's not Graylingwell but hey! You have to have a fall back site on every explore dontcha!!!
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