Farndon & Churton Local History Pages

Village Inns and Public Houses


White Horse, Churton

White Horse, Churton
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White Horse, Churton

The White Horse had been yet another addition to the long line of pubs that were unable to survive during the Covid lockdown, and despite the effort of the licensee, time had finally been called in 2020. For months the chalk board outside announced there would be a quiz on a Thursday long since gone, while the unsightly large concrete blocks in front of the pub, (bang in the centre of a pretty village) - deposited to prevent 'unauthorised parking' - seemed to mark the death knell. Even before Covid hit, pubs had been closing all over the country at an alarming rate, and there seemed no way back for the White Horse.

There were rumours and counter-rumours, mainly suggesting that developers were keen to get their hands on it and turn it into flats, or even demolish it and build housing across the whole site, including the rear car park.

A village action group was formed to fight for the survival of the pub, then the news broke in March 2022 that Gary Usher, the nationally known chef and restaurateur of Elite Bistros, was interested. No one could quite believe it. But the rumours were true, and by July, Gary who is based in Chester, had beaten off bids by property developers, and had purchased the site and buildings as a freehold.

Surely if anyone could make the business viable it was Gary, with his expert knowledge and skills with his company Elite Bistros. But this was to be his first venture into the pub trade, and a departure from his usual business modus operandi, as he intended to retain the bar and continue run the White Horse as a traditional village pub, while still offering a quality menu.


The Original White Horse Beerhouse

The original White Horse Inn c.1895

This wasn’t the first pub on the site. A small roadside cottage, where the carpark is today, served as a beerhouse for the local farmers and other workers after a long day. In fact, the licensees of the original White Horse were generally farmers too, tilling around ten acres in the surrounding village farmland.

Red Lion Inn c.1895

During the 18th-19th century, the village could support two hostelries, as the Red Lion Inn was just a few yards along the main road, which still stands today, although now a private residence. Their origins are thought to be in the mid seventeenth century, although the first White Horse cottage could have been older.

They are certainly there on the Tithe Map surveyed in 1840 (map below).

The earliest known licensee was Moses Baker, baptised in Farndon on 9 June 1805, although it is possible that he followed in the footsteps of his father who also resided in Churton. He was born in 1764 and married Martha Wynne in St Chad’s on 8 Apr 1789. Moses was named after Martha’s father. Moses junior married Ann Huxley, fifteen years his senior, in St Mary’s on the Hill in Chester on 13 October 1833, and were residing in Churton as farmers in 1841, but were likely to have been running the beerhouse at the same time. Ann Baker passed away in March 1844 and was buried in St Chad’s, Farndon, while Moses carried on with the farm. In 1846 he married again, to Elizabeth Reeves, a forty-three-year-old spinster of Churton, and in 1851 he was recorded as a farmer of 9 acres, as well as the 'Beerseller of the White Horse.'

Tithe Map surveyed in 1840, showing the original building and the adjacent stableblock used for dray horses

James son of James & Mary Baker
bapt 24 May 1764
(bottom of page)
James Baker & Martha Wynne Marriage 1789
James Baker burial 1838
Anne Baker 1843
Martha dtr of Moses and Martha Wynne of Clutton
bapt Farndon 13 Jan 1772
Moses son of James and Martha Baker of Churton
bapt Farndon 9 June 1805
Moses Baker = Elizabeth Reeves of Churton
Banns, 19 Dec 1846
Elizabeth Baker
burial 28 March 1883


1841 Census - Moses Baker and Ann Baker, Farmer of Churton

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1851 Census - Moses Baker and Elizabeth Baker, Farmer (9 Acres) and Beerseller of Churton

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1871 Census - Moses Baker and Elizabeth Baker, Farmer 11 ½ acres, Beerseller of Churton

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By 1871, Moses was farming 11½ acres and still running the White Horse Beerhouse with Elizabeth. However, the long, four decade tenancy of Moses Baker came to an end in September 1873, when he passed away aged sixty-eight and was interred on 16 September in St Chad’s churchyard in nearby Farndon.

His affairs were left in order when he put his hand to his will on 29 August 1873, just days before his passing;

The Will of Moses Baker, Beer Seller

This is the last Will and Testament of me, Moses Baker, Beer Seller, of Churton by Aldford in the County of Chester. I give, devise, and bequeath, all the real and personal estate of which I shall be possessed or entitled at the time of my decease unto my dear wife for the term of her natural life. Afterwards to my nephew John Parker, Farmer of Highfields, Coddington, in the County of Chester absolutely. And I appoint the said John Parker my sole Executor of this my Will.

In witness whereof, I hereunto set my hand, this twenty-ninth day of August in the year of Our Lord one thousand and eight hundred and seventy-three.
Witness the cross X of the said Moses Baker. W. Thelwall, Surgeon of Farndon, Cheshire
Signed by the said Moses Baker, the Testator, in our presence, who in his presence and in the presence of each other at the same time, subscribe our names as witnesses;
William Thelwall, Surgeon of Farndon
George Brown, Farmer, Churton by Aldford
Proved at Chester the 13th Day of December 1873 by the oath of John Parker the Nephew, the sole executor to whom administration was granted.

Affidavit of due execution filed Charles T W Parry Dist. Regr.
The Testator Moses Baker was late of Churton by Aldford in the County of Chester Beerseller and died on the 13th day of September 1873 at Churton by Aldford aforesaid.
Under £20. No Leaseholder } Charles W Parry
T.V. Royle, Solicitor, Chester } District Registrar


In summary, the estate of Moses Baker, including the White Horse, was to be left to his wife Elizabeth, and on her passing, to his nephew James Parker, farmer of Highfields, Coddington, who in the meantime would act as executor.

Elizabeth carried on alone for a short time at the White Horse, before she moved to Crewe-by-Farndon, probably to be cared for in her last years by relatives. By the terms of the will, as James Parker could not yet inherit during her lifetime, temporary licensees, Laurence and Martha Thomas, were taken on to run the White Horse.

In March 1883, Elizabeth Baker died and was buried on the 28th in Farndon churchyard. The way was now clear for James Parker to inherit, and by the time of the 1891 census, James Parker had moved into the pub as the new licensee with his wife Martha.

1881 Census - Laurence and Martha Thomas, Innkeeper of Churton

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1891 Census - James Parker and Martha Parker, Innkeeper of Churton

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James Parker and Martha Parker outside the White Horse Inn c.1895, with Edgar Clubbe standing at the door

James soon had plans to improve his legacy. The old beerhouse cottage by now, was centuries old and no longer fit for purpose. It was decided that it would be too costly to repair to bring in the necessary expansion, so sadly for the heritage of the village, he applied to demolish the old pub and build a new one on the same site.

(There is a village myth that the original building was destroyed by fire, hence the need for the new building. This is quite untrue. Confusion may have arisen due to the Red Lion next door being gutted by fire in the 1930s). His application came before Broxton Magistrates Court on 1 September 1899;

James Parker's application for a new White Horse Inn, Cheshire Observer, 2 September 1899


James Parker and Martha Parker


Churton Village 1895, showing the old roadside pub at the crossroads.


Churton Village 1897, showing the old roadside pub marked P.H.


James Parker's new White Horse Inn c.1910


1901 Census - James Parker and Martha Parker, Publican of Churton

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Birkenhead & Cheshire Advertiser, 2 July 1910



1911 Census - James Parker and Martha Parker, Beer retailer (Publican) of Churton

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By 1911, William, James Parker's son, was now of age and assisting in the running of the pub, and would be joined by his brother Noah Parker at the end of the war. However, Noah would soon join the postal service and serve the local community as their postman.

The First World War

Five of James Parker's sons were eligible to volunteer in August 1914, or be called to register for service in January 1916, however no record of service appears to exist. This does not mean they did not serve, but extensive research has so far drawn a blank. At the start of the conflict, James' sons were; James Harry (31, Joiner), John (29, Bricklayer), Thomas (25, Groom), William (21, Assisting his father, White Horse Inn), Joseph (19, Railway Clerk). Younger brother Frank became eligible for call-up in the latter stages of the conflict.

If they did not serve, they were either deemed unfit, or were in reserved occupation.

The Inter-War Years

No sooner had the war ended, when the Parker family were hit with the tragic passing of daughter and sister Elizabeth, aged only thirty-two. She had fallen victim to the so called 'Spanish Flu', the killer pandemic sweeping across Europe in the aftermath of the conflict.

Her death was reported in the Chester Chronicle;

Death of Elizabeth Parker,
Chester Chronicle, 22 February 1919
Aldford concert,
Chester Chronicle, 8 December 1917

1921 Census - James Parker and Martha Parker, Licensee / Publican of Churton

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In 1921 James’ son Frank Parker was working as a Motor Driver for the Duke of Westminster, possibly as a chauffeur. He married later that year and by 1939 was living with his wife Florence in Upton Heath and working as a gardener.

Auction of Martha Parker's possessions
Crewe Chronicle, January 1929
An auction held at the White Horse
Cheshire Observer, 18 May 1929

In 1929, Martha Parker passed away aged sixty-seven. Her widowed husband James was now aged seventy-two, and with the sale of their property had no doubt retired, leaving the running of the White Horse to his son William and his wife Gertrude.

James passed away in 1938 aged eighty-one.

Postman Noah Parker retires, Cheshire Observer 12 February 1938

1939 Census - William David and Gertrude Parker, Innkeeper, White Horse, Churton

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After the First World War, William had married Gertrude Adeline Lewis on 14 April 1920 in St Chad's, Farndon. Gertrude was a local girl, the daughter of William Fleet Lewis, a bricklayer living on Bridge Street (High Street), Farndon. She had been baptised in Farndon on 10 Jan 1897.

W D Parker leaving the White Horse, Cheshire Observer, 27 November 1943

William’s departure in 1943, brought to an end the Parker family association with the White Horse after six decades.

Long after their departure from Churton, William David Parker died aged eighty-three in Denbigh, Clwyd in 25 August 1976, and Gertrude on 13 January 1987 at Elsinore, 13 Curzon Park South, in Chester.

The Povey tenancy 1943-55

After the Parker family’s long residency to an end in 1943 after a period of almost sixty years, the next licencee was Jessie Povey. She and her family were from Preston, her husband Albert Victor Povey who had served in the Merchant Navy since the First World War. They married just afterwards, and her son Albert Victor junior was born in 1920, and Cyril in 1926. By 1936 young Albert had also signed up for the Merchant Navy. In 1939 they had moved from Preston to Rosedale Avenue in Crosby, no doubt for Albert to be closer to his employers and the main port of arrival and departure. Albert snr was discharged from the Navy shortly after having been serving on the MV Adda.

[MV Adda a passenger vessel launched on the Clyde for Elder Dempster of Liverpool on 25 May 1922 and completed 14 November 1922. The Adda was later torpedoed on 8 Jun 1941 by a U Boat and sank 82 nautical miles (152 km) west of Freetown, Sierra Leone with the loss of ten of the 425 people on board. Survivors were rescued by HMS Cyclamen.]

On his retirement, Albert and Jessie Povey moved to Mold, where they took on the tenancy of the Grade II listed Dolphin Hotel. Sadly, their stay was to be a short one, as Albert passed away on 28 October 1943 in Chester Royal Infirmary. Jessie decided to stay in the pub trade and moved to Churton to take on the White Horse. However, her stay was to be short here too, as she passed away on 17 August 1945, also in the Chester Royal Infirmary.

1921 census
Jessie and Albert Povey jnr. Albert Povey snr was away at sea.
1921 census address
Jessie and Albert Povey jnr.
Albert Povey senior’s Merchant Navy ticket
1939 Census
Albert Povey jnr - Merchant Navy Ticket
First Voyage
Dolphin Hotel, Mold
Death of Jessie Povey
Cheshire Observer 25 August 1945
Death of Albert Povey jnr
Cheshire Observer 13 September 1963



In 1950, Albert Povey married Phyllis Parry, and by 1954 they had given up the tenancy and moved to Bagillt near Flint, to take on the running of another pub, also called, by coincidence, The White Horse.

The Churton White Horse was taken over by Hilda Watkins, who came from the Royal Oak Hotel in Hoole.

Just nine years later, Albert passed away in Holywell aged only forty-three.

Protection Order - Hilda Patricia Watkins, Cheshire Observer, 10 July 1954


White Horse Rowing Team Success, Cheshire Observer, 6 July 1973


White Horse Rowing Team
- photo which was on the wall in the bar for many years



By the 1980s the White Horse was under Bass Charrington, run by tenants John and Brenda Creffield, and more improvements were made including an extension to the car park hoping to cater for more passing trade and customers travelling from further afield such as Chester

Cheshire Observer, 25 March 1983


Chester Chronicle, 13 November 1987


Into the 1990s and the tenancy had changed once more when Barry and Janice Holtham took the lease on from landlords Paramount Plc. This followed some improvements made by Paramount including the extension to the buildings including the conservatory, an exterior dwelling and car park to the rear.
Chester Chronicle, 13 December 1991


Chester Chronicle, 16 January 1998


The year 1997 brought the collapse of Bass Charrington, and most of their public houses were sold off, with the buyer creating Punch Taverns.
Pub sales agent for Punch Taverns, Paramount, leased the White Horse pracically on Free House terms, to experienced hosts Carl and Julie O'Shaughnessy, who came in from Watergate's Wine Bar in Chester. Further investment was made to provide extensive refurbishment.


Further change of tenancy came in 2000, when Tony and Irene Jones took the lease, followed by Alan Paynter, who held it until 2014.

In November 2014, it was announced in the local press that, 'Ash and Becca Nall-Evans are hospitality professionals with a wealth of experience in the industry. They have recently taken over the White Horse at Churton, which underwent a major refurbishment before opening on Saturday 24 January 2015. We offer an extensive pub menu with all the favourites, an excellent choice for dining with friends and family, or just popping in for a drink to sample one of our great range of wines, spirits, beers (including guest ales from local breweries).'

Gallery of Renovations 2009/2016

2009

2009

2009

2009

2009

2011

2011


Renovations 2015/2016






A snapshot from 2011 of the original White Horse website

Note: This is defunct and no longer online







White Horse Walks


The website also featured several local walks ending at the White Horse

White Horse Walk 1
Lower Lane Walk
Approx. 1.77 miles (2.85 km)
White Horse Walk 2
Farndon River Walk
Approx. 4.34 miles (6.99 km)
White Horse Walk 3
Aldford River Walk
Approx. 5.58 miles (8.98 km)
White Horse Walk 4
Aldford River Walk (Extended)
Approx. 12.71km (7.90 miles)




Modern map - Churton landscape



Dee flood plain - avoid the river walk during floods!







Modern map - White Horse area

Admiral Taverns sale



Following the departure of Ash and Becca Nall-Evans, Dave and Jackie Biles became tenants under Admiral Taverns. Despite their best efforts in an industry witnessing high numbers of pub closures every week, they were then hit by the pandemic and lockdown, which became unrecoverable for a struggling business in a rural area.

Finally during the 2020 lockdown, it seemed the White Horse had reached the end of its days and would be sold by Admiral Taverns, most likely to developers intent on its demolition for new housing. In reaction to the site being put up for sale, Churton Parish Council became concerned about the potential permanent loss of a village asset, and a consequence interested parties in the village formed the White Horse Action Movement (WHAM).

In July 2020 Alyson Thacker reported,

The Parish Council has been notified by CWAC of Admiral Taverns intention to sell the White Horse, and that under the Asset of Community Value legislation there is an Interim Moratorium, until the 13th August 2020, allowing the village to come back with any initial interest in taking on and operating the premises. We can also state that the PC is in consultation with WHAM, and will update further in due course, via both Facebook and the forthcoming Newsletter. But if, in the first instance, there are any expressions of interest, contact should be made through the PC. churtonparishclerk@hotmail.co.uk
Alyson Thacker 3 July 2020

White Horse Action Movement (WHAM)



Gary Usher of Elite Bistros

However in March 2022, the news broke that Gary Usher of Elite Bistros had swooped to fend off interest from property developers, and had purchased the White Horse from under their noses - with the intention to preserve it as a village pub.

Katherine Price reported on the impending sale in the The Caterer on 7 March 2022;



Gary Usher's Elite Bistros is set to acquire its first pub:
the White Horse in Churton, Cheshire.

Admiral Taverns has put the freehold of the 2,375 sq ft site up for sale with a guide price of £495,000. The pub did not reopen following the onset of the pandemic in 2020 after former licensees Dave and Jackie Biles announced the business at the time was "unsustainable".

"We are in the middle of buying the White Horse pub in Churton but it's not complete. I've always loved it there & it would be a dream for us to run it," said Usher, posting on Twitter. He said an offer has been accepted on the venue and there was space upstairs in the pub for around five bedrooms. "I'm absolutely aware how much the White Horse means to the community in Churton because like any good pub that's who it's primarily there for, the community, and anyone else who visits is a lovely bonus. If we get it I don't want to rip it apart and change the way it looks. I love it. "Our plans at the White Horse are pretty simple, we want to serve great drinks, delicious unpretentious food by a team that love what they do. I'm super keen to hear what the local community like."

The pub will join the group's sites including Sticky Walnut in Hoole, Chester, the first solo restaurant for Usher, which opened in 2011; Burnt Truffle in Heswall on the Wirral, which opened in July 2015; Hispi in Didsbury, south Manchester; Wreckfish in Liverpool; Pinion in Prescot; and Kala in Manchester, which opened in 2019. All sites apart from Sticky Walnut were crowdfunded.

Usher has also recently teased plans to open a new tapas restaurant called Joya and announced that the company is seeking to raise £2m by selling shares to strengthen the business, create a new brand within it and open three further sites. Usher said on Twitter the group has got its "eye on a few sites" for the Joya concept, which he hopes to launch this year, and plans to sell a retail range of Elite Bistros' red wine gravy.

The winner of the 2021 Restaurateur of the Year – Independent Catey said the Crowdcube raise would launch on 4 April. Last year, the group also crowdfunded the launch of an event catering business.

The Caterer

On 13 May 2022, Josh Barrie of Code Hospitality (www.codehospitality.co.uk) reported about Gary Usher's new venture,

The news of Usher’s new venture created ripples in the hospitality trade, all eager to discover more. Speaking in May 2022 he said, “We’ve got a place lined up in Churton. It’s a freehold, so we’re taking over and refurbishing. We’re going to add five rooms and operate as a B&B, though that’s still being planned. I think people want good food in the area. Come, stay, go for a long walk and have something to eat. It won’t be a classic Elite Bistros-style menu. You’ll still know it’s us but it’ll be much more pubby. And we want to keep locals happy”

In July 2022, Kevin Mountford of WHAM pasted on Facebook;

Great news as it finally looks like the White Horse will soon be open again! As W.H.A.M we aimed to keep the pub out of the hands of developers and regardless of whether it became a community pub or one with a friendly owner it didn’t matter. We now welcome Gary & his team and let’s make sure we all catch up for a drink and support our village pub!!’

There was much work to do if Gary was to bring the White Horse up to standard, so as to serve the community with a quality establishment which paying customers had come to expect from Elite Bistros. He intended to carry out much of the work himself, partly due to the cost, but mainly as it was part of the process from which he derives great satisfaction.

Nevertheless, funds were still required, and after a false start, he opted for a Kickstarter (crowdfunding) venture to bring in the necessary revenue to fit out the pub and bring the plan to fruition.

He set a target of £200,000 to be raised over a week, which he publicised on social media. In fact, his regular posts on Twitter to his following of over 26,000 kept them informed - and continues to do so - of the day to day updates of progress.

Astonishingly, the target was reached in less than two days.

Katherine Price once again reported the news in The Caterer. On 8 November 2022 she wrote,

Gary Usher's White Horse crowdfund closes exceeding target

Gary Usher's latest crowdfund has closed, exceeding a £200,000 target to raise a total of £223,748 with 1,352 backers. Usher posted on Twitter: "Doing a Kickstarter for this project was never the plan, but perhaps it should have been. Some things I guess are meant to be. Thank you, I hope we make you all proud."

The Kickstarter target was reached in just 24 hours, with the funds going towards refurbishing and reopening Elite Bistros' first pub, the White Horse in Churton, Cheshire. The pub is hoped to open in the new year with bedrooms planned for 2024. The crowdfund was a "plan B" after Usher cancelled an equity-based crowdfund, the group's first equity-based crowdfund, which raised more than £500,000 of a £750,000 target but did not reach the target figure.

The winner of last year's Restaurateur of the Year – Independent Catey, Usher is no stranger to crowdfunding, having raised £744,796 between 2015 and 2021 (exceeding the set target every time) to grow to six bistros and an events company, all offering approachable, affordable, quality modern bistro food. He now employs 150 people and the business has an annual turnover of £6m. The business also has plans for a new tapas concept, Joya, and is developing the first floor of Deva House, the Elite Bistro Events headquarters in Chester, for a development and masterclass kitchen.

Elite Bistros' sites include Sticky Walnut in Hoole, Chester, the first solo restaurant for Usher, which opened in 2011; Burnt Truffle in Heswall on the Wirral, which opened in July 2015; Hispi in Didsbury, south Manchester; Wreckfish in Liverpool; Pinion in Prescot; and Kala in Manchester, which opened in 2019. All sites apart from Sticky Walnut were crowdfunded.

The Caterer




The Refurb Begins

Within days of getting the keys Gary was on site from early morning, taking on the clear-up of the neglected pub, with intentions to carry out as a much of the work as possible to reduce further outlay. Then to his surprise, and from almost the beginning, locals began to call in to offer their help, so keen were they to see their beloved pub open once more. They brought a myriad of skills, and tools - and if a part of the job couldn’t be done by them, they knew someone who could.



Manchester Evening News

Inside Gary Usher’s new pub in Cheshire
that's a proper village boozer

by Ben Arnold - 15 Jan 2023

“I feel like a bit of a loser sometimes,” says Gary Usher, standing in the car park of his new pub in Churton, a pretty hamlet near Chester. “I see some people, chefs, people in the restaurant world, and they just seem to look incredible, and everything’s so neat, and they always look really smart in suits and things. And I think ‘why am I always covered in s**t’?”

To be honest, he is not covered in that much s**t, but he looks like he could have been here for months. Probably because he has. He’s got a bit of a ratty black fleece on, a woolly hat, steel toe cap work boots and trackies, so I get where he's coming from. But the loser bit? Some might take issue with that, even if he doesn’t.

The chef proprietor behind a host of award-winning restaurants, from Kala on King Street, Hispi in Didsbury, Wreckfish in Liverpool, Sticky Walnut in Hoole, Pinion in Prescot and Burnt Truffle in Heswall - not to mention his own catering business and the cook-at-home spin off - has gone from strength to strength in recent years, in an industry beset on all sides by challenges.

So loser? Not so much. He’s done all this by getting his hands dirty. He’s been involved in all the manual work of the fit-outs of all his restaurants, since day one. But the White Horse project has been something else entirely.

The reclaimed bar at The White Horse

It’s been pretty overwhelming, and for lots of reasons. Firstly, the speed in which it all happened. Launching a crowdfunding drive to fund it, he raised the target of £220,000 in just 24 hours, £27,000 of which landed in the first five minutes.

He takes people’s money very seriously indeed, and so he’s been at the pub every day since last August. “I’m painter, cleaner, general skivvy,” he says. “I can’t tell you how many times I’m going to the tip. Every bit of fence out here, I’ve painted, all the tables in there, I’ve painted, all the walls in there, I’ve painted. The bar, I’ve painted. I f**king hate painting, and I’m s**t at it!

“But we can’t be paying someone to paint a fence in the car park, because I can do that. We’ve saved thousands and thousands of pounds by me and Matt doing everything. He’s a very peculiar man, in that he’s so multi-skilled.”

Matt is Matt Shaw, Gary’s managing director of his company Elite Bistros, and when I arrive at the pub, he’s got some pliers in his hand and he’s bending some metal beading behind the bar. Matt also plumbed in the new loos, and knows everything from electrics to kitchen fitting, the equipment for which is going to take the lion’s share of the budget.

Gary and his MD Matt Shaw

So, with that in mind, the pub has been brought together with a host of reclaimed materials, begged, borrowed, though hopefully not stolen. Like a pair of chandeliers second hand from Widnes, while the wood for the bar was bought from a lady in Southport off Facebook Marketplace. “I know people who would spend £15,000 on a bar alone, this cost me a couple of hundred quid,” he says. In time, he wants to have rooms upstairs too, but first things first.

The pub is just a few minutes’ drive from where his parents live, so Gary had driven past it countless times, and been in it a few times too, under previous landlords, though he always thought it could be so much better. It closed down as lockdown hit, and never reopened. Then there were plans submitted to redevelop it into flats, a move that spurred the local community into action.

“The community here is f**king amazing,” he says. “After the pub was put up for sale, the community put this bid in to buy it, to stop it being developed, and then between them, a group of about 20 of them started to plan to actually do it. They were really going for it, really impressive.

Work in progress in the back dining room

“I was a bit nervous, because I knew the community had tried to develop it themselves, and I was worried that there would be a group of people who didn’t want me to do it. I couldn’t have been more wrong.”

Within days of getting the keys and starting to clear up the neglected hostelry, locals started coming out of the woodwork. They were offering to help, and - and this still seems to baffle Gary - they wanted nothing in return.

Now he’s got a whole group of new friends and neighbours, salt of the earth folk who will not only be his regulars, but who will have put their own sweat into transforming the place.

Kevin, who lives opposite, who was involved in the community bid. Then there’s Steve, who made the bar and knocked him up a log store out of an old fence, among dozens of other jobs. Grant, who turned up on the first day and offered him as many tools as he needed. Gearóid who sourced some old parquet flooring and fitted it for him. Paul, who lives just round the corner, turned up one day to say hello and just kept turning up.

“These people have loads of other stuff on. But they just kept calling their mates to help out,” says Gary. “They don’t want payment, not a penny, I’ve offered. I’ve offered them free meals at the other restaurants. Paul, after going to Sticky Walnut, sent me a picture a few days later to say he’d had a great dinner. I asked him why he didn’t tell me he was going, and he said ‘because you’d have tried to pay for it’.

“This is what it’s been like. It feels a bit cheesy talking about it, but that’s what’s happened. A lady makes lunch for us, she drops off soup. It’s endless. John, a farmer from just over the way, him and his son have picked up tons of earth for us. They all just want to be part of it, and want to see it open again.

“In places like this, pubs can become massively important community spaces. You get maybe an older gent, who lives on his own. He might come down for a pint, but that’s probably not what he’s coming for, he’s coming to see people. That’s what it’s about.”

What it’s also about will be the food, which he ‘hopes’ will be good. “Some people think we do fancy food,” he says. “We don’t do fancy food.” As if to accent this, he’s feverishly excited about the chips. And rightly so, being the absolute cornerstone of any decent pub menu.

Earlier this week, like a child on Christmas morning, he posted footage of his new ‘potato rumbler’ on Twitter, the machine that will be peeling and chipping thousands upon thousands of chips every week.

“It’s just something that we believe in so much,” he says. Of the chips. And you just know he means it. So whatever the menu ends up serving, whether it's his now-famous featherblade of beef, as seen at Hispi, or other pub classics, as long as he’s focussing on the chips, all will be right with the world. But, for the time being, there’s still much to do. He hopes they’ll be open by the tail end of February. At the moment, there’s no kitchen, though the room is ready for it all to start going in, and like all these projects, once the end is in sight, things start to move very quickly.

“People ask ‘is it going to be a gastro pub?’,” he says. “That’s not what I want it to be. It’s a horrible word. We’re just a pub, and I hope we’ll do great food. That’s all I want to be.”

Ben Arnold - Manhester Evening News







With a Twitter following of over 26,000, plus more on Facebook and Instagram, Gary kept everyone updated with his daily posts of how the work was going, with occasional video 'walk-throughs'. Prominent throughout, as well as his complete involvement in the all aspects of the manual work required, was the regular visits and help from new neighbours and village community in Churton.

The photos are from the White Horse Twitter account, where many more can be viewed if you give them a follow by clicking the above Twitter header.

Gary Usher is on @GaryUsher_

White Horse Opening Menu

Click for full size



Gallery of 2022-23 Renovations


The White Horse Reopens

Finally, on 2 February 2023, Gary Usher went online to announce the opening of The White Horse on 3 March, which would be proceeded by a launch party for all those who supported the funding appeal and all involved in the refurb work. A new chapter had begun in this much-loved village pub.



Click for White Horse website

thewhitehorsechurton.co.uk




The White Horse History













Researched and written by Mike Royden


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