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Posted By: uptoncx 632 Red Cat, Brimstage - 8th Jan 2009 5:50pm
The Red Cat in Brimstage about 1910
Indexed happy

[Linked Image]

This (and in fact the village of Brimstage) was known in Tranmere as the "Three Mile Limit", as it was three miles from Tranmere and this entitled you to be called a traveller and to demand food and drink when the Inn was closed.


Posted By: Anonymous Re: 632 Red Cat, Brimstage - 16th Feb 2010 3:34pm
Dates back to about 1850 and was demolished in 1931-32.



Attached picture Red_Cat_Brimstage_Road.jpg
Posted By: MikeMcGWirral Re: 632 Red Cat, Brimstage - 26th Mar 2014 6:12pm
Are those 2 pics of the same building?
Doesn't look like it to me -
2 chimneys on 1, 1 on other
2 storeys on 1, 1 on other.

The bottom pic looks more like the school house(?) on the green, on Brimstage Road in the village, but I'd have to check for sure.

Interesting bit about the 3 mile limit.
Posted By: granny Re: 632 Red Cat, Brimstage - 26th Mar 2014 10:30pm
You are correct. It is the old school house at Brimstage.
Here's another..

Description
English: The old school house, Green Bank, Brimstage, Wirral, Merseyside, England.

Date 9 June 2013, 11:23:40
Source Own work
Author Rept0n1x


Attached picture 800px-The_old_school_house_at_Brimstage_(3).jpg
Posted By: granny Re: 632 Red Cat, Brimstage - 26th Mar 2014 10:34pm
The original inn of that name [Red Cat] stood in the village of Brimstage until it was demolished to make room for the village hall erected in 1932 by Lord Leverhulme. The village is overlooked by Brimstage Hall and its chantry chapel. One of the corbels of the chapel shows a "cat" carved in the red sandstone. The family of Lady Margery de Hulse, who built the chapel in the 14th century, was a branch of the Barons of Montalt, whose coat of arms was a red lion rampant. It is thought that the mason who worked on the chapel had never seen a lion, and, on being informed that it was a member of the cat family, he carved a cat's head with a snarl, or, as it appears, a "grinning Cheshire cat!"

Extract from "The Story of Greasby" by John Williams, 1978

Taken from:http://www.greasby.btck.co.uk/pubs
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