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The Short Version
The
building which we now know as “The
Star and Garter” was conceived in
the same year as was Scotland’s
national bard, Robert Burns. The
year 2009 marked the 250th
anniversary of the poet’s birth –
and also 250 years of Number One,
High Street, Linlithgow:
affectionately known to local
residents as simply “The Star.”
Robert Burns would have travelled
past the entrance to the building on
his visit to Linlithgow in 1787,
entering the town through the East
High Port or Gateway, its position
now marked by brass studs in the
roadway just outside the hotel. The
stately, three storey, Georgian
mansion was the home of the rich
Boyd family – merchants and ship
owners. Between 1818 and 1830 John
Boyd was Provost of Linlithgow and
it is his property which is marked
on John Wood’s 1820 map of the
burgh.


The
original house boasted six bedrooms
and a stately ballroom but, in the
1840s, it was transformed into a
Public House. An 1847 invoice shows
it belonging to James Burleigh who,
in addition to running the “Star and
Garter Hotel”, also hired out Gigs,
Droskies (low, four-wheeled
carriages), and Post Horses. The
horses would have been kept in
stables - clearly marked on the mid
19th century OS map. Some of the
steeds would have been used to pull
the Edinburgh to Linlithgow Post
Chaise which would use the Star and
Garter as a coaching inn. The
hostelry was also in an excellent
position to accommodate travellers
using the new Edinburgh to Glasgow
railway which, from the year 1842,
passed right above the building.
“The Star and Garter” in fact would
have been an archetypal railway
hotel – in the style of many across
the country at that time. In the
1860s, the building fell into the
hands of the Whitten family.
Innkeeper John Whitten is buried
beneath an elaborate headstone in
the graveyard of St Michael’s
Church.
Other 19th century publicans
included John Maddox whose invoices
advertised “Wines, Carriages and
Post Horses” and T. M. Woodcock . Mr
Woodock was a great supporter of the
Linlithgow and Stirlingshire Hunt
and the huntsmen would regularly
meet outside his inn. The horses
would be stabled in the area to the
east of the building, where the
small car park now exists. The
horses would be brought by train
from Haymarket and Ratho Stations
and unloaded in the goods yard at
Linlithgow Station. The group would
also hold their Hunt Ball in the
Star and Garter. One such dinner,
held in April, 1856, saw 80 members
sit down under the chairmanship of
Major Sharp of Houston to pay
tribute to the Master of the Hounds,
Captain James Sandilands. It must
have made a glorious show as
everyone attending was dressed in
regulation attire of “white
waistcoat, over-worn with blue coat
with black velvet, turn-down collars
and yellow buttons embossed with the
letters LSH.” If anyone turned up
wearing the wrong dress code they
were fined a gallon of best claret!
In 1882 Linlithgowshire Bowling
Association was inaugurated at a
meeting at the hotel (In 1999 it was
renamed West Lothian Bowling
Association).
By 1921 the Star and Garter had
moved out of Woodcock hands and was
being run by Mrs V. M’Minn, a
widowed lady who advertised in the
Marches Programme that she would
give “every comfort and attention”
to all customers “at moderate
charges.” In the 1930s and 40s, the
hostelry was run by George Ebbs and
then by the legendary “Miffy” Boyd.
No one seemed to know his real name
- he was always “Miffy” – apparently
after a well known, 1920s, cartoon
character. He was a tiny man, but
with a huge character: a town
councillor and, by all accounts, his
one abiding passion was the
provision of a good water supply for
the burgh. The hotel was then
purchased by the Pearce family whose
adverts included their new telephone
number “Linlithgow 26”, and declared
that the establishment was AA and
RAC approved.
Ronnie Pearce, the son of the
original owners, ran the pub in the
50s and early 60s. He was a
well-liked figure in the town, a
keen cricketer who played for the
County team. ‘The Star’ was able to
take advantage of the old “Bona
Fide” drinking laws which declared
that one could not drink on a Sunday
in one’s own local hotel. In order
to consume alcohol, you had to be a
traveller, voyaging at least three
miles from home. Thus it was that
the residents of Bridgend would
congregate in the Star on a Sunday
evening and engage in singing - as
many had done in their days as shale
miners.
In the mid 1960s, the Star became
the property of local character,
David Bryce. He was a generous
landlord who held many excellent
social gatherings on the premises.
The “back lounge” became a favourite
haunt of members of local groups –
and much clandestine business was
conducted. In the late 60s a band of
enthusiasts began discussing the
possibility of resurrecting the
Rugby Club which had initially set
up in the 1920s. Eventually, in
1970, Linlithgow Rugby Club was duly
instituted in the back room of ‘The
Star’.
The building changed hands again in
the 1970s. In 1975, the new owner,
Hugh Keenan, announced in the
Marches programme that the
establishment was “undergoing a
period of complete restoration which
when complete will re-establish the
hotel as one of the best in West
Lothian.” What did emerge was a
completely revamped bar area. Away
went the old back room and in came a
new restaurant called El Rancho.
Upstairs, Bowlers Discotheque
emerged - an attraction to many of
the younger members of the
community.
The Star was to change hands again
in the late twentieth and in the
early twenty-first century – being
owned firstly by a syndicate which
also ran the Kaim Park Hotel in
Bathgate and then by Bill and Doreen
Atkinson who transformed the hotel,
upgrading all 15 bedrooms and
consequently being awarded a three
star rating from “Visit Scotland”
Tourist Association. The Star is now
owned by John Bartlett who is proud
to be in charge of a building which
has featured prominently in the
town’s life for a quarter of a
millennium.
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