Henry Bott (1810-1888)
The longest serving landlord of the Angel Hotel in Bourne was Henry Bott who presided as mine host for 50 years in the middle
part of the 19th century during which time he became one of the town's most highly respected and influential
persons.
He was born at the Angel Hotel on 15th October 1810 when it was owned by
his father, also Henry Bott, and when he died in 1838, his son succeeded as landlord.
Mr Bott senior had bought the Angel at auction in 1807 when it was a quaint old stone building, an ancient hostelry then used as
a posting house at which the Perseverance stage coach plying between Hull and London stopped regularly. Under the patronage of
father and later his son, the Angel evolved as an important market town hotel and during this period, the foundations of the business that we know today were laid. Bott junior was untiring in his endeavours for
the business and for the town and both prospered as a result of his association with them.
Henry Bott's interests were diverse and the 1851 census lists him as an innkeeper and maltster making his own beer, as well as being a farmer with 60 acres of land, employing an odd job man, a boy, a housekeeper, a boot man, cook, waitress and barmaid.
In 1856, he became a director of the newly formed Bourne and Essendine Railway Company and he was also prominent in civic life and was for a time chairman of the Vestry Meeting that administered local affairs, the forerunner of the local councils that were introduced in the late 19th century. He took a prominent part in all local affairs and was always at the forefront of any enterprise that concerned the welfare of the town.
His main social interest was as a freemason
and he was instrumental in the formation of the present Hereward Lodge (No
1232) that now has its own headquarters building in Wherry's Lane. There was no
permanent meeting place at that time and Mr Bott arranged for a room at
the Angel Hotel to be set aside for that purpose. The Stamford Mercury
reported on 13th November 1868:
A
Provincial Grand Lodge of Emergency in connection with the ancient
fraternity of free and accepted Masons was held at the Angel Hotel on the
9th inst. for the purpose of dedicating and consecrating a new masonic
hall, to be denominated "Hereward Lodge". In the absence of the
Duke of St Albans, R W., Provincial Grand Master, the W Deputy-provincial
Grand Master was present, together with a goodly company of the brethren
from various towns in the province as well as out of it. The newly-created
lodge bids fair to take a respectable position amongst the various lodges
in the parish. After the ceremonial was concluded, Mr Bott supplied a
sumptuous banquet, which was partaken of by 40 of the brethren.
But perhaps his most lasting legacy to the town was the introduction of street lighting. He was, in conjunction with William Wherry senior, one of the original promoters of the Bourne Gas Light and Coke Company in 1840 which built the town's gas works and soon, coal gas was not only being used for heating and lighting in homes, shops and business premises, but also for street lighting.
This was in the main due to the insistence of Henry Bott who wanted to see the streets safe and well lit at night for the benefit of townspeople. The movement for the introduction of gas lighting in the town centre met with considerable and influential opposition but Bott's resolute perseverance triumphed over all obstacles and by 1885 there were 56 public gas lamps at various points around the town which had never previously been lighted at night. Kelly's
Directory of Lincolnshire reported: "The town consists principally of four streets diverting from the Market Place, all remarkably clean and lighted with gas."
Henry Bott was not merely a committee man because he also served for 25 years as the town's gas inspector. He was also
deeply religious and a regular worshipper at Bourne Abbey where he officiated as the parish churchwarden.
It was in this capacity that he was mainly responsible for the alterations
to the Abbey Church which were carried out in 1870 and involved moving the
organ gallery and extensions to the north aisle at a total cost of
£1,200, financed by public subscription. The work was already being
planned by Mr Bott and the church architects, together with a committee of
21 parishioners, when he was re-elected parish churchwarden for the fifth
successive year at the Easter vestry meeting on Monday 13th April 1868 and
tributes were paid to his diligence and perseverance, particularly in
regard to the project in hand.
Bott died at the hotel on 7th July 1888 at the age of 77. The entire town mourned his passing and shops and businesses closed while his funeral was taking place. After a service at the Abbey Church, principal tradesmen
and fellow members of the Hereward Lodge of Freemasons joined the imposing funeral cortege as it moved down South Street on its way to
the cemetery where he was buried in a graveside ceremony and his body now lies under a grand marble
cross mounted on a triple plinth.
Buried with him are his sister Sarah Bott (12th January 1801-7th July 1861),
his wife Hannah Howett Bott (25th March 1833-13th June 1885) and a son Edmund Samuel Bott (15th September 1863-10th March
1867).
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After Henry Bott's death, ownership of the Angel Hotel passed
to another son, Mr Arthur Bott, who had been born in 1855, but he was not
a fit man, having suffered serious injuries when his trap overturned in
1885 and he lay in a critical condition for several days and never fully
recovered. Arthur Bott died in
1899 at the young age of 44 and is buried in the cemetery alongside his
father.
The hotel was then put up for sale, so ending the association of
the Bott family with the business that had lasted for almost 100 years.
The property was offered at auction on Thursday 24th August 1899 and
although the saleroom at the hotel was full, it remained unsold. Bidding
was far from brisk, starting at £2,000 and, proceeding very slowly,
reached £3,850 [£250,000 at today's values] at which price, there being no further offers, it was
withdrawn by the auctioneer, Mr Arthur Saul, the last bidder being Mr W W
Copeland, formerly of the Red Lion Hotel at Spalding. The hotel was
subsequently sold privately for an undisclosed sum to a
retired army officer, Veterinary-Major W W Townson, who took over the hotel in October
1901.
None of Henry Bott's other family had followed the licensed trade, his eldest son for instance, also called Henry, had become a
surgeon, qualifying in 1872 and later practising at Brentford in
Middlesex, while his third son, Herbert Bott MA, took holy orders, being
ordained on 20th December 1885 by the Bishop of Newcastle and then became
a curate at South Shields.
See also The
Angel Hotel The Abbey Church
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