Possibly England's oldest hotel!
The Old Bell stands on the top of a hill and, apart from the Abbey,
is the highest building in Malmesbury. It is not surprising, therefore,
that there were fortifications on the site many hundreds of years
ago. There was probably a Saxon castle, but these were generally built
of wood and any evidence of occupation prior to the 12th century has
now disappeared.
Probably the stone fortification was that erected by Bishop Roger
Poore of Sarum, about 1130, in the reign of Henry I. The only certain
remains of this castle are in the wall immediately to the west of
the gazebo at the end of the garden.
One local historian believes that the central part of The Old Bell
was formed from the castle after the grant of king John in 1216 to
demolish it.
However the claim to be England's oldest hotel rests on the premise
that an almost completely new building was erected around 1220 by
Walter Loring (Abott from 1208 to 1244). Its function was to entertain
important guests; the Abbey was then one of the most important seats
of learning in England.
As far as it is known The Old Bell has been continuously in use as
a place of entertainment since that time and it is on the basis of
this 770 years of service to the community that it is considered to
be England's oldest hotel.
But to return to King John's time… important visitors to the
Old Bell would not have entered at the front where there are the remains
of a stone spiral staircase, but from the rear.
They would have climbed an external covered stairway to enter one
of the two halls which stretched upwards from the first floor right
to the apex of the roof - some thirty feet. In medieval times this
must indeed have been impressive; the greater of these two halls was
heated by a stone hooded fireplace similar to the one in the present
Great Hall. The only remains of this are now the fluted columns which
supported it, part of the hearth which can be seen in the ceiling
of the Great Hall and the carved stone string course which is visible
inside and outside George Moore on the second floor. In the loft there
are remnants of wall paintings on either side of the chimney breast
dating from the same period.
The principle medieval feature left is the stone hooded fireplace
in the Great Hall. Details of its discovery in 1986 are given on the
wall alongside it. There are only a dozen or so examples left from
this period and this one is unique in being in an inhabited building
and on the ground floor. There is no satisfactory explanation as to
why it was built there at all, because the ground floor was the domain
of the servants who would scarcely have been thought worthy of the
extravagance of a fireplace, let alone one as expensive as this one
must have been.
Apart from the walls themselves, the other original 13th Century features
are some of the timbers above the Great Hall, and the window on the
first floor immediately above the rear entrance (best seen from outside).
This was probably inserted by the Abbott Colerne towards the end of
the 13th Century.
Up to the late 15th Century the extent of the guest house was from
the present Farmers Bar wall through to the end of the Lounge. A further
house was then added to the East for the Steward of the Abbey. For
some reason that is not clear, the east wall of the guest house was
demolished at that time.
Still later in the 17th century, the two upper halls were divided
into two floors with a loft above and the roof appeared in its present
form. Features remaining from this middle period of the Old Bell's
life are the circular staircase at the East End, the window in the
sitting room of John Rushout, the large fluted beams in the Athelstan
Suite which continue through into Loring, and the fireplace in the
residents' sitting room.
The Old Bell reached its present stage of development in 1908 when
Joseph Moore is reported to have found a cache of gold and with it
built the Edwardian extension which now forms the Farmers Bar, , Dining
room and the ten bedrooms above them; built what is now the Den and
was in 1908 the kitchen, bought Castle House (the former Steward's
House) and sundry other properties and refurbished all of this. The
story of "Abbey gold" has been viewed with scepticism, but
in today's prices all the works he carried out must have cost between
£500,000- £1 million, and it has to be explained how a
small innkeeper raised such a large sum if he did not find the gold.
An interesting fact about the spiral staircase at the East End is
that it rotates in the opposite way to those in a castle, reason being
that in an area that requires fortification the spiral staircase descends
anticlockwise, so leaving the "sword arm" free for fighting
the enemy. A staircase that descends in the clockwise direction, as
in the case of the Old Bell, denotes men of peace.