The Thieves’ Kitchen is a pub in the centre of the town and borough of Worthing, West Sussex. Established as a public house in the late 20th century, it occupies two early 19th-century listed buildings in the oldest part of the town: a Greek Revival-style former wine merchants premises, and a Neoclassical chapel built for Wesleyan Methodists in 1839. The main part of the pub is in the wine merchants building facing Warwick Street, while the old chapel, facing Bedford Row, serves as its function room. Both buildings have been designated separately as Grade II Listed Buildings.
Roberts and Son Wine Merchants, 10–12 Warwick Street
History
The Roberts family entered the wine trade five years after Worthing was granted the status of a town in 1803—a development which encouraged rapid residential and commercial growth. In 1808, they established their business in a newly built yellow-brick building on the south side of Warwick Street, part of Worthing's old village street and one of the first roads to develop in the town's early years. The premises may have been built by John Rebecca, architect of many of Worthing's early buildings. The business thrived, and a beer and wine shop were added. This was called the Vintners Arms, but it was usually known as the Thieves Kitchen locally—a humorous reference to its popularity with local tradesmen. In the 1830s, the premises were rebuilt in the Greek Revival style, again using the pale brickwork often seen on old buildings in Worthing: the town had many brickworks in the 19th century, and the local clay yielded creamy-yellow bricks. The Roberts family opened another wine bar and restaurant in the town in 1950, and ran it for 36 years. They owned and ran the Vintners Arms as a pub and wine bar until 1977, when they sold it to St George's Taverns Ltd, a pub chain. It has since been renamed the Vintners Parrot and is owned by the Greene King Pub Company. The building was designated a Grade IIListed building on 21 May 1976.
Architecture
The building presents its main façade to Warwick Street, but it also wraps around the street corner to form the top of Bedford Row, one of Worthing's oldest speculative residential developments: a terrace of bow-fronted houses built in 1803 opposite a formal lawn. The Warwick Street elevation has five bays in two discrete parts: the eastern section rises to four storeys and spans three bays, while the two western bays have two storeys and stand slightly forward and separate. Between the modern frontages on the ground floor and the yellowish brick walls, there is a cornice. The windows, most of which are sashes, have various embellishments. Three sash windows on the first floor of the Bedford Row façade have iron balconies with anthemion ornamentation. Most are multi-pane windows with muntins, and those on the first floor have flat hood moulds. There is a larger window on the west corner, topped with a pediment.
Bedford Hall
History
Bedford Hall has a complex history with multiple uses. In 1820, the BrightonCircuit of Wesleyan Methodists extended its reach to Worthing: meetings were held in a private house. Two years later, a chapel was built on Marine Place. The flint building, named Providence Chapel, was used for the next 17 years; but in 1839 Charles Hide was commissioned to design a new place of worship nearby. The Hide family was at the centre of Worthing's architectural, building and surveying industry for 150 years from 1803, when Edward and John Hide went into partnership. Edward's son Charles designed Montague Hall and Worthing's original town hall as well as the chapel. Hide's building, in the Neoclassical style, was finished in 1840, and the congregation moved in. Additions were made in 1847 and 1861, when a school was built on adjacent land. The congregation moved again in June 1900 when a new church was built in Steyne Gardens. After its closure, the name Bedford Hall was adopted and it became a meeting room and auction house. When the National Provincial Bank refurbished its premises in 1967, it moved into Bedford Hall temporarily. It was later occupied by the expanded Vintners Parrot pub, which turned it into a function room. Bedford Hall was also listedat Grade II by English Heritage on 21 May 1976.
Architecture
Hide's building is a stuccoed Neoclassical edifice with distinctive Egyptian-style tapering windows. The façade is dominated by the three windows, all wider at the bottom than the top; the left and right windows are longer and have flat architrave-style hood moulds above them, while the centre window terminates above the door, although the framed surround is carried down to ground level around it. The door therefore tapers from bottom to top as well. Above the windows is a cornice topped by a shallow pediment with a round window.