The Cavalier (formerly the Angel) Inn
Middlegate, Newark, showing the Cavalier inn newly opened in 1965
R. Brown
The building as it is today (2014) - Savers Health & beauty store
Photographed July 2014
A nod to earlier times - Wooden supporting bracket incorporated as a feature on the 1965 building
Photographed July 2014
Above & Below; A selection of trade adverts which appeared at the time of the Cavalier's opening in 1965
Middlegate, Newark-on-Trent
26 Middlegate, Newark (originally 34 Middlegate prior to street re-numbering in c.1891)
Early Records
The earliest record to a pub on this site dates from 1471 where it is mentioned in a deed (Cornelius Brown's History of Newark, Vol.2, p.26). This makes the Angel Newark's third oldest known pub, after the Saracen's Head (1341) and the Old White Hart (1413), both in the Market Place.
An early printed reference to the Angel occurs in Cresswell's Nottingham Journal on 24th May 1783.
Not a coaching inn
The Angel was not one of Newark's coaching inns, but (in 1831) was the pick-up point for a number of local carrier's carts. These were, on Wednesdays, John Jackson's carrier to Bingham, and Lanech Willerth's carrier to Sutton-on-Trent. Then, on Wednesdays and Fridays Thomas Wood's carrier departed from the Angel for Mansfield.
Publicans
1832 - Richard Hemstock
1835 - Richard Hempstock (sic)
1841 - Richard Hemstock
Later History
In 1965 the Angel building was demolished and rebuilt. The new pub was re-christened The Cavalier Inn
The Cavalier closed in the Summer of 2001, and in the following November the Newark Advertiser (23rd Nov. 2001 p.5) reported that it was to be redeveloped at the Savers healt and beauty store.
At the time of writing (July 2014) the premises are still occupied by Savers