Tinner's Arms
The Tinner's Arms is a Grade II-listed traditional Cornish pub in Zennor, Cornwall. The name is derived from the Tinners, with records of tin extraction in the area dating back to Tudor times.[1] D. H. Lawrence stayed for a fortnight in the pub in 1916.[2][3] The pub sign pictures a tin miner at work, testimony to its origins. It is the only pub in the village.[4] ArchitectureIt is located opposite St Senara's Church and was supposedly originally built in 1271 to house the masons building the church.[5] There is some disagreement about the age of the building as English Heritage believes it was probably built around the early 18th century and extended in the 19th and 20th centuries. "The building is built of granite rubble with granite moorstone dressings. Grouted or slurried scantle slate roofs. Dressed granite stacks over the original gable ends." It originally had a two-room plan with a larger hall/kitchen to the right and a parlour over lower ground to the left. There may have been an unheated middle room as there is a small blocked window to the right of the doorway. The two rooms have been consolidated into one and the building was extended in the 19th century to the left at right angles to the front.[6] It is described as "all low beams and dark wood" with a "warm fire in the winter", and retains a medieval ambiance.[7] Its specials are "Tinner's" and "Zennor Mermaid" (Sharp's Special).[7] The Daily Telegraph notes its "sleepy, timeless quality and the way it's just not changed in centuries."[8][better source needed] Next door is White House, originally named Bos Cres, or "house in the middle", a Grade II-listed building dated to 1838 and restored in 2005, promoted as accommodation with the pub.[9] Critical receptionThe AA noted:
The Good Pub Guide ranked it 4.5 stars of 5 stating:
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