1
Sign for the Jolly Huntsman
Jolly has long been a popular word with pub-namers, suggesting as it does someone who is of lively and happy disposition, jovial, laughing loudly as someone does who is slightly, but pleasantly, intoxicated
Image: © Maigheach-gheal
Taken: 1 Jul 2009
0.01 miles
2
The Kington Club
Village affairs are discussed over a meal and a sip or two.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 29 May 2021
0.01 miles
3
The Jolly Huntsman, Kington St Michael
The inn dates from the late 18th century and is a Grade II listed building.
Image: © Maigheach-gheal
Taken: 1 Jul 2009
0.01 miles
4
Pub Sign, Kington St Michael
For The Jolly Huntsman, good roast dinner on a Sunday
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 28 Mar 2010
0.02 miles
5
Either way in to the Jolly Huntsman
The pub is a freehold and has won awards for its beers and ales.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 29 May 2021
0.02 miles
6
The Jolly Huntsman, Kington St Michael
An acclaimed pub in the village high street, the Jolly Huntsman was originally an eighteenth century building that became a brewery called The White Horse Brewery in the nineteenth, then the White Hart. It converted to being an inn quite naturally but the name 'Jolly Huntsman' was adopted in the 1970s.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 29 May 2021
0.02 miles
7
Cafe, The Street, Kington St Michael, Wiltshire 2015
Image: © Ray Bird
Taken: 10 Sep 2015
0.02 miles
8
Only on one side
The main road through Kington St Michael is mainly kept free of parked cars on the west side by notices, rather than yellow lines.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 29 May 2021
0.02 miles
9
2009 : Narcissi, Kington St. Michael
Hope it is not an injustice to Kington St.Michael calling it a dormitory village, it was pretty quiet when I was there, and this is the main road.
Image: © Maurice Pullin
Taken: 11 Apr 2009
0.03 miles
10
Lyte's almshouses
In 1612, Isaac Lyte (the grandfather of noted antiquarian John Aubrey) was born in the village. He later became an alderman of the City of London and left the princely sum of £600 for the construction of almshouses here. Completed in 1675, they were to provide a home for six poor unmarried men of the parishes of Kington St Michael and Kington Langley. Thus they remain almost unchanged, apart from the restoration of the 1960s, which added bathrooms; in 2008, extensions were made to assist disabled tennants.
Image: © Neil Owen
Taken: 29 May 2021
0.03 miles