| The Bottom Shop  
                     The Abbey Inn has long been known locally as the 'Bottom 
                      Shop.' In the old days a pub was also a shop and the term 
                      is still used by the licensing trade. It first got a public 
                      house licence in 1897 when Alexander Henderson was the licensee. 
                      Charles Lumsden took over in 1900 and he had it until 1909 
                      when John Romans let it to William Walker. Mr. Walker, however, 
                      had a little difficulty getting the licence transferred 
                      to his name. William Stark, janitor at Newbattle School, 
                      arid Rob King, farmer, objected at the Licensing Court meeting 
                      and tried to get the licence withdrawn. A letter had been 
                      delivered to 800 householders in Newtongrange and the surrounding 
                      district by the temperance societies. The following is a 
                      copy of the letter.  
                    
                       
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                           NEWTONGRANGE 30th March, 1909.  
                          Dear Sir or Madam,  
                            As it is now generally recognised that the question 
                            of the continuance or non-continuance of licenses 
                            to sell drink in any locality is a question that should 
                            be settled by the voice of the people; we, the undersigned, 
                            respectfully invite the householders of Newtongrange 
                            and surrounding districts, in view of the forthcoming 
                            licensing courts to take advantage of the enclosed 
                            form to indicate their mind on the above question 
                            so that the licensing Magistrate may be assisted and 
                            guided in the with-holding and granting of licenses 
                           
                          (Rev.) ALEXANDER HARDIE. President of Newbattle U.F. 
                            Total Abstinence Society. 
                            JAMES TAYLOR. President of Newbattle Band of Hope. 
                             
                            GEORGE PHILIP Chief Ruler of the Rechabites, Newtongrange 
                             
                            ALEX. LECKIE Chief Templar of "Guiding Star" 
                            Lodge, Newtongrange 
                            GEORGE WOOD Right Worshipful Patriarch, Sons of Temperance, 
                            Newtongrange.  
                          N.B. To be called for in a day or two. Please fill 
                            up and sign.  
                          VOTING FORM  
                          1 Prohibitory Resolution(means that no certificate 
                            for the sale of excisable liquors shall be granted). 
                           
                          2 Limiting Resolution(means that the number of certificates 
                            for sale of excisable liquors shall be reduced).  
                          3 No Change Resolution(means that the existing conditions 
                            shall continue)  
                          Please indicate your vote by making a X in the right 
                            hand space opposite the Resolution for which you vote. 
                           
                          Signature of the Householders.......................................................... 
                           
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                    The results of the poll were read out at the Licensing 
                      Court meeting. 299 forms were returned signed and properly 
                      filled up and of these 81 voted for no change in the licenses, 
                      44 voted for limited licences and 174 voted for total prohibition. 
                      Counsel for the objectors claimed that this was "an 
                      overwhelming majority" in favour of prohibition. This 
                      was not accepted by the court, nor did the court think that 
                      two public houses was too many for a population of 5,000 
                      "almost entirely composed of members of the mining 
                      trade." Mr. Walker was granted his licence unanimously. 
                     
                    There was a letter from an anonymous correspondent in the 
                      Dalkeith Advertiser during the course of the licensing controversy, 
                      demanding to know the turnover of the Dean. Part of the 
                      letter read, "The conscience of the community has been 
                      debauched by the bribes and doles distributed by the "Reformed" 
                      Public House establishment in the place."  
                    In 1910 there was a fight in the Abbey Inn between a waiter 
                      and two East Calder miners over the price of a dozen bottles 
                      of beer. During the disturbance the waiter got a black eye. 
                      Two days later the two miners were seen passing the Abbey 
                      Inn going towards Newbattle. Mr. Lumsden and the waiter 
                      followed the men down the Peth and gave then a hammering. 
                      Mr. Lumsden was fined £3 and the waiter, John Kerr, 
                      0 for their actions.  
                    Mr. Walker bought the licensed grocer's shop at Hope House 
                      on Newbattle Road from John Stout in 1915. You could only 
                      have one licence at a time in those days and so Walker put 
                      Tom Hackett in the grocer's as manager and licensee. Torn 
                      Hackett was Mr. Walker's "guid brother" - they 
                      were married to two sisters.  
                    Jim Barton worked in Hackett's as a boy. He remembers, 
                      "The beer came in barrels and we bottled it, like o' 
                      stout and Bass. We bottled that in the grocer's and we harried 
                      it up tae the Bottom Shop. Bass had tae lie about four tae 
                      six weeks before ye could really take the cork oot tae let 
                      a' the sediment drap tae the bottom, then it wis a' clear. 
                      As sin as ye yaised that barrel ye bottled another yin an' 
                      pit the bottles at he side o' it - bottled on such and such 
                      a day - and by the time ye got that sellt this yin wis ready. 
                      It wisnae long in goin'. A lot o' folk drunk Bass then. 
                      After that they tried draught Bass but it widnae take and 
                      then it yaist tae gaun off in hot weather. Ye had it in 
                      the cellar an' ye'd tae keep cold bags on the tap o' it 
                      - a gless o' cauld water on it. That wis tae cool it doon 
                      or it wid go. When ye did start tae bottle it ye daurny 
                      stop. Ah did that when ah wis bottlin' it first - ah didnae 
                      ken, of course - an' ah got a slap on the mooth for it. 
                      That wis Walker. Tae pit the Bass oot ye'd tae hud the bottle 
                      a certain way and watch it fillin' afore the sediment came 
                      and then stop. That was yer bottle o' Bass and that was 
                      6d a bottle. Now, Bass is different. Ye can turn Bass oot. 
                      There's nae ingredients in it noo."  
                    Jim Barton recalls some of Mr. Walker's business practices: 
                      "An* then he got in as much sugar an' he got in a barrel 
                      o' treckle an' a barrel o' seerup an' ye had tae take 5/- 
                      worth o' messages before ye got a pund o' treckle or seerup 
                      or a pund o' sugar."  
                    Jim later went to work in the Bottom Shop under Mr. Walker 
                      "He was a great man! He never drunk. He had a bottle 
                      o' cold tea on the side an' a traveller came in an' he would 
                      say, "Ye'll take a dram, Mr. Walker an' gee the boy 
                      a shilling. The shilling went intae the till an' he would 
                      take his gless - but his gless o' tea- and cherge him the 
                      full price o' it. he never drunk."  
                    The Bottom Shop's opening hours were from 4 pm. to 9 pm. 
                      after 1915. Jim Barton remembers. "During the First 
                      War I've seen them standing there at half past three, richt 
                      up tae the White Gates in a queue waitin' tae get in at 
                      fewer o' clock. But Walker was richt cute efter that. He 
                      went an' got a licence for tae sell drink. Ye could order 
                      it an' ah could carry it oot intae the coo park - that's 
                      where the Legion is now. They used tae come an' order half 
                      a dozen bottles o' beer and a gill o' whisky, ye ken, and 
                      I hid tae take it oot.  
                    Walker, he used tae open the door at fower o' clock and 
                      on the coon-ter wis a gless o' whisky an' a pint o' beer, 
                      a gless o' whisky and a pint o' beer, repeated richt doon 
                      a' the coonter. Ah stood at the door - ah was only a young 
                      laddie - and let them in and coonted them. Ah let in so 
                      many an they drank their gless o' whisky and their pint 
                      o' beer an oot they went an' in came another crowd. By the 
                      time they were goin' oot they were fillin' up the glesses 
                      again.  
                    There were 54 gallon hoggets* (hogshead) and Walker used 
                      tae bottle it - half pint bottles - an' at a certain time 
                      at night the beer went off. Only bottled beer left 6d. a 
                      bottle. He was makin' 3d off every pint. He had 80 dozen 
                      bottles ready. An' he bottled it off o' the fraught beer 
                      an' that wis what he din.  
                    A lot o' whisky came in bottles but Walker boucht it in 
                      bulk. He reduced it his ainsel'. Six big barrels at the 
                      top o' the bar and we pumped it intae the barrels an' it 
                      had four wee taps. It was Walker's Special. Ye got it over 
                      the proof. Ye reduced it to 70 by addin' water.  
                    Then the tramps used tae come in there wi' their jeely 
                      jars for beer. There was a man wi' a dug's collar. He had 
                      a big collar right up tae his neck like a minister." 
                     
                    Mr. Walker had bought the Bottom Shop from the trustees 
                      of the late John Romans in 1918 and in 1923 he sold it to 
                      the Lothian Coal Co, who owned it for the next 25 years. 
                      During that time the licencees were the Montgomerys, who 
                      owned Woolleys' of Dalkeith, the lemonade manufacturers. 
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