Peter Manfield, 73, just couldn’t bear the thought of losing his local village 100-year-old pub.
A man who didn’t want to lose his favourite pub re-mortgaged his home to buy it and stop it shutting down. Peter Manfield, 73, could not bear the thought of losing his village local pub, so took out the loan against his house to keep the boozer going.
At the heart of the community for 100 years, The Dog and Donkey in Devon, has lived through much history during World War Two and seen an array of different landlords.
But making the decision to buy it did not come lightly, Mr Manfield explained, as he felt he had to give it a go or risk always living with the regret of it becoming a block of flats.
Mr Manfield said he did not have enough money to buy the pub outright, so he re-mortgaged his house and did it up as much as he could.
Although Mr Manfield, a music teacher and musician, didn’t want to disclose his personal finances, public records show the pub was sold in 2023 for around £270,000.
He said: “We obviously didn’t have enough money to buy a pub so we re-mortgaged our house to buy the pub and technically do it up as much as we could.
“It’s a lovely pub and it’s 100 year old this year and it also saw the Second World War through. It’s a beautiful building and there’s nothing else in the village apart from the village hall.
“To lose its heart would’ve been catastrophic in my opinion and you’ve got nowhere to go.”
Mr Manfield added: “If we didn’t buy it and it was sold it could be made into a block of flats, who knows? And then what have you got?
“You haven’t got history, that history of 100 years is gone and there’s no bringing it back. Of all that history and all that people that have come in here, the old landlords and if you look outside there’s a plaque that it’s the original plaque. This is an original building and we intend to keep this as a traditional English pub that it’s quite unique.”
Mr Manfield, who moved to the village in 1997, explained that the landlord was struggling and he was going to have to get rid of the pub. He added that it could possibly be changed into a block of flats or even be knocked down.
“I am not a big drinker, I might come down once a fortnight or once in 10 days and particularly if I have been working or playing somewhere then I come back and have a drink on the way through just to relax,” Mr Manfield explained.
“It’s just a lovely old building and it is a bit like when it’s gone it’s gone and it was just unacceptable to let it go without a fight. That’s the reason why we borrowed the money on the house to keep the pub.”
He explained that he doesn’t feel like he is the owner of the pub, but instead the keeper.
“I am just keeping it to make sure that it survives,” he added.
Apart from wanting to save the pub for the community, he wanted its story to remain alive. He said: “The bar is very wide and the reason is during the Second World War, G.I.s used to come down for a drink and they used to jump over the bar and try to snog the barmaid.
“The landlord had the bar made wider so they couldn’t jump across. It’s got an original fireplace and an original tiled floor. We would lose all that and what for?”
He added: “There’s also skittle teams here that come in, we have all sorts of people that use the pub for meetings, dog walkers, and the ethos was to keep it a traditional pub.
“It’s not a restaurant that most have become with a pub, this is a pub that does pub food. It’s a traditional pub that in my opinion we had to keep and there was no other way I don’t think.”
Mr Manfield met the current landlord Mark Loftin when he was cutting his hair, and he told him he was thinking about buying a pub. The second time they met, Mr Loftin told him he wouldn’t mind giving it a go as a landlord.
Mr Manfield said: “He’s never run a pub before which is brilliant in many ways before he’s got no baggage and I’d never owned a pub. Without the landlord this pub wouldn’t be here – very lucky to have found him.”
Mr Loftin took the lease over on February 1 2024. He added: “This was an amazing opportunity and something to be involved with, especially with Pete.
“Our values and belief systems basically align and that’s what’s important – wanting to keep the pub, keeping it traditional, not turning it into a gastro pub and that’s what we are doing.”
The community response has been positive, explained Mr Manfield, who added that they have been lucky that their pub is thriving.
He said: “Community response has been very good. We are extremely lucky in this pub to have an amazing landlord and his family is just wonderful.
“It’s a traditional English pub doing traditional English things. We have been very lucky. Many pubs are struggling and closing – this pub is surviving.”
Locals have taken to social media to thank Mr Manfield for buying the pub. One said: “Just moved into Knowle Village, great to have a friendly convenient Local!”
A second said: “Pete has always been a legend”. A third added: “Wishing you good luck in your new venture.” Another said: “It’s a great pub with friendly staff. Never had a bad meal here and plenty of it. Nice pub garden too.”
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE.


You must be logged in to post a comment Login