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1–5 Pillory Street, Nantwich
・ 1–50 series (Chicago "L")
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1–5 Pillory Street, Nantwich : ウィキペディア英語版
1–5 Pillory Street, Nantwich

1–5 Pillory Street is a large curved corner block in Nantwich, Cheshire, England, in the French Baroque style of the late 17th century, which is listed at grade II. It is located on the corner of Hospital Street and Pillory Street (at ), and also includes 2 Hospital Street. Formerly known as Chesters' Stores, it was built in 1911 for the grocer's, P. H. Chesters, to a design by local architect, Ernest H. Edleston (1880–1964). The building has subsequently been used for a variety of retail and wholesale purposes, and it is currently a furniture store.
It is the most recent listed building in Nantwich, as well as the only one dating from after the Victorian era. English Heritage describes the building in the listing as "a corner block of unusual design",〔 and local historian Jane Stevenson calls it "flamboyant".〔Stevenson, p. 44〕 Some contemporary observers likened the building, with its circular, porthole-like windows, to the ''Lusitania'' liner, which had been launched a few years earlier.
==History==

The corner of Pillory Street and Hospital Street (1 Pillory Street and 2 Hospital Street) was occupied from 1869 by Chesters' Stores, a premises of P. H. Chesters. This successful local Grocer's business had been established by Philip H. Chesters in 1859 and continued by his three nephews including Joseph Chesters. It was the largest grocery business in Nantwich in the early 20th century, with several other premises in the town, including a small shop adjacent to the Crown Hotel on High Street, a bakery on Barker Street and a warehouse on Pepper Street.〔〔Vaughan, pp. 5, 24〕 The original stores also featured a curved corner.〔
In 1910, the existing corner premises of the firm were demolished, together with adjacent buildings including two public houses (the Golden Lion and the George and Dragon), and Pillory Street was widened. The corner, which forms the junction of Pillory Street, Hospital Street and High Street, had been the site of numerous accidents.〔Lamberton & Gray, pp. 90, 92, 101–4〕
The present building was constructed in 1911. The design was by local architect E. H. Edleston of Bower & Edleston, a Nantwich firm of architects founded in 1854 by Thomas Bower.〔〔 A contemporary commentator described:
Dicky Garnetts refers to a chemist's, Garnett's, which had occupied a wooden thatched building at 1 Hospital Street opposite Chesters' Stores, and had been demolished in 1883.〔 Despite the luxurious premises, prices at Chesters' Stores were described as "very competitive".〔 In addition to the retail area, the new building housed assistants and apprentices.〔〔 In 1929, the business passed to Joseph Chesters' son, Colin F. Chesters.〔 1–5 Pillory Street remained Chesters' Stores until at least 1939.〔〔''Kelly's Directory'', 1939〕 Subsequent retailers on the site included H. S. Jones and Son, a wholesale confectioner; Boots, a chemist (1960s); and later a carpet shop.

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