DOVER KENT ARCHIVES

Sort file:- Penge, February, 2025.

Page Updated:- Friday, 21 February, 2025.

PUB LIST PUBLIC HOUSES Paul Skelton

Earliest 1960s-

Drum

Latest 2011

101A Parish Lane

Penge

Drum

Above photo, date unknown. I believe the youth club was down the side of the alley.

Above photo, date unknown.

Drum 2019

Above photo, 2019.

Drum 2019

Above photo, 2019.

Drum membership card 1966

Above membership card 1966.

 

Not a lot known about this establishment yet, but have been informed that during the 1960s they had a 5-s-side football team and used to be a venue for live bands.

Also known as the 101 Club, due its address, and was actually the Penge Territorial Army Drill Hall HQ Building.

Built as Headquarters of the Royal West Kent Regiment and mentioned in the 1915 Street directory. This building is one of the few structures in the borough built to serve the troops during World War I.

This was certainly a youth club in the 1960s, so I am unsure whether it had a drinks license, but some suggest it did, although I suspect this was a case of smuggling drinks in unknown to the organisers.

 

The https://www.pengeheritagetrail.org.uk web site, accessed 21 February 2025 says the following:-

The Parish Lane Drill Hall & HQ building was opened on 3rd June, 1914, by Colonel Edward Satterthwaite (later Mayor of Bromley) as Headquarters of “D” (Beckenham & Penge) Company of the 5th Battalion of the Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment as well as “C” Company of the Kent Cyclist Battalion.

On 6th August 144 volunteers of Company D marched from their Drill Hall to join up with 1/5th Battalion. (1/5th were volunteers for foreign service, 2/5 were this who were too young, too old or too infirm for foreign service and served in England). 1/5, to their disappointment, were sent to India to relieve regular troops to fight in Europe. Later they fought the Turks in Mesopotamia.

During World War I the drill hall was used by 3rd Volunteer Battalion The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment (WWI equivalent of WWII Home Guard) and 1st Cadet Battalion Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment.

After WWI the Parish Lane Drill Hall became HQ for “B” Company of the 5th Battalion of The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment and 208th Battery, 52nd Kent Medium Brigade, Royal Artillery (the Kent Cyclists were disbanded in 1921 and the 208 Better replaced them). The 208 Battery later was converted into an Anti-Aircraft battery. In addition the Army Cadets & Invicta Rifle Club were based at the Drill Hall.

During World War II the 5th Battalion served in Belgium & France before being evacuated from Dunkirk. Major H.J.D. Combe, C.O of A Company was part of the rear-guard at Dunkirk. They then served in Egypt and then Italy (including at Monte Cassino). Meanwhile the 208th Battery served with the Home Forces during the Battle of Britain before joining the 1st Army in North Africa in 1942 and then to Italy during the following year. During WWII the drill hall continued to be used by the Army Cadets and by “D” (Penge) Company of 57th Battalion Home Guard.

After WWII the TA was yet again reorganised (4th & 5th Battalions QORWK amalgamated) and the Parish Lane Drill Hall was HQ of “D” Company of the 4 the Battalion of The Queen’s Own Royal West Kent Regiment in 1948 as well as B Battery Kent Cadet Battery Royal Artillery and Invicta Rifle Club. The Q Battery of 458 (M) H.A.A. Regt. R.A. T.A. had moved to the new Drill Hall in Penge High Street.

The Parish Lane Drill Hall was closed early in 1961. It was reopened as a Youth Leisure Centre in 1966 with the HQ building being converted into five flats which remain in use. The Youth Centre closed and was demolished in 2011.’

There was much local disappointment when the Youth Centre (known as The Drum) closed despite a lengthy campaign to save it. Fondly remembered as a venue for local bands, discos and general fun gatherings which kept the youth off the streets and gave them somewhere to go.

The Parish Lane building still remains as an iconic, well-designed symbol of late Victorian grandeur, indicating the concerns and aspirations of a bygone age. It is one of several buildings representing Penge’s ‘lost heritage’ where a blue Heritage Trail plaque would be most appropriate.

 

LICENSEE LIST

 

If anyone should have any further information, or indeed any pictures or photographs of the above licensed premises, please email:-

Pub-info@Dover-Kent.Com.

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