This impressive coaching inn built around a cobbled courtyard dates in part to 1545. From the eighteenth century it was an important stop on the old York to Carlisle mail coach run. Charles Dickens
and his illustrator friend Hablot K. Browne (Phiz) stayed here at Bowes in the Ancient Unicorn in February 1838 when researching the rumours of the cruel Northern boarding schools where unwanted
(often illegitimate) children were abandoned to an unknown fate.
Five minutes walk away from the pub is Shaw's Academy - now converted into flats. It has a plaque which confirms it as: 'Dotheboys Hall' immortalised by Charles Dickens in
Nicholas Nickleby. The wicked Wackford Squeers is modelled on William Shaw, the former headmaster. In the nearby churchyard are the
headstones of Shaw and a boy called George Ashton Taylor, of Trowbridge, Wiltshire who died suddenly aged 19 years in Mr. Shaws Academy. Dickens later wrote: "I think his ghost put Smike into my mind
on the spot".
Dickens was travelling incognito with documentation presenting himself as an agent for someone who wished their child to attend the Academy. It is said he met a local farmer here who tried to dissuade
him from sending a child to the school. At that time the inn had a reading room which Dickens and Browne used when collating their material. There were 15 such Academies in the immediate area, 2 of them
in Bowes - both now private residences located at the extreme ends of the village. Six months after Nicholas Nickleby was published a large majority of the Northumbria and Yorkshire
schools closed down.
A second literary connection with the pub concerns the Scottish poet David Mallet who in 1760 published the Ballad of Edwin & Emma
about a son and a daughter of rival innkeepers of Bowes - the son of Roger Wrightson fell in love with Martha Roulton to the chagrin of their families. Roger fell ill with fever and died and Martha died a
few days later of a broken heart. They were both buried in the same grave much to Roger's sister's disapproval.
Oak beams, a roaring fire and a handsome portrait of Charles Dickens add to the charm of the cosy bar. There is a wide range of bar snacks on offer and an a la carte menu in the candlelit dining room.
