Horse and Jockey Caddington
Horse & Jockey Public House: 125 Watling Street, Caddington

The Horse & Jockey in the 1960s [PL/PH2/65]
Bedfordshire & Luton Archives & Records Service does not have much in the way of source material for this public house| mainly because, although originally owned by Dunstable brewer Benjamin Bennett, it was taken over by Mann, Gossman & Paulin of Whitechapel in 1938. To judge by the licensing records the beerhouse|, as it then was opened in 1893, only becoming a public house in thre twentieth century.
In 1927 the beerhouse was valued under the 1925 Rating Valuation Act at which point it comprised a bar, tap room, reception room and kitchen downstairs, with a cellar below and four bedrooms upstairs; outside were four pig sties, three cow houses, a coachhouse, a public urinal and two earth closets. Trade was not so good consisting of 1½ barrels of beer and three dozen bottles of beer per week with two dozen bottles of minerals; surprisingly, considering he had been licensee for 34 years, Thomas Goodman did not know the gross takings. Later the valuer "saw Eeles", presumably one of Bennett's brewery staff and discovered that "capacity more than actual" trade and reduced the valuation accordingly.

The Horse & Jockey in March 2007
References:
- PSL6a/1: Register of Alehouse Licences: c.1890-1922;
- PSL6a/2: Register of Alehouse Licences: 1922-1964;
- DV1/C96: rating valuation: 1927;
- PL/PH2/65: photograph: 1960s;
- PCCaddington30/4: transfer of licence: 1996;
- PCCaddington30/6: transfer of licence: 1997;
- PCCaddington30/9: transfer of licence: 1998;
- PCCaddington30/13-14: transfer of licence: 2000
List of Licensees: note that this is not a complete list. Italics indicate licensees whose beginning and/or end dates are not known:
1893-1933: Thomas Goodman;
1933-1934: Ralph Warren Marshall;
1934-1941: James Payne;
1941-1949: William Goss Kentish;
1949: Cyril Frank Tompkins;
1996: Anthony Johnstone;
1996-1997: Francis George O'Callaghan;
1998: Gavin Bishen
1998-2000: Susan Elizabeth Miller;
2000: Simon Neil Webster