Robert Pople

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Robert Pople, as Mayor of Exeter

Robert Pople (8 February 1836 – 6 February 1909) was a publican who was three times Mayor of Exeter, Devon.[1]

Pople was born in Somerset on 8 February 1836, and grew up near Bridgwater.[2]

He was a publican, running The Commercial Hotel in Brigwater.[3]

In 1865, Pople and his wife moved to Exeter, to run the Half Moon Hotel. In 1868, they took over the New London Inn (later the new London Hotel), which he ran until his death.

In 1869, he was elected as a Conservative councillor on Exeter City Council, for the St David's ward.[4] It was subsequently discovered that Pople had bribed four people £10 each to vote for him, and he appeared in front of the Election Commission at Bridgwater.[5] Pople admitted the charge, which was part of a wider bribery effort by John Murlis, who bribed around 140 people.[6]

Exeter theatre fire

On 5 September 1887, a fire broke out at the Theatre Royal, opposite Pople's New London Inn.[7]

Pople responded at the first alarm, bringing five or six ladders which saved many people,[8][9] and then opened his premises, using the pub to shelter the survivors, and laying out victims in the stables.[10]

His actions during the fire were widely reported, including by The Illustrated London News, and he was praised for his actions. He was presented with a silver and gold bracelet by the Earl of Portsmouth the following month for his actions on the night of the fire.[11][12]

Popularity and rise to mayor

Death

References

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