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Birmingham district shown within the West Midlands county This is a list of statutory listed pubs in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) Grade Criteria I Buildings of exceptional interest. II* Particularly important buildings of more than special ...
The Old Crown, a pub in Deritend, claims to be one of the oldest extant secular buildings in Birmingham, England. [1] It is Grade II* listed, and claims to date back to c. 1368, retaining its "black and white" timber frame, although almost all of the present building dates from the early 16th century.
In January 2015, the Birmingham Mail praised the pub's in-house traditional Thai restaurant in a feature highlighting '17 of the best comfort foods in Birmingham'. [18] In April 2016, in an interview with The Guardian, screenwriter and film director Steven Knight described the venue as a "Peaky Blinders-era pub" and recommended it as a place to ...
The Crown is a former pub on the corner of Station Street and Hill Street, Birmingham. It has been called the "birthplace of heavy metal", and hosted Black Sabbath's first gig. [1] It was built in 1881, to designs by the architect Thomson Plevins. [2]
The Golden Eagle was a 1930s public house in Birmingham, England, which became known as a venue for live music. The pub stood on Hill Street, in Birmingham City Centre, between Victoria Square and the western end of New Street Station. It closed in January 1984 and was demolished soon afterwards.
The Lad in the Lane is a pub in the Bromford area of Erdington in Birmingham, England.Dating to the year 1400, it is considered to be the oldest house and pub in the city, [1] although The Old Crown in Digbeth claims to date from 1368, a date which is yet to be confirmed.
A man who was wrongly convicted of IRA attacks on pubs in Birmingham in 1974 has died at the age of 80. Paddy Hill was among a group of men from Northern Ireland jailed for the atrocity who became ...
An original Mitchells & Butlers Brewery pub, The Queens Arms, in central Birmingham. Other acquisitions included Holder's Brewers, who owned Birmingham's Midland Brewery, in 1919, [6] and the Highgate & Walsall Brewery in 1939. [7] The company merged with Bass in 1961. [3]