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Bull's Head interior, 2014. The Bull's Head, also known as The Bull, is a pub in Barnes in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, England. It hosts live music in an attached music room that has a seated capacity of 70 people. [1] [2] [3] Overlooking the river Thames, it was one of the first and most important jazz venues in Britain.
A number of listed buildings line the village high street. Boreham Street sits atop a ridge with views south over the Pevensey Levels towards Normans Bay and the coast and to the north over open farmland. Boreham Street has the 'Bull's Head' public house and Scolfe's restaurant/tea rooms. The village hall, Reid Hall, holds local events. [1]
Bull's Head Inn, old coaching house in Belper Lane End, Derbyshire, England; Bull's Head, Strand-on-the-Green, a listed public house in Chiswick, London, England; The Bull's Head, Barnes, a pub in Barnes, Richmond-upon-Thames, London, England; The Bull's Head Hotel, one of the Early grounds of Manchester City F.C. in Manchester, England
The Bull's Head Inn, which was located at 73–75 High Street. The Bull's Head Inn was a pub located at 73–75 High Street in Poole, Dorset, England.The building, now used by a recruitment agency, is the oldest building on central Poole High Street, and is a Grade II* listed building.
A painting of the Bull's Head Tavern off of Bowery Street in Manhattan, New York, during the American Revolutionary War in 1783 An illustration of the above painting of the Bull's Head Tavern. Bull's Head Tavern was an establishment located on Bowery, a street in Manhattan, New York City.
Pratt's Bottom is a village in Greater London, England, within the London Borough of Bromley and, prior to 1965, within the historic county of Kent.It is south of its parent parish of Orpington, lies about 100 metres above sea level and beyond London's urban sprawl.
The Bull's Head. The Bull's Head is a Grade II listed public house at 15 Strand-on-the-Green, Chiswick, London, England. The building (Grade II listed in 1970) is 18th century with later additions; the architect is not known. It is a two-storey white-painted brick building, and still has its pantile roof with two dormer windows. The entrance ...
There was another Boar's Head Inn, at Whitechapel, the courtyard of which was used from 1557 onwards as an inn-yard theatre to stage plays, known as the Boar's Head Theatre. It was refurbished in 1598–1599. [5] There was yet another Boar's Head Inn, at Southwark, owned by Sir John Fastolf, who is the source for the character-name of Falstaff. [6]