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Flying Scotsman, Kings Cross: 1901 2–4 Caledonian Road, Kings Cross. Now the Scottish Stores. The Hope: 19th century II 94 Cowcross Street, Smithfield The Hope and Anchor, Islington: Greene King: 1880 II 207, Upper St The Island Queen: 1851 II 87 Noel Road: The Old Queens Head: The Columbo Group II Essex Rd The Old Red Lion, Islington: II The ...
The Flying Scotsman, 2008 The Scottish Stores, the original name. The Flying Scotsman is a Grade II listed public house at 2–4 Caledonian Road, Kings Cross, London. [1]It was originally called The Scottish Stores, and was designed by the architects Wylson and Long, probably for James Kirk, and built in 1900–01.
Station King's Cross station: £200 N/A £782,000 NW1: Principal services: Glasgow Central, Edinburgh Waverley, Sunderland, Newcastle, York, Leeds: Light blue The Angel, Islington: £100 £50 £866,000 N1: The Angel is a former pub, not a street. It was a Lyons Corner House in 1935 and is reportedly where Watson and Phillips stopped for lunch ...
The Water Rats is a live music venue at 328 Grays Inn Road, Kings Cross, London, England. Until 1992, it was known as The Pindar of Wakefield and was famous for its regular old time music hall entertainment. Bob Dylan played his first UK gig here in December 1962. [1]
King's Cross railway station, also known as London King's Cross, is a passenger railway terminus in the London Borough of Camden, on the edge of Central London.It is in the London station group, one of the busiest stations in the United Kingdom and the southern terminus of the East Coast Main Line to Yorkshire and the Humber, North East England and Scotland.
The Ship and Shovell is a Victorian pub in Craven Passage, Charing Cross, London. It may be unique for consisting of two separate buildings on either side of a street, connected underground by a shared cellar. [1] [2] [3] Interior, 2016
King's Cross is a district in the London Boroughs of Camden and Islington, on either side of Euston Road in north London, England, 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of Charing Cross, bordered by Barnsbury to the north, Clerkenwell to the southeast, Angel to the east, Holborn and Bloomsbury to the south, Euston to the west and Camden Town to the northwest.
The Spice of Life is a pub at Cambridge Circus in London's Charing Cross Road. The pub was founded as The George & Thirteen Cantons [ 1 ] in or before 1759, [ 2 ] and later became The Scots Hoose . By 1975 it had been renamed The Spice of Life.