Ad
related to: pub warwick way londonaa.com has been visited by 100K+ users in the past month
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Oxford Arms in 1875. Picture taken by Alfred & John Bool of the Society for Photographing Relics of Old London The other side of the courtyard in 1875. The Oxford Arms in Warwick Lane was one of the last surviving galleried coaching inns in London. It stood near St Paul's Cathedral between the 17th and late 19th centuries.
Its pub sign, featuring two men carrying a sedan chair, can be traced back to 1729. [2] The pub is near Birdcage Walk, where James I had aviaries for exotic birds, and close to St James's Park tube station. It has been called 'The hidden gem of Dartmouth Street' by The London Evening Standard. [3] It is a Grade II listed building. [4]
The Anchor is a pub in the London Borough of Southwark. It is in the Bankside locality on the south bank of the River Thames, close to Southwark Cathedral and London Bridge station. A tavern establishment (under various names) has been at the pub's location for over 800 years. [1] Behind the pub are buildings that were operated by the Anchor ...
Warwick Place, on an 1860s Ordnance Survey map not long after the street was built. (centre) [1] The Warwick Castle is a grade II listed public house at Warwick Place, Maida Vale, London, that was built in 1846. It and Warwick Place were named after Jane Warwick, the bride of the original landowner.
The pub is variously said to be named after a retired footman who bought the establishment and named it after himself, [5] or via its then owner William Douglas, 4th Duke of Queensberry, who employed a footman "said to be able to keep up a respectable 8 mph". [3] Footmen were originally employed to run ahead of a carriage to ensure the way was ...
The Coleherne Arms 1866 public house was a gay pub in west London. Located at 261 Old Brompton Road, Earl's Court, it was a well-known music venue from the 1950s, and a popular landmark leather bar during the 1970s and 1980s. In 2008, it was rebranded as a gastropub, The Pembroke.
The Fitzroy Tavern is a public house situated at Charlotte Street in the Fitzrovia district of central London, England, [1] owned by Samuel Smith Old Brewery.. It became famous during a period spanning the 1920s to the mid-1950s as a meeting place for many of London's artists, intellectuals and bohemians such as Jacob Epstein, Nina Hamnett, Dylan Thomas, Augustus John, and George Orwell.
The Cittie of Yorke is a grade II listed public house on London's High Holborn, and is listed in CAMRA's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [1] [2] The pub is owned and operated by Samuel Smith Old Brewery. Although the current building is a rebuilding of the 1920s, the buildings on this site have been pubs since 1430. [2]