View allAll Photos Tagged pubs
The Gatehouse Pub, 1 North Rd, Highgate, London N6 4BD. Sunday 16 December 2012. 11:13
Dating back centuries the mock Tudor facade was added around 1905.
Irish Pub In Minneapolis - Near the stadiums. HDR (OK - pseudo HDR single shot raw - converted in Lightroom)
Historic Stowe pub reopens without the fleas, rats or mouldy walls
Visitors to the New Inn at Stowe gardens found much to complain about in the 18th century. Modern ones should not...
New Inn at Stowe
The newly restored tap room at Stowe's New Inn, minus the features that led to moaning from 18th-century guests.
At a cost of £9m the worst pub in Buckinghamshire is open again and ready to receive guests. However, the National Trust has not been entirely authentic in its restoration of the 18th-century New Inn at Stowe.
The fires are burning again in the grates, the beer barrels are ready in the tap room and the sheets are hanging in the laundry, but the fleas, the rats, the filth, the wallpaper breathing arsenic fumes from walls mouldy with damp, the dreadful food and the even worse beds are gone.
Lord Cobham built the New Inn in 1717 to feed and water visitors to the extraordinary front garden at his palatial home at Stowe: 250 acres studded with temples, columns, arches, obelisks, cascades, grottoes, and lakes.
The lakes were a three-dimensional allegory of liberal politics, with the Temple of Modern Virtue a deliberately tottering ruin sheltering only a headless bust of Louis XIV, and the Temple of British Worthies glorifying a motley crew including Isaac Newton, Elizabeth I, John Locke and Walter Raleigh.
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"It was, then as now, the most important landscape garden in Europe, designed as a riposte to Versailles," said Richard Wheeler, the National Trust garden historian.
"It was all intended to ensure that the attentive visitor would never in their future life even contemplate voting Tory – though there is no evidence that this ever worked."
Visitors flocked to a garden which Wheeler described as "a theme- park-style tourist attraction of its time".
The inn, which also served as a pub for locals and estate workers, was built to cater for visitors who were well enough off to arrive by stage coach or post chaise and pay 6d for a guidebook without which they had no hope of making sense of the garden, but were not grand enough to be invited to stay in the house.
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Cobham leased his pub to various landlords. Complaints from early guests, traced by an archaeologist, Gary Marshall, were vituperative. One visitor said that none of his party had been able to sleep a wink from the "fleas and gnats". Another moaned about "bad beds and worse eating". Marshall has also established that the cellars regularly flooded disastrously: he began his own work in the building standing in a foot of foetid water.
The complaints ended after the inn changed hands in the late 18th century and was considerably smartened up. By the end of the 19th century, when the gardens had bankrupted their owners and been stripped of many features, the New Inn had become a farm house.
The National Trust began an epic restoration of the gardens 20 years ago, but with the big house now one of the grander public schools, it had to operate from a glorified garden shed.
The trust bought the New Inn from the last private owners in 2005, when the roof was falling in, the floors had collapsed and the weed-choked yard was a graveyard of abandoned farm machinery.
During the restoration, which was done with the help of a £1.5m grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, volunteers cleaned and recycled 128,000 roof tiles, revealing some startling obscenities scrawled by Georgian workmen. A new barn-like building, replacing one beyond restoration, was built to house a shop and cafe.
A pub at the very edge of Doncaster town centre. The modern brick wall marks where the vandals who controlled the town in the 1960s demolished vast swathes of the old town in the name of modernisation - fine old buildings, and the grounds of the parish church, were replaced by a dual carriageway and a shopping centre.
A very traditional pub on the eve of the smoking ban in Britain. Now pubs are closing weekly and the character of establishments like this is being replaced with the bland homogeneity of chain pubs which seduce punters with cheap booze
Pub in Dublin, Temple Bar Street, 2006
Canon EOS 5
Canon EF 50mm f1.4
f/5.6
1/500 Sek.
Kodak Ektar 400
Dieser Pub mit seiner außergewöhnlichen Fassade steht am Beginn des Temple Bar Districts in Dublin. Zum Zeitpunkt des Fotos war er noch wenig besucht. Wenige Stunden später wird es hier richtig voll.
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This pub with its extraordinary front is located at the beginning of the Temple Bar District in Dublin. At the time of the photo it was rarely visited. A few hours later, things get really busy here.
One of a few pubs not modernised around Brick Lane, I've added a texture to keep it even more in keeping with a fascinating part of London.
A side view of The Wynnstay Arms at Ruabon in North Wales, in my view it is one of Robinson's finer pubs.