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We came across this nameless bar (the owner said "just call us The Top Bar") and called in for a quick glass of Zot Dubbel. Apparently they hold a quiz night at 10.00pm on Tuesday nights, so we remained there, had a few more Zots and the 'British Railways Universally Challenged' team came third. Not a bad result.
16th April 2013
This photo was taken at insomnia58
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Photo by David Portass/iEventMedia.co.uk
Built to serve a colliery that never materialised, this huge pub catered for anglers and the occasional traveller. It was next to the long closed Park Drain station. The pub has now ceased trading.
Just outside Blackfriars tube station, we marvelled at this tiny thin pub. I've tried to google it but the name on it 'Brandies' doesn't come up. It looked abandoned anyway, which is a shame
Situated beside the bridge where Great Western Road crosses the Grand Union Canal, just north of Westbourne Park station and formerly known as the Grand Union, and before that the Pelican and the Carton Bridge Tavern,
The pub is a Fullers House but also offers Litovel, San Miguel and Becks Vier and good food, but its greatest asset is its Canalside Terrace
The London Trip 27.08.2012
REF 89-512
Church Street and opposite the church of St. Thomas the Martyr. Currently listed in the 2009 Good Beer Guide but beware as the pub no longer sells real ale. Quote "We were throwing more away than we were selling". Maybe if it was kept properly it would have shifted. Old skills dying in our midst. If you serve it (properly), they will come (and drink it).
This photo was taken at insomnia58
Find out more about Multiplay, watch our videos and see all the latest news on the website, facebook and twitter.
Photo by David Portass/iEventMedia.co.uk
Opened December 1974. Closed in the 90s. Current status: Demolished in 1999 but survived by its sibling in Stretford.
Viva a primavera na Beira Alta
->Comente a foto, não coloque só publicidade.
->Please, comment the photo, don't put only pub.
Images from RENE:GADE Festival, 2nd May 2015.
Held at Cafe Rene, Gloucester and featuring street art, live music, food and drink, and art for sale in the cellar bar.
Dice 67
Pictured 1958. Closed 1971. Re-opened October 1979. Current status: Re-reopened and renamed the Crescent in 1986 and still serving.
Its quite a thought to think that this fine old pub had been pulling pints for almost 200 years by the time that Robert Burns came to live in Dumfries. Burns is widely believed to have had this hostelry on his list of favoured inns although proof of this has not survived it does seem likely. Towards the end of the 19th. century the landlord was a Mr. John Thomson an avid collector of Burns memorobilia, in 1904 he paid £55 at Sothebys' for Burns's Dumfries burgess ticket quite a sum in those days. Today it can be seen with other of Thomson's purchases in the collection at the nearby Robert Burns Centre.
Robert Burns 1759 -1796.