View allAll Photos Tagged pubs

Taken some time in the late 30s. The pub is the Black Prince on the corner of Black Prince Road/Ethelred St, in Kennington. Anyone spot the smoker in the back row giving a sly v-sign?

Camera: Zero 2000 Pinhole

Film: Kodak Portra 400

Exposure Time: 2 minutes

Location: Capitol Hill, Seattle

Series: Pinhole'd Breweries and Pubs

 

Continuing my pinhole’d brewery and pub series, with an offering from the Hopevine. The Hopevine is a neighborhood pub located on 15th Avenue E in Capitol Hill. The owners of the Hopevine also run two other fine establishments in the Latona Pub (a personal favorite of mine) and Fiddler’s Inn.

 

Supporters of the local beer scene, the Hopevine and its two cohorts are akin to using social media to post their tap list on a regular basis. Being a huge beer nerd, I love seeing their updates pop up on Facebook letting me know what delicious brews they currently have on tap. Its convinced me to pay them a visit on more than one occasion.

 

Hopvine Pub's website.

Yes it's a tram. Yes it's a pub.

The delightful pub sign of the Dewdrop Inn in Kingsteignton

The new pub sign in Barton at the recently refurbished Prince of Orange pub. Here is a link to the old pub sign

www.flickr.com/photos/bridgemarkertim/4967922399/in/photo...

 

At the junction of Garswood Road and Station Road. Pub sign www.flickr.com/photos/garstonian/4849850772

An atmospheric piece of art on Leighton Buzzard's canal-side Grove Lock sign.

Pleasant enough pub, seen from the station footbridge

Seen when it was a good Whitbread (Wethereds) pub

Bricklayers Arms Pub Sign, Stondon, Essex.

In the garden of the Habsburg Pub at the swiss checkpoint Wiesenrain to Lustenau in Austria. Jun 14, 2006, 9.00 pm.

Publiée en Septembre 1938.

Inside The Pub.Valletta Malta

The Famous Pub where Oliver Reed Died

On his last night, Oliver Reed downed over eight pints of lager, twelve double rums and half a bottle of whiskey, won an arm-wrestling content against many members of the British Royal Navy crew, HMS Cumberland, and insisted on paying for the entire round.

listed at no 5 in the World's Top 10 Legendary Bars

Guildhall Tavern Pub Sign in Poole,

Dorset.

The Ferryman & Firkin Pub Sign

in Southampton.

The Seafood Pub Company, which operated the Forest at Fence, the Alma Inn at Laneshawbridge, the Assheton Arms in Downham and the Barley Mow in Barley, has ceased trading.

 

The Barrowford-based company, which also has gastropubs outside of East Lancashire, announced the shock news in a letter to staff at the weekend. It is thought the impact of the coronavirus lockdown has been a significant factor.

 

Founded by Joycelyn Neve in 2010, the company's portfolio had won a clutch of awards and satsified customers in the years since.

 

Burnley Express 15th June 2020

 

Warm, inviting, traditional and friendly, The Barley Mow Restaurant nestles at the foot of Pendle Hill, in the quaint village of Barley.

www.barleymowatbarley.co.uk/

 

A VILLAGE pub in the shadow of Pendle Hill is set to take in guests for the first time as part of a £500,000 refurbishment project.

 

And bosses at the Seafood Pub Company are hopeful that their overhaul of the Barley Mow, in Barley, will prove as successful as their other East Lancashire ventures.

 

Similar revamps have turned around the fortunes of the Oyster and Otter in Blackburn, and The Assheton Arms, in nearby Downham.

 

LET 030314

 

VILLAGERS have clubbed together to buy their local pub which was under threat of closure.

 

A local consortium has bought the Barley Mow, Barley, in the shadow of Pendle Hill, which closed in June 2020 after the previous owners, The Seafood Pub Company, went into administration.

 

It has been acquired from the administrators by Barley residents who will operate the pub through their company PTL Property Limited.

 

The new owners are keen to transform Barley Mow into a popular ‘go to’ for locals and stopover for walkers to the area when Covid restrictions are lifted.

 

It will operate as a free house with an extensive range of beers and wines, and restaurant serving traditional pub meals. It will also offer accommodation.

 

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Railway Street and outside Earlestown railway station. Pub sign www.flickr.com/photos/garstonian/5453665178

The Wheatsheaf Pub Sign in Writtle.

Essex, England.

Pub bike project more labels going on, a few more to go then laquer it up :)

This great pub is located on Spon Street and is well worth a visit.

The Cleave in the village of Lustleigh on Dartmoor

This could be the hotel we had the free showers in, in 1964. I seem to remember it being on the S side of the road.

  

Check out this great little historic ABC video clip..

www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-26/royal-hotels-why-are-so-ma...

© Moen.Fotosport 2007-2011. NOTA: Prohibida la publicación de estas imágenes en cualquier medio o soporte sin autorización expresa del autor fuera de www.flickr.com/photos/moenfotosport/ . Todos los derechos de imagen digital del archivo están reservados al propietario.La reproducción sin autorización de una imagen puede dar lugar a una indemnización al vulnerarse un derecho fundamental

We had a great time and a great meal at McGuires Irish Pub.

Tolkiens House Pub

Former locatiom

Zagreb, Croatia 2006

Bailie Bar, Stockbridge

 

The Bailie Pub Website - History

 

"As far as can be established The Bailie, or the site of The Bailie, has been a bar since the 1870's. In it's previous incarnation, it was known as the Grand Bar. The Grand Bar was very much a working man's 'spit and sawdust' bar, as were the majority of bars in Stockbridge. It was also quite different in design to what The Bailie is now. There was no restaurant area, as during that period no food would have been served. There was also a small "snug' bar, commonly known as the jug' bar which was where women were allowed to drink! Unfortunately, however, there were no female toilets in the bar.

In 1971, the Grand Bar was bought by Hamish Henderson (some of whose artwork can still be viewed on

our walls) and it was Hamish who renamed the pub The Bailie, apparently after a theatre production that was on at the time. Even up until this time, there was no restaurant area. During this period, Stockbridge was very different to what it is today. St Stephen Street was very dilapidated, and there were plans to basically knock the street down and build anew. This

caused outrage with the many antique dealers and small businesses in the street, who, legend has it, managed to stopped the plans.

During the early 1980's The Bailie's current owners bought the pub from Hamish and made some substantial changes to it. The beer cellar was moved from inside to outside, underneath the pavement into the previously unused cellars. The pub was more than doubled in size by buying the adjoining 2 basement

properties. This extension now forms the restaurant/dining area, kitchen and toilets (obviously including

a ladies toilet) The old gent's toilet handle is still existing in the place of the original toilet, however this can often cause confusion for our older regulars who have had one too many!

Other than a few minor changes to the pub i.e. adding televisions (one of which is hidden on the wall

behind a picture, and some improvements to the outside to accommodate the smoking ban in 2006, The Bailie still remains the same today. There is no music, no fruit machines and no juke box. Banter and debate are encouraged around the large island bar and to this day there are still many regulars drinking in the bar who first started drinking here in the 1950's and 60's "

Lost amidst the glorys of the Chiltern Hills in Buckinghamshire, this lovely pub / restaurant "The Thre Horseshoes." A glorious place to lunch or better still stay for a while - if you can find it that is?

March 16 2013.

 

Camera: Olympus FE-120 6.0 Digital.

RAVINTOLA POTTI:

Insinöörinkatu 38

 

Nimellä lienee jotain tekemistä vieressä sijaitsevan Veikkauksen toimipisteen kanssa. Karaoke ja tietokilpailut kuuluvat ohjelmaan.

Half a day in Brizzle.

I used to drink in this pub in 1980, they used to have a piano player in at the weekend which is something that never seems to happen anymore in London pubs

MOB from Vienna at a little live concert at The Office Pub in Graz organized by indiepartment.

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