View allAll Photos Tagged pubs
Community Pub & Eatery in Tacoma, Washington
Print version: society6.com/VoronaPhotography/Community-Pub_Print
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The golden ball pub, is on Cromwell road, York, it is a very old pub in the bishop hill area of the city, it was originally bought by John Smith's brewery in 1902, and remodeled in 1929, and kept virtually the same today, it was later to become a community pub, where locals have a share in the running of the pub, it's a grade 11 listed building, it's off the tourest track, and is used mainly by the local residents
A pub in the Walsall area currently (September 2011) being renovated after many months out of commercial use. Formerly a tied house it will reopen as a freehouse thus being free from the evils of the Brewery Trade Robber Barons.
The bar.
20110924pub(2)BarB
The 'Stage Door' pub, located in the Waterloo district of London, stands on the site of an older pub called the 'Halfway Inn', which was mentioned by Samuel Pepys in his 1665 diary.
The pub was rebuilt during the 19th century, and not until 1985 was its name changed to 'Stage Door'!
Best viewed ORIGINAL - read the green sign, it could explain a lot!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJW19nlzb3Q
www.youtube.com/watch?v=rY0WxgSXdEE
Or it could be called "Another one bites the dust"!
A report stated there are 52 pubs closing every week due to the recession and people buying cheap alcohol from supermarkets to drink at home.
Pubs in Britain were not just places you went to to drink beer. They were places where you went to meet people who shared your interests. Many pubs became meeting places for people in particular trades - The Wheelwrights Arms, The Masons Arms etc - there was even an Elastic Inn in Coventry where people from the hosiery industry met.
The Pipemakers Arms in Rye, Sussex is, however, probably unique both in name and in the way the pub is decorated. I forgot to check to see if it has a conventional sign as well as this masonry relief.
This is the Britannia inn, hurdsfield road, Macclesfield, Cheshire, it's a small pub, in a line of terraced houses, it's a very old pub
Dans une vitrine à l'intérieur d'un pub, le premier qui trouve aura droit à une bière dans ce pub ;)
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Copy of the Malcolm X panel from the 2015 window at the Red Lion Desi-Pub in West Bromwich, designed by Steven Cartwright (the figurative roundels cut and painted by Aidan McRae Thomson).
Steven & I worked on the original window together in 2015, and it was a joy to revisit this interesting project, being asked to paint a replica of this panel especially for this exhibition in late 2023. The original window has featured on tv a couple of times, most recently in a series with Grayson Perry.
See Steven Cartwright Glass Designs website below for more information :-
www.cartwrightglassdesigns.co.uk/projects/red-lion
Displayed as part of The Glass Heart exhibition.
twotempleplace.org/exhibitions/the-glass-heart/
The former Astor House, now known as Two Temple Place and a venue for exhibitions. This was the former home of William Waldorf Astor finished in 1895 and designed by leading Victorian architect John Loughborough Pearson. Its rich internal woodwork and decor by J. D. Crace are a joy to behold.
I was here for the evening launch of The Glass Heart exhibition (27th Jan - 21st April 2024) having worked on one of the panels in the show.
Alas, it seems that The Angel is no more - a victim of economic downturns and / or failure to make timely sales tax payments.
One of my friend's greyhounds, Starsky, having a snooze in the pub. They're quite good pub dogs, after a walk they are ready for a lie down while we get a beer and a natter, only stirring when someone bends down to give them some attention, or if they hear a packet of crisps or peanuts being opened.
Cathy Burke, proprietor of Atlantic City’s Irish Pub, along with her husband Richard, proudly shows off the memorabilia she and her husband have collected since the 1970’s.
The pub’s walls are covered with artifacts from Joe DiMaggio’s bat to a Mae West poster The pub is located at St. James Place at The Boardwalk.
PhotoEssay by Lou Perri