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The Free Press is a pub in Prospect Row, Cambridge, England. At 30 square feet (2.8 m 2 ), it is "surely the smallest pub room in Cambridgeshire" and its fittings are either original from the 1940s or copies. [ 1 ]
The Fort St George In England is the oldest pub on the River Cam in Cambridge, England. The Grade II listed timber-framed building [1] on Midsummer Common dates in part from the 16th century, [2] and although "much altered and enlarged over the years, still has considerable charm. Especially notable is the snug to the right of the main entrance ...
Pages in category "Pub stubs" ... Fort St George In England; Forth & Clyde Hotel ... The Fox Goes Free; The Fox, Twickenham; The Free Press, Cambridge; G. The ...
Free Press (advocacy group), a USA media advocacy organization founded by professor Robert W. McChesney and journalist John Nichols; Free Press (publisher), an imprint of Simon & Schuster publishing; House of the Free Press, a building in Bucharest, Romania; The Free Press, Cambridge, a pub in Cambridgeshire, England
Today the pub serves a special ale to commemorate the discovery, dubbed "Eagle's DNA". Also in 1953 Watson and Crick worked over lunch in the Eagle to draw up a list of the 20 canonical amino acids. This has been a very influential rubric for molecular biology, and was a key development in understanding the protein-coding nature of DNA. [8
The street was previously noted for the number of pubs and was at one stage synonymous with the King Street Run pub crawl. Former pubs on the street included (italicised street numbers indicate the numbering scheme prior to 1897): [4] The Boot (39/97 King Street) Cambridge Ale Stores/Cambridge Arms (4/6 King Street. Now d'Arry's restaurant.
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In Kneesworth, Yuva restaurant ( was the Red Lion) lies near the crossroads on the Old North Road and occupies a 17th-century building that was still a farmhouse in 1795. At the corner, the 19th-century pub The Rose occupied a prominent position before being sold in April 1992. A former pub The Hoops was converted into a club in around 1910. [6]