Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Duke of York. The Duke of York is a public house at 47 Rathbone Street, Fitzrovia, London, W1. It is located in the north of the street on the corner with Charlotte Place and bears the year 1791. [1] In 1943 Anthony Burgess and his wife were drinking in the pub when they witnessed it invaded by a "razor gang".
The pub was opened by a German national named Christian Schmitt [citation needed] in 1891 and traded as "York Minster". Schmitt died in 1911. His wife, Bertha Margaretha Schmitt, continued to run the pub until 1914. With the outbreak of the First World War, Bertha Schmitt sold the pub to a Belgian, Victor Berlemont, who had moved to London in ...
The Duke. The Duke of York is a Grade II listed public house at 7 Roger Street, Bloomsbury, London WC1N 2PB. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [2] It forms part of Mytre House, built-in 1937-38 by the architect D. E. Harrington. [1]
The Duke of Hamilton: 23 New End Duke of York, Bloomsbury: 1938 II 7 Roger St The Duke of York, Fitzrovia: Greene King: 1791 47 Rathbone St The Falcon, Camden: 234 Royal College Street. Closed in 2002, converted to flats. The Flask, Hampstead: Young's Brewery: 1874 II 14 Flask Walk. Rebuilt 1874 Freemasons' Tavern ***** 18th century
The Duke of York Column is a monument in London, England, to Prince Frederick, Duke of York, the second son of King George III. The designer was Benjamin Dean Wyatt . It is sited where a purposefully wide endpoint of Regent Street , known as Waterloo Place and Gardens, meets The Mall , between the two terraces of Carlton House Terrace and their ...
Newly created by Cadogan in 2004, Duke of York Square was the first new public square to be opened in London for a century, and now hosts over 30 shops, 6 restaurants, flats, schools, offices and a weekly Fine Food Market.
Among the restaurants in the street are the historic Wiltons, the long established Rowley's Restaurant, the new Fortnum and Mason restaurant, and Franco's. Tramp nightclub and the 70-seat Jermyn Street Theatre (the West End's smallest) [10] are also on the street. Many of the buildings on Jermyn Street are owned by the Crown Estate.
The York & Albany pub in April 2009. The York & Albany is a former pub in Camden Town, London, near Regent's Park. The building is part of a development by John Nash, and is Grade II listed. [1] It was at one time operated by Gordon Ramsay as a boutique hotel and gastropub. The gastropub was positively reviewed by restaurant critics. [2] [3] [4]