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The Lord Nelson Hotel is a heritage-listed pub and hotel located at 19 Kent Street, Millers Point, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was built by James Dempsey around 1814 to 1815. James Dempsey was originally a stonemason born in Ireland. It is the oldest working licensed hotel in Sydney.
Woodforde's also helped The Lord Nelson to reopen in Burnham Thorpe, along with the Holkham Estate, after a 5-year closure. Late 2023, multi-award-winning Aaron Tubman joined the company as head brewer to help accelerate growth plans and launch the Brewer Signature Range, highlighting members of the brewery team with their own unique beer ...
The Lord Nelson is a Grade II listed public house at 386 Old Kent Road, Bermondsey, London. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [2] It was built in the early 19th century. [1] It is now one of only two pubs left on the Old Kent Road, which at one point had 39. [3] [4]
The Hero of Waterloo is the second oldest surviving hotel in Sydney; the oldest is the nearby Lord Nelson Hotel. Paton was a stonemason who had worked on the nearby Garrison Church. Paton constructed the existing hotel c. 1842 on the corner of Lower Fort and Windmill Streets from sandstone excavated from the Argyle Cut. The hotel was first ...
The opening was performed by Admiral Lord West of Spithead, who had been First Sea Lord from 2002 to 2006, and by the brewery's chief executive Simon Emeny. During the opening a magnum of London Pride beer was ceremonially smashed on the pub's exterior. [1] The pub's interior decor is inspired by HMS Victory, Nelson's flagship at the Battle of ...
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The brewery was established in 2004 by Ross Smith, [1] [2] with head brewer, Steve Plowman, and was one of only three breweries established in the Margaret River area. In late 2006, the brewery was purchased by a group of investment bankers, the Empire Beer Group for $15M (AUS), [3] who subsequently arranged a $30M (AUS) public float, [2] to bankroll plans to open another outlet (with a larger ...
The figurehead was a bust of Lord Nelson, and is now on display at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. [2] The ship was named by Nelson's niece Lady Bridport at the request of Queen Victoria, who with Prince Albert also attended the launch. The wine used was some kept from HMS Victory after returning from Trafalgar. Five hundred people were on board ...