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The Woolpack, Banstead, is a Shepherd Neame pub. The brewery has 303 pubs and hotels throughout London and South East England. The brewery's brands are typically given prominence in frontage with extensive branding. All fonts and pumps bear distinctive logos and branding, glasses are branded, and bar runners advertising house beers are commonplace.
The parish also has two pubs, Albion Tavern (Shepherd Neame) [10] and Brents Tavern. [11] It also has the popular Davington Primary School. Also included within the parish is the Faversham Angling Club Lakes and nearby Oare Gunpowder Works (now a country park).
This pub's licence was acquired by Shepherd Neame [7] and the premises were reopened after a restoration that finished in April 2009. There is a wood-panelled bar with three sections on the ground floor and downstairs restaurant.
Features include the primary school, village hall, riding stables, and the local pub, The Juggs, which is housed in a 14th-century cottage and now leased to the Kentish brewer Shepherd Neame. The pub and Juggs Lane (a road used as a public path which runs by it), are named after the fish-carrying baskets used by Brighton fishwives on their way ...
There is only one pub now in Seal. "The Five Bells" in Church Street is managed by Shepherd Neame Brewery and is open every day. The name for the pub comes from the fact that there were originally five bells installed in the belltower at St Peter & St Paul's Church, given its close proximity to the church (there are now six bells installed in ...
The company, which runs 310 pubs primarily in the South East, said it has been encouraged by the rebound in customer demand. Pub group Shepherd Neame says supply disruption ‘easing’ Skip to ...
The Spanish Galleon was built in 1836, [1] on the south side of College Approach (formerly Clarence Street) where it meets Greenwich Church Street, as part of Joseph Kay's redevelopment of central Greenwich around 1830 which replaced its congested and narrow streets with a more spacious street layout and architecture in the Regency style. [2]
Historically the village has been home to three public houses. The Bonny Cravat and Six Bells opposite the church in the main village, and The Stonebridge Inn serving the Brattle area at the other end of the village. The Bonny Cravat is a managed Shepherd Neame pub and The Six Bells is a free house. The Stonebridge Inn closed in the early 2000s ...