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A pub on the east side of the road Bishopsgate, in the Bishopsgate Without area and is in the historic East End of London, which Bentley had once owned, changed its name from The Old Jerusalem to Dirty Dick's, and recreated the look of Bentley's warehouse shop.
The Swan is a Grade II listed historic pub, [1] immediately south-west of the city centre of York, in England. It was built as a beer house and grocery in 1861, at the end of a terrace on Bishopgate Street, the northern extension of Bishopthorpe Road. In 1899 it was purchased by the Joshua Tetley's & Son brewery, which in 1936 decided to ...
The pub, seen from Merchantgate. The Red Lion is a pub in the city centre of York, in England.. The building originated as a house, in a yard off Walmgate.The original part of the building is to the north-east, built in the 15th century as a house with a first floor hall and other rooms below.
Firefighters were able to free the 43-year-old man from the grease vent at the Red Lion Pub in Houston after he broke into the business through the roof.
Adam and Eve is a pub in the city of Norwich, England. It is located in Bishopgate, close to Norwich Cathedral, the Great Hospital and Norwich Law Courts. It is widely claimed to be the oldest pub in the city, [1] with the earliest known reference made in 1249. [2] [3]
Red Lion, St James's: 1821 II 2 Duke of York Street, St James's, Red Lion, Westminster: Fuller's Brewery: 1890 48 Parliament Street The Salisbury, Covent Garden: 1899 II 91–93 St. Martin's Lane, Covent Garden The Ship, New Cavendish Street: II New Cavendish Street Ship and Shovell: Hall and Woodhouse: II Craven Passage, Charing Cross Silver ...
The Red Lion Pub bombing was a bomb attack on 2 November 1971 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Planted by the Provisional IRA, it exploded in the Red Lion pub on Ormeau Road, killing three people and injuring about 30 others. The IRA members had given customers less than ten seconds to flee the building.
The White Hart is a former pub at 121 Bishopsgate, London. The librarian at the Bishopsgate Institute, Charles Goss, wrote a history of the White Hart in 1930, and believed that it dated back to 1246. [1] Samuel Nixon (sculptor) had his workshop at The White Hart (1838-1854). It certainly existed as The White Hart in 1377.