Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Birlingham is surrounded on the north, south and east sides by a river-bend known as Swans Neck, part of the River Avon.The village is located on a floodplain. [5] Bow Brook passes by the village's west side.
The Blue Anchor Inn, Aberthaw, Vale of Glamorgan, a 14th-century Grade II* listed thatched pub. Golden Cross , Cardiff, a distinctive Edwardian pub the current building dates from 1903. Palladium, Llandudno , built in 1920, a former theatre converted to a pub in 2001, Grade II listed.
Depiction of the Thatched House Tavern. The Thatched House Tavern was an inn in the St James's district of London, England.It was located in St James's Street. [1] It stood between 1711 and 1843, when it was demolished and the site used for the new Conservative Club, with the inn relocated to an adjacent building where it lasted until 1865 when that was also pulled down. [2]
The pub was established in 1676 and was historically in the county of Middlesex. [3] The Amalgamated Society of Gentleman's Servants once met at The Yorkshire Grey inn in the late 18th century, although Hart Street is mentioned as the location and it is possibly a different pub. [3] In 1848 it was owned by an Oliver Waterloo King. [4]
The pub, in 2013. The Old Swan is a historic public house in Gargrave, a village in North Yorkshire, in England. The pub was built in either the 18th century, or the early 19th century. It was grade II listed in 1989. [1] In 2020, the landlord attempted to burn down the building, and had to be rescued from the roof of the building while it was ...
A 200-year-old rural Derbyshire pub that was closed due to "mounting losses" could now be shut for good and become a home. The Black Swan pub in Wirksworth Road, Idridgehay, a few miles west of ...
To tell which swan belonged to whom, the Vintners' swans' beaks would be marked with two notches, or nicks. The word 'nick' was mistaken for 'neck', and so the Vintners spotted that a Swan With Two Necks could afford them a rather clever pun, and a striking pub sign. When Swan Upping is carried out nowadays rings are used in lieu of nicking beaks.
The Black Swan pub on Burn Bridge Road. Its local name is the Mucky Duck. Apparently there has been a hostelry on the site since charcoal burners used it in c. 1650. [4] [5] Opposite the pub on Burn Bridge Road was the smithy, later a grocer's shop until the 1960s and now converted to an office. [11]