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The Tan Hill Inn is a public house at Tan Hill, North Yorkshire. It is the highest inn in the British Isles at 1,732 feet (528 m) above sea level. [ 1 ] According to the Guinness Book of World Records , it is slightly higher than the Cat and Fiddle Inn in the Peak District, which is at 1,690 feet (520 m).
The Tan Hill Inn is the highest inn in the British Isles at 1,732 feet (528 m) above sea level. ... Found in the peaks of the highest fells of North Yorkshire, ...
A section of the road is known as the "Cat and Fiddle Road" after the inn. The building is some 1,689 feet (515 m) above sea level, and it was the second-highest public house in Britain before it closed in 2015 (the Tan Hill Inn in Yorkshire is slightly higher). [1] In 2020, it reopened as a distillery, shop and bar.
The radio mast on top of Sir William Hill is a prominent local landmark. Sir William Hill Road is an ancient packhorse route across the moor and was part of the Sheffield to Buxton Turnpike of 1758. The Barrel Inn on Sir William Hill Road at Bretton is the highest pub in Derbyshire. [3] Chair Stone of Wet Withens
Mid Derbyshire MP Jonathan Davies met with campaigners Carol Holden and Chris Collins, who want their local pub in West Hallam - the Punch Bowl public house - to open after being closed since 2022.
The Cat and Fiddle Inn in Cheshire is the second-highest inn or public house in England. Ye Olde Man and Scythe is one of the oldest pubs in the country, and the oldest in Bolton, dating back to 1251; The Moon Under Water, Deansgate, Manchester, a Wetherspoons house, is the largest in the country; The Old Wellington Inn, Shambles Square ...
The Lion Inn is at 1,325 ft (404 m) above sea level on Blakey Ridge (Blakey means Black), [1] [2] [3] on the road between Castleton and Hutton-le-Hole. [4] The pub is known for being the fourth highest in England, and the second highest in Yorkshire, after the Tan Hill Inn, which like the Lion, used to serve miners.
The inn was behind The Swan on Church Street. It was a tavern from the early 1800s until about 1950. Marston's Brewery owned the pub in the early 1900s. The building is now a holiday cottage. [16] White Hart This coaching inn occupied a four-storey building in Scarsdale Place (off Market Place) since before 1752.