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The Ship and Shovell is a Victorian pub in Craven Passage, Charing Cross, London. It may be unique for consisting of two separate buildings on either side of a street, connected underground by a shared cellar. [1] [2] [3] Interior, 2016
The Sherlock Holmes in 2022. The Sherlock Holmes is a Victorian-themed public house in Northumberland Street near Charing Cross railway station and Trafalgar Square which contains a large collection of memorabilia related to the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.
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 Cross Tavern: Taylor Walker Pubs: 1674 II Whitehall Star Tavern ...
The Spice of Life is a pub at Cambridge Circus in London's Charing Cross Road. The pub was founded as The George & Thirteen Cantons [ 1 ] in or before 1759, [ 2 ] and later became The Scots Hoose . By 1975 it had been renamed The Spice of Life.
Booksellers William and Gilbert Foyle, founders of the world-famous Foyles, opened their first West End shop at 16 Cecil Court in 1904, before moving to the current site on Charing Cross Road in 1906. [13] In the 1930s, Cecil Court became a well known meeting place for Jewish refugees, which in 1983–84 inspired R.B. Kitaj to paint Cecil Court ...
The Admiralty is a pub at 66 Trafalgar Square, London. It is the only pub situated on the square. [1] The Italianate building was built in 1871 by the architect F. W. Porter for the Union Bank. It was listed at Grade II in 1987, by which time it was a branch of the National Westminster Bank. [2]
Heaven is a gay superclub in Charing Cross, London, England.It has played a central role and had a major influence in the development of London's LGBT scene for over 40 years and is home to long-running gay night G-A-Y.
Charing Cross (/ ˈ tʃ ær ɪ ŋ / CHARR-ing) [1] is a junction in Westminster, London, England, where six routes meet.Since the early 19th century, Charing Cross has been the notional "centre of London" and became the point from which distances from London are measured.