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Moseley also has its own literary festival, Pow-Wow LitFest, [11] which has taken place annually at the Prince of Wales pub as of 2011. Moseley is also home to many pubs , restaurants and cafés . In 2015 Moseley was named as the "best urban place to live" by The Sunday Times, with the newspaper citing its 'Arts and Crafts', 'Bohemian culture ...
The Fighting Cocks is a Grade II listed public house in Moseley, Birmingham, England. [1] ... The public house by this name in Moseley was first recorded in 1759 ...
Birmingham district shown within the West Midlands county This is a list of statutory listed pubs in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) Grade Criteria I Buildings of exceptional interest. II* Particularly important buildings of more than special ...
Moseley: 1996 1999 The Holt Brewery Co Ltd [19] Nechells: 1872 1934 Edmunds Brewhouse City Centre: 2015 2018 Ivybush Brewery [20] Edgbaston: 1994 1998 Mitchells & Butlers Brewery: Cape Hill: 1898 2002 Original Brewing Company Birmingham [21] Rubery: 1998 2000 Thousand Trades Brewing Co. Hall Green: 2016 2017 Urban Brewery [22] Jewellery Quarter ...
In January 2015, the Birmingham Mail praised the pub's in-house traditional Thai restaurant in a feature highlighting '17 of the best comfort foods in Birmingham'. [18] In April 2016, in an interview with The Guardian, screenwriter and film director Steven Knight described the venue as a "Peaky Blinders-era pub" and recommended it as a place to ...
Billesley Common is a recreational area of public open space in South Birmingham, England. It is situated along the Yardley Wood Road, between the suburbs of Moseley and Yardley Wood. Birmingham's rugby union team, Birmingham Moseley Rugby Club of the National League 1 lease part of the common from Birmingham City Council for their pitches and ...
The pub in 2005. The Queen's Arms (sometimes styled "The Queens Arms") is a Grade II listed public house in Birmingham, England, built c. 1870. [1] It is noted for the tiled Art Nouveau signage on its exterior, which was remodelled in 1901 to the designs of the architect, Joseph D. Ward for its then owners, Mitchells & Butlers.
The Crown Inn is a public house in Broad Street, Birmingham, England. [1] Built in 1781, it was rebuilt in 1883, 1930 and 1991. [1] It is Grade II listed. [2]It was the brewery tap for William Butler's brewery, a Victorian building that survived at the rear of The Crown until 1987.