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Rules was opened by Thomas Rule in 1798, primarily as an oyster bar but served, and continues to serve, traditional British cuisine. Rules specialises in game and has its own estate, the Lartington Estate, in Teesdale. [2] [3] The restaurant stayed in the Rule family until World War I, when Charles Rule swapped businesses with Thomas Bell. Bell ...
The best hotels in Covent Garden are: Best hotel for luxury: Rosewood London. Best hotel for design: L’oscar. ... Scarfes Bar, the oft-awarded cocktail bar, low-lit by Tiffany lamps, which takes ...
Freemasons Arms, Covent Garden: Long Acre The Grenadier: 1720 18, Wilton Row, Belgravia. Originally the officers' mess of the 1st Regiment of Foot Guards The Harp: 47 Chandos Place, Covent Garden Lamb and Flag, Covent Garden: 1772 II Rose Street, Covent Garden The Marquis of Clanricarde: Mid-19th century II 36 Southwick Street, Paddington
68–86 Bar and Restaurant – building in Kensington and Chelsea, London, England, UK A. Wong – Michelin-starred Chinese restaurant in Pimlico, London Aberdeen Angus Steak Houses – British restaurant chain Pages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets [ 1 ]
The Crown, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden (2015) The Crown, Monmouth Street, Covent Garden (2016) The Crown is a pub in Covent Garden, London, at 43 Monmouth Street facing on to Seven Dials and Short's Gardens. The pub was established in 1833. [1] The ceramic tiling outside is original. [2]
Then the following year he broke with Visconti and, working with Alan Lubin, established Peppermint Park, a cocktail bar in Covent Garden, as well as the Coconut Grove and Fatso's Pasta Joint restaurants. [1] They then sold the cocktail bar and the restaurants to Courage who employed them to set up the Dome Brasserie chain. [1]
The oak-panelled Good Godfrey's Bar and Lounge takes its name from the hotel's original house band, Howard Godfrey and The Waldorfians. [ 2 ] The Wild Monkey is a bar serving cocktails in a "tropical environment".
The Salisbury was well known as a gay-friendly pub from Oscar Wilde's time up until the mid-1980s. [5] The 1961 British suspense film Victim, directed by Basil Dearden and starring Dirk Bogarde and Sylvia Syms, includes scenes inside and outside The Salisbury and was the first English language film to use the word "homosexual".