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Public houses in Shropshire. There are currently 599 [1] pubs in the county, which equates to 785 people per pub. The figure fell below 700 for the first time in modern history in April 2006, and below 600 in February 2015.
Free House may refer to: Free House (horse) , an American Thoroughbred racehorse Free house (pub) , a British pub that is owned independently of the breweries that supply it
King's Head Passage (left) and the public house (right) The King's Head is an old public house on the historic street Mardol in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. [1] It was previously known as the "Last Inn" as it was the last inn in Shrewsbury on the route out of town towards Wales (Frankwell historically was a separate entity, outside the borough of Shrewsbury).
Cross Houses is a village in Shropshire, England, the largest village in the Parish of Berrington. It is located on the A458 road and is 4 miles south east of Shrewsbury . Cross Houses is also the name of a hamlet south-west of Bridgnorth .
In 1995, the Tan Hill Inn became the first public house in the UK to be granted a licence to hold weddings and civil ceremonies, after new laws were established to allow couples to marry in places other than churches or register offices. [6] The pub is a free house and has served a range of beers from the Black Sheep and Theakston breweries. [7]
The Feathers Hotel is a historic inn in Ludlow, Shropshire. Its imposing half-timbered frontage was constructed in 1619, over an earlier core, for a local lawyer, Rees Jones. [ 2 ] John Newman describes the hotel as a "prodigy" of Tudor architecture and it is noted for its Jacobean furnishings.
Coton Hill is an historic suburb of the town of Shrewsbury, Shropshire, situated in the ancient parish of St Mary (with a small enclave of the parish of St Julian in Greenfields). The River Severn flows nearby to the west, whilst Bagley Brook , the original river bed of the Severn runs to the east.
A house, later a house and a shop, it was extended in the 17th century, and refaced in the 19th century. The front block is in red brick with a slate roof, three storeys and two bays. In the ground floor is a 19th-century shop front and a doorway to the right.