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The Golden Lion Hotel is in the coastal English town of Hunstanton, King's Lynn and West Norfolk, Norfolk, England. [2] It is a three-star hotel and has been a Grade II listed building since 20 September 1984.
The Bingley Arms was originally named The Priests Inn. The Bingley Arms calls itself the oldest pub in Britain, with a history dating back to between AD 905 and AD 953, and says that it served as a safe house for persecuted Catholic priests, and also as a courthouse from around AD 1000 from which offenders were taken to the pillory across the road. [1]
Pet friendly are hotels which offer a range of amenities designed to accommodate pet owners. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] In these hotels pet owners get gourmet room service menus for their pets. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Examples include, JW Marriott Hotels , Renaissance Hotels , Ritz-Carlton .
Doom Bar on draught alongside other beers in a pub in Wetherby, West Yorkshire. Doom Bar bitter (4.0 abv), the brewery's flagship ale, accounts for nearly 90% of sales. Over 24,000,000 imperial pints (14,000 kl) of Doom Bar was produced in 2010. [2] It was the highest selling cask ale in the UK in 2019. [3]
Hunstanton came to exemplify a 19th-century estate seaside town. Most of the fabric and character of that development survives. In 1915, during the First World War, Hunstanton was the headquarters of the West Norfolk training programme of the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders, as they prepared for active service on the Western Front. [4]
Chemic Tavern (formerly Chemical Tavern), Leeds, West Yorkshire. Named for the workers at the nearby Woodhouse Chemical Works, (C. 1840–1900) it was a beer house on the 1861 census when the licensee was James Lapish. [207] [208] Custom House Tavern, Wisbech: (now closed) named for the local customs post in the port. [3]
Old Hunstanton is a village and civil parish in the English county of Norfolk. It covers an area of 5.35 km 2 (2.07 sq mi) and had a population of 47 in 25 households at the 2001 census . [ 1 ] The population had risen to 628 at the 2011 Census. [ 2 ]
Slate Yorkshire Square brewing vessels were used at the brewery from 1913 until 1975. [63] Stainless steel Yorkshire Squares were in use by at least 1953, but were removed in the 1980s, and the brewery now uses conical tanks. [63] [64] By 1953, the brewery site occupied 20 acres. [65] Wooden casks were still in use in the 1960s. [44]