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The pub owner, a man named Tom O'Flanagan, is happy to have customers again. Homer and Grampa sit down at the pub and start drinking while Marge takes Bart and Lisa to visit various Irish landmarks, such as the Giant's Causeway, Blarney Castle, the Guinness brewery and the city of Dublin.
The name refers to the junction of Holloway Road (the A1) with Seven Sisters Road, where the Nag's Head pub stood, and also to the surrounding area, particularly the stretch of Holloway Road between the former pub and its junction with Camden Road.
The Lord Nelson is a Grade II listed public house at 386 Old Kent Road, Bermondsey, London. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [2] It was built in the early 19th century. [1] It is now one of only two pubs left on the Old Kent Road, which at one point had 39. [3] [4]
The Flask pub is located at the junction with South Grove and has existed on the spot since the seventeenth century. The Flask pub. A junction by the Duke of St Albans pub marks the southern end of the street. [4] Swain's Lane runs east off it before heading northwards up a steep approach to Highgate. West Hill features a number of listed ...
The George Tavern is a Grade II listed public house and music venue located on Commercial Road in Stepney, London.It is owned and operated by artist Pauline Forster.. Formerly known as the Halfway House, the building contains original brickwork some 700 years old, [citation needed] and is mentioned in texts by Geoffrey Chaucer, Samuel Pepys and Charles Dickens.
The Water Rats is a live music venue at 328 Grays Inn Road, Kings Cross, London, England. Until 1992, it was known as The Pindar of Wakefield and was famous for its regular old time music hall entertainment. Bob Dylan played his first UK gig here in December 1962. [1]
The Coleherne Arms 1866 public house was a gay pub in west London. Located at 261 Old Brompton Road, Earl's Court, it was a well-known music venue from the 1950s, and a popular landmark leather bar during the 1970s and 1980s. In 2008, it was rebranded as a gastropub, The Pembroke.
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.