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Greene King plaque on the side of a pub in Sudbury, Suffolk. The brewery was founded by Benjamin Greene in Bury St. Edmunds in 1799. [3] In Richard Wilson's biographical analysis of the Greene family, he credits various family members for being able to achieve distinction in the worlds of business and banking, literature (Graham Greene, for example) and broadcasting in the nineteenth and ...
Benjamin Greene (5 April 1780 – 26 November 1860) was an English businessman, newspaper owner and the founder of Greene King, one of the United Kingdom's largest brewing businesses. [1] He later became the owner of multiple plantations in the British West Indies and supported slavery.
Chef & Brewer logo Rose and Crown, a Chef & Brewer pub, Kew, London The Bear Inn, a Chef & Brewer pub, Berkswell. The Chef & Brewer collection is a collection of over 150 licensed countryside pub restaurants in the United Kingdom, owned by Greene King. They provide pub food, specials and cask ales.
It is the second oldest pub in Cambridge, after the Pickerell Inn. [3] The street frontage, located on the north side of Bene't Street in the centre of the city, [4] is of circa 1600, with a galleried 19th-century wing behind, facing the courtyard. [1] The site is owned by Corpus Christi College and is managed by Greene King brewery.
The Old Speckled Hen logo. Old Speckled Hen is a bitter beer originally made by the Morland Brewery, but now brewed by Greene King Brewery.Old Speckled Hen was first brewed in 1979 in Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire in England, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the MG car factory there on 30 November 1979.
Chris Valeri has launched a one-man effort to save the General Greene Inn, where the plans for Washington's crossing of the Delaware were hatched. A 'Herculean effort' and mighty hopes for ...
The Greene Man is a public house in London's Euston Road. It was formerly known as the Green Man (and Porters Bar) and before that, the Farthing Pie House or Pye House as mutton pies could be bought there for a farthing. When it was established in the 18th century, the area was rural and so the surroundings were farm fields and pleasure gardens.
From 1844 to 1935 the Statue of William IV stood on the location of the former inn, before being moved to Greenwich. [3] Near the site, at 33–35 Eastcheap , the architect Robert Lewis Roumieu created a neo-Gothic building in 1868; this makes references to the Boar's Head Inn in its design and exterior decorations, which include a boar's head ...
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