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The Famous Royal Navy Volunteer is a pub on King Street in the English city of Bristol. Previously known as the Naval Volunteer, Royal Naval Volunteer and Royal Navy Volunteer [1], it is located at 17 King Street and 18 King Street. 17 King Street dates from 1665 and has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building. [2]
The King William Ale House is a historic public house situated on King Street in Bristol, England.It dates from 1670 and was originally part of a row of three houses. The three have been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building since 8 January 1959. [1]
The King's Head. The King's Head is a Grade II listed pub in Bristol, England. [1] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. [2] It was built in the mid-17th century, refurbished about 1865, with later 19th and 20th-century additions. [1]
King Street is a 17th-century street in the historic city centre of Bristol, England. The street lies just south of the old town wall and was laid out in 1650 to develop the Town Marsh, the area then lying between the south or Marsh Wall and the Avon. The north side was developed first and the south side in 1663, when the street was named after ...
The pub dates from about 1775, an entry appearing in Sketchley's Bristol Directory of that year, for Lewis Jenkins, victualler, Lodging & Board, 'Duke of Cumberland', 44 King Street, and is a grade II listed building. [2] [3] The pub's heritage lies with traditional, New Orleans inspired jazz.
A trow was a flat-bottomed barge, and Llandogo is a village 20 miles (32 km) north-west of Bristol, across the Severn Estuary and upstream on the River Wye in South Wales, where trows were once built. Trows historically sailed to trade in Bristol from Llandogo. The pub was named by Captain Hawkins, a sailor who lived in Llandogo and ran the pub ...
Grade II listed pubs in Bristol (12 P) ... 35 King Street, Bristol; A. Academy Cinema, Bristol; Alderman Proctor's Drinking Fountain; Armada House, Bristol; Ashton ...
The Crown is a historic pub in Bristol, England, near to St Nicholas Market, an area known as "the Old City". The Crown was built in the 18th century and is a Grade II listed building. [1] It was built on the medieval Bristol Tolzey Court. This court had been a meeting place for Bristol's merchants, and had jurisdiction over a wide range of ...