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A smaller Midland Railway terminus station, Bristol St Philip's, opened nearby but was closed in 1953 and subsequently demolished. The bar has a sloping floor. [6] In 2000 Thomas Brooman, co-founder and managing director of World of Music, Arts and Dance took charge of the Palace. [7]
The Mauretania is a pub in the English city of Bristol, built in 1870 by Henry Masters, with a rear extension being added in 1938 by WH Watkins.It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II listed building.
The Old Ship is a Grade II-listed 18th century pub at 82 George Street, Richmond. [51] The Princess Louise, High Holborn notable for its rare, preserved and listed interior. [52] It is owned by the Samuel Smith Old Brewery. [53] The Prospect of Whitby, Wapping. Said to be London's oldest riverside pub, dating back to around 1520. [54]
Magari, Unit 18 – Cargo 2, Museum Street, Bristol, BS1 6ZA | 01179292865 | info@magaripasta.co.uk | magaripasta.co.uk Snobby’s Chandos Road is home to not one but two Italian favourites.
The King William Ale House is owned and operated by Samuel Smith Old Brewery. It has two entrances, one on King Street, the other on Little King Street. Inside there is a stone fireplace and a number of seating booths. The pub also has sufficient space for pool tables. The draught ales are kept in kegs rather than casks. [4]
The Stag and Hounds is a grade II listed pub in Old Market, Bristol. [1] The oldest parts of the building date to 1483, when it was probably as a private house. The current building is predominantly from the early 18th century, when it became a pub. It was partly rebuilt in the 1960s, and refurbished in 1987.
Both of the original houses, though different in style, reflect the local vernacular; for example the High St facade of No.1 has many similarities with the surviving Llandoger Trow pub in Bristol. Some of Bristol's timber-framed buildings were however constructed in part from recycled ship's timbers, so it is not completely out of the question ...
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 Joe McMahon, a sailor who lived in Llandogo and ran the ...