Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Harvey's Brewery is a brewery in Lewes, East Sussex, England. Harvey's estate includes 45 tied houses, mostly in Sussex, and three in London: Royal Oak, Southwark, The Cat's Back, Wandsworth and The Phoenix, Stockwell. It sells and distributes its main product, Sussex Best Bitter, to other pubs, off-licences and social clubs in south east England.
Related: 12 Small Towns Known for Being LGBTQ-Friendly. ... Lewes, Delaware. ... with a traditional Irish pub, artsy espresso shop, local-catch fishery, and killer pizzeria among its shops and ...
Dwile flonking at the Lewes Arms pub in Sussex. Dwile flonking, dwyle flunking, or nurdling is a British pub game played by two teams, with one dancing around in a circle, while a player from the other team attempts to hit them by throwing a beer-soaked cloth. The game is associated with the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.
The pub's name refers to the blood sport of bull-baiting, [1] and the Dog & Bull is "understood to be the oldest pub in Croydon". [2] The current Dog & Bull was built in the 18th century and is Grade II listed. [3] There was previously a pub called The Bell on the site which was established in the 12th or 13th century when Surrey Street was ...
The pub's address is in Barcombe Mills but it is generally considered as an offshoot of Barcombe Cross or Spithurst. The disused Barcombe Mills railway station served the hamlet until 1969. Now just a collection of houses and a water treatment works, the area once had a thriving community.
Jill's Pond, Landport Bottom, near Lewes. Landport Bottom , near Lewes but in the Hamsey parish, was a Medieval river crossing according to records in 1296. [18] Lewes Council bought 110 acres of ex-arable in the Bottom, principally to stop soil erosion from irresponsible winter ploughing.
It bears the names of the 28 and the inscriptions "Sacred to the Memory of the Russian Soldiers who died Prisoners of War in Lewes in the years 1854 1855 1856", and "Raised by Order of His Majesty the Emperor of Russia Alexander II 1877", with an addition to show that the Soviet Embassy restored the memorial in 1957. It is listed Grade II.
A petition of 1200 signatures was collected. The mayor of Lewes and the then Lewes MP Norman Baker [5] spoke out against the withdrawal.. Following the withdrawal, the regulars of the pub staged a well-publicised boycott [6] with a regular vigil outside the pub at peak times to explain the situation to casual visitors, [7] [8] which resulted in an estimated loss of trade of 90%. [9]