A large 1930s pub located in a perhaps surprising back street location in this suburb to the east of Stoke-on-Trent. The eponymous station has closed, although the railway line is still in operation.
A large 1930s pub located in a perhaps surprising back street location in this suburb to the east of Stoke-on-Trent. The eponymous station has closed, although the railway line is still in operation.
A substantial pub by the by-pass on the north-eastern side of the town. According to StreetView, it was converted to a Tesco Express at some time between 2011 and 2014. The first pub on this blog in the historic county of Huntingdonshire.
A large food-oriented pub, previously a Crown Carvery, situated on a B-road to the west of Wigan, and visible from the nearby M6 motorway. The estate agent’s board says “Change of use considered”. The StreetView image was captured on a beautiful Spring day in 2019.
An ornate Edwardian pub advertising Bentley’s Rotherham Ales, with “Rebuilt 1909” in the gable. The similarly elaborate Cutlers’ Arms next door, proclaiming William Stones’ Cannon Ales, is still trading.
This roadside pub in the shadow of an imposing church, and now in a sadly burnt-out state, was in fact the last to close in the Cross Green area of Leeds, and completes my series covering the pubs of that neighbourhood. Unusually for the area, it was tied to Bass rather than Tetley’s, although no doubt you would be more likely to have encountered Brew Ten and Toby Light rather than the eponymous Burton classic.
This compact inter-wars pub in the Cross Green area of the city was actually demolished before StreetView was created, and the current view is unrecognisable. The Fisherman’s Hut can be seen in the background.
An imposing inter-wars “flat-iron” pub in the Cross Green area of the city, which has been closed since the final years of the last century.