A redbrick country pub on a minor road not too far from the River Weaver. It had closed by 2019 and has now been converted to residential use.
A redbrick country pub on a minor road not too far from the River Weaver. It had closed by 2019 and has now been converted to residential use.
A small street-corner local on the south side of the town. Originally called the Eclipse, it was one of two pubs in the town renamed after Great Lakes by local brewer James Lake in the 1870s, the other being the Lake Superior, also now closed. It was closed and converted to residential use in 2014.
A former Holt’s pub in a tucked-away location on the west side of the town in the shadow of the M60/M602 junction.
A former coaching inn dating back to the 18th century. Formerly the King’s Head, it was run by cricketer Burn Bullock and his wife until he died in 1954 and was renamed in his honour on her retirement in 1975. It closed in 2013 and was severely damaged by fire in 2024.
A distinctive Victorian red-brick pub with an arched frontage, across the road from the River Aire on the north side of the town centre. It has been closed since 2009, and planning permission has now been granted for its demolition.
A post-war pub, originally knoqn as the Stratton, in a back-street location in the Shirley district on the north-west side of the city. Demolition work began in September 2024.