Britain's Pubs [Page 2/2] (Part of Britain's Lost & Living Pub Series)
843 subscribers
1.46K photos
151 videos
260 links
An Archive of British Pubs both dead and alive.

Part of the 'Britain's Lost & Living Pubs Series'

Channel 1: Videos @LostAndLivingPubs
Channel 2 Pub Posts/Archive
Download Telegram
Mark E Smith at The Forresters in Prestwich, Manchester, by Charles Gordon Montgomery, early 1980s.
Forwarded from Vinnie Sullivan
White Hart public house once sat on #Hackney Marshes (on the road to #Leyton) which is now the #Olympic site. This site is close to where I was born & lived my life. Having been born in modern times, I'll never know what it was really like. @Britains___Pubs

🎨 A.G. Stout, 1896.
Britain's Pubs [Page 2/2] (Part of Britain's Lost & Living Pub Series)
The White Hart, on the #RiverLea at #TempleMills, #Hackney Marshes by J.T. Wilson The painting faces the White Hart where we can see in the foreground, horses pulling a heavily-laden cart of straw through water. https://t.me/vinniesullivan/27321
White Hart, Temple Mill Lane, #HackneyMarsh, #Hackney, #E15
#RIP ⚰️

Possibly established by 1513, demolished in 1999, we shall never see it's kind again. Originally listed under #Stratford, and previously under #Leyton, the spot is now the Olympic site, meaning we can't see any traces what so ever. This is near where I grew up (@VinnieSull1van), and it's sad to think of what it's become. Next drink you have, think of the White Hart.

https://t.me/vinniesullivan/27321

https://t.me/BritainsPubs/1418
The White Hart #RIP
629 Green Ln, #Ilford, #IG3

Ilford has next to nothing left other than the shells we remember which were once part of the community.
📸 @VinnieSull1van
Forwarded from The Jolly Reiver
Stopped by The Black Bull pub in Etal. The only thatched roof pub in Northumberland. Shame about the modern plastic & glass doorway but otherwise a very nice building.
This pub was earlier called the Eight Bells; the change of name to Ten Bells seems to have occurred in 1791. The name relates to the number of bells in the tower of Christchurch, next door. This originally had eight bells, increasing to ten in 1787 and actually to 12 in 1801

This pub was first built in 1752 or 1753 and was extensively rebuilt in 1845 - it remains open