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Boyd Arms, Ballycastle


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4 The Diamond, Ballycastle, BT54 6AW (View on Google Map)
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Historic Interest

Mid 18th century Grade B+ Listed, reference HB05/13/022

Information for this venue is provided by the Northern Ireland Branch of CAMRA
Previous Names
Local Authority
Causeway Coast and Glens
Last updated
26/07/2023
Last surveyed
Leasehold owner
unknown
Freehold owner
unknown
Pub ID
BEL/54
Asset of Community Value

Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance

Listed status: B+

This three-storey building once also accomodated a hotel but it's now just a pub. Fixtures and fittings from various periods are on display.

 The right-hand front door leads into a wide corridor with a red and buff tiled floor, dado panelling, a couple of basic benches and narrow shelves for stand-up drinking. Note the annunciator box in the corridor showing where service was required, including what were five former letting bedrooms. Through the left-hand door is a typical, simple bar stretching back from the street; it includes some Victorian or early 20th century work, although the counter was revamped, probably in the 1950s or 1960s. Attached to the servery is a delightful tiny glazed-in snug with a little hatch through which drinks can be served. The small room at the rear with a figure 2 over the doorway was refitted in 1998. Across the corridor is another room but here the fittings, including the Victorian-style fireplace, are modern.

General information about historic pub interiors

A three-storey former hotel of probable mid 18th-century construction (a painted sign on the gable has a date of 1761). In the public bar and snug are some Victorian or early 20th-century fittings. It is named after the Boyd family on whose land Ballycastle lies and who built the pub and other buildings in this part of town. They built the Boyds Arms Hotel for the holsters, coach-drivers, attendants and similar lower classes and for the gentry the Antrim Arms Hotel across the street.

The right-hand front door leads into a corridor with a red and yellow diamond-shaped quarry-tiled floor, old dado panelling painted cream, a couple of basic benches and narrow shelves for stand-up drinking. Don’t miss the indicator box in the corridor showing where service was required, including the five letting bedrooms.

The left-hand front door leads to a typical, simple Irish bar stretching back from the street. The old bar back consists of shelves with a mirrored back. The bar counter appears to be a replacement from the 1950s with its plain wood frontage and Formica top. The narrow room has more old dado panelling and some bench seating.

At the end of the counter there is a tiny snug created by partition walls that reach the ceiling, the one attached to the servery being fully glazed above the dado. It has a latch and plank door, two benches attached to the partition walls, a small table attached to the wall and a little hatch through which drinks can be served. The snug was popular on cattle fair days for private deals.

Across the corridor is another room but here the fittings including the Victorian-style fireplace are modern. The small room at the rear with a figure 2 over the doorway was refitted in 1998.

The pub and the town are incredibly busy on the days of Ould Lammas Fair, which dates from 1606 and is therefore one of Ireland’s oldest fairs. It falls on the last Tuesday of August but starts on a Sunday evening and runs all day Monday and Tuesday. It is now most famous for it's 'Dulse' - edible seaweed that has been collected from local shores and dried out and 'Yellow Man' - a yellow candy similar in texture to toffee and taste of honeycomb.

General information about historic pub interiors
Tuesday
11:30am - 1:00am
Wednesday
11:30am - 1:30am
Thursday
11:30am - 1:30am
Friday
11:30am - 1:30am
Saturday
11:30am - 1:30am
Sunday
11:30am - 1:30am
Monday
11:30am - 1:00am

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Facilities
Features
Real Heritage Pub Real Heritage Pub
Transport
Close to bus routes (120m)

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