This Pub is Closed Long Term
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
A large, ‘improved public house’ built 1932 for Ramsden’s brewery by local architects Glendinning & Hanson and designed with a central hall-lounge – a fully-developed advance on the old-style drinking lobby, equipped with its own element of seating and housing the main servery. The counter and back-fitting here are impressive (although now typically marred by a modern pot-shelf). Other surviving original features include an unused off-sales, some of the seating and a lofty vaulted function room upstairs. The formerly separate snug and smoke room were merged into one end of the hall-lounge during the 1970s.
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Pubs to Cherish Yorkshire's Real Heritage Pubs lists the 119 public houses in the Yorkshire region which still have interiors or internal features of real historic significance. They are a richly-diverse part of Yorkshire's cultural and built heritage. Some of...