Reopened 10 October 2019 having been closed since Young's moved out of Wandsworth in 2006. Now has the same tenants as the nearby Wandsworth pubs the Old Sergeant and the Pig & Whistle. The pub has a strict 18+ admission policy. The Ram Inn is Grade II listed.
The Slybeast microbrewery had a six barrel plant in the pub and its keg 1533 session IPA got its name from the date of the first known year of beer being brewed on this site. Indeed this Wandsworth site is recognised as having the record for the longest continuous brewing history on one site in Britain.
Young's breweriana were initially displayed in the main bar of this former Young's Brewery Tap, but the pub was part of the 'Ram Pub Company' tranche of which the freehold was sold to Punch in 2021. Upstairs is more of a party venue with shuffleboards and a Citroen H2 van serving tacos and it was rumoured in February 2022 that Punch wanted to turn the whole place into more of a nightclub, starting by evicting the SlyBeast brewer.
The Laine Pub Company are now managing the pub, with draught beers only keg on reopening 10 February 2023 after closure from early October 2022. AG&G are having another go at marketing the freehold but Laines have now reinstated two real ales and the pub is looking up.
Historic Interest
Grade II listing:-Public house, now also shop. 1883 with 1930s remodelling, for Young's Ram Brewery, formerly known as the Ram Inn. Yellow brick with plaster details, and glazed terra cotta ground floor. 2-3 storeys. EXTERIOR: Curved wider bay to corner of Wandsworth High and Ram Street, with 4 window bays to each return at 2nd floor, additional 3-5 bays at 1st and ground floors with carriage entrance to north end at Ram Street and additional wide entrance to west end at Wandsworth High Street. Ground floor is 1930s glazed cream terra cotta; pilasters with flat ionic capitals defined each wide window bay; upper floors of 1883 build, the 1st floor windows within plastered architraves and under shallow scrolled pediments linked by continuous frieze, 2nd floor with shorter sashes also in plastered architraves and abutting corbelled eaves cornice. Corner bay with 'THE RAM INN' green lettering to frieze and flanked by glazed plaques with Ram detail under segmental arch and Young & Co.'s Ales & Stout' over
Public Bar', entrance now blocked; slightly advanced upper storeys with pediment over 1st floor window; corbelled base of chimney to 2nd floor extending above shallow hipped roof. Entrances each to High Street and Ram Street flanked by similar terra cotta plaques. INTERIOR: Ground floor retains beamed plaster ceilings. 1st floor has good neo-Elizabethan room with wood-panelled walls and honeycomb pattern plaster ceiling with foliate decoration; wide stone chimneypiece. HISTORY: In 1831, Young & Bainbridge bought the Ram brewery from Tritton, who had owned the freehold for this site since the C19. The earlier pub on the site, the Ram, was replaced with this building after the major 1881 fire at the brewery damaged the earlier Ram Inn, believed to have dated from the late-C17. This was again damaged in WWII. The pub was called the Ram until being re-named the Brewery Tap in 1974. See list entry for the Grade II* Brewery for a fuller history.
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 0 regular beers.
Ram Inn, Wandsworth
Changing beers typically include: Gun - Scaramanga Extra Pale , Portobello - Star , Windsor & Eton (seasonal)
Source: National