Opened in August 1981, this is the pub that started the real ale revolution in the Kelham Island area. Cask beers from around the country, including occasionally Kelham Island Pale Rider brewed by Thornbridge. Vegetarian and gluten-free dishes feature on the menu. The walls are covered with many awards presented to the pub and Kelham Island brewery. Beer festivals are held every August and at various other times.
In June 2018, local artist Matt Cockayne, spend three days painting a mural on the outside corner wall.
Historic Interest
The Fat Cat is a little-altered and typically detailed example of a mid-C19th. pub and former hotel in, what was, an industrial quarter close to central Sheffield. It has an excellent original layout: two downstairs rooms, a small central bar, mosaic in the doorway and a terrazzo floor passageway. Opened in 1850 and originally known as The Kelham Tavern, the pub was renamed the Alma, in 1856, after the Battle of the Alma River (SW Crimea) on 20/09/1854. The combined forces of the British, French and Turks faced a Russian army of 33,600. The pub was taken over by Sheffield brewer, William Stones in 1912. A small entrance lobby with mosaic floor bearing the legend CANNON ALES, (c.1912) leads into a corridor with terrazzo floor leading to a room on the left and a doorway to the servery on right. The entrance lobby also leads to a room on the right. The bar was up-graded in 1981 from a formica-topped surface. The three-sided servery has a canopy including coloured glass over, and a clock under, a rounded pediment. The latter is believed to be a payment settling kiosk obtained from a Co-op butchers in Rotherham.The left hand-room has bench seating on most of the walls. The Victorian style fireplace with tiled base was installed in 1981. The right-hand room has a Victorian green tiled, cast iron and wood surround fireplace at the rear and has bench seating on the outside walls. A 1914 plan (James R.Wigfull for Messr's.Wm.Stones Ltd.) shows a pub layout which is similar to the current layout with three exceptions. 1914 has two entrances to the building: the current position and a second corner entrance. The current corner room is split into two rooms: a public bar which is only accessible from the corner entrance and a Smoke Room which is accessible from the central corridor. The bar has a rounded corner in the Public Bar. In addition, Cottages are indicated at the rear of the pub. 1914 has these changing into Scullery, Pantry and Coals. There is also an upstairs Club Room in the same position as to-days upstairs room. Plans approved in 1941 (Wigfull, Inott and Ridgeway, Sheffield) indicate that, with the removal of an internal wall, the corner Public Bar has extended into the Smoke Room and that the bar is squared off into the current layout. The corner entrance has also been removed. The pub became the Fat Cat on 29th.July 1981 when the building was bought, at auction, for £33,750 by Solicitor, Bruce Bentley and his business partner, Sheffield Polytechnic Economics Lecturer, Dave Wickett (1947-2012), becoming one of the first Real Ale Freehouses in the UK. In 1989, Dave bought out the share owned by Bruce. Opening day (21st.August) saw queues down the street. The Fat Cat is one of a number of pubs which was flooded in both the 1864 and 2007 Sheffield floods. A 1982 plan shows that the Scullery, Pantry and Coals have changed into an extended Gents, and a new Ladies W.C. and Stores. The Club Room is now Function Room. In addition, the Tap Room is now named No-smoking room, the first such facility to be available in Sheffield – in 1986, this fact was mentioned in the House of Commons by Bassetlaw MP Joe Ashton and therefore recorded in Hansard. Unfortunately, the pub is formally recorded as being on “Elmer Street.“
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: II
The Fat Cat is a little-altered and typically detailed example of a mid-C19th. pub and former hotel in, what was, an industrial quarter close to central Sheffield. It has an excellent original layout: two downstairs rooms, a small central bar, mosaic in the doorway and a terrazzo floor passageway.
The Fat Cat is a little-altered and typically detailed example of a three-storey brick-built mid-C19th. pub and former hotel in, what was, an industrial quarter close to central Sheffield. It has an excellent original layout: two downstairs rooms, a small central bar, mosaic in the doorway and a terrazzo floor passageway. In June 2018, local artist Matt Cockayne (Goo Design), spent three days painting a mural on the outside corner wall.
The pub was taken over by Sheffield brewer, William Stones in 1876 – note the mosaic floor in the small entrance lobby bearing the legend "CANNON ALES". Opened in 1850 and originally known as 'the Kelham Tavern,' it was renamed ‘the Alma’ after the Battle of the Alma River (SW Crimea) on 20/09/1854. It was re-named the Fat Cat in 1981 when the building was bought, at auction, for £33,750 by Solicitor, Bruce Bentley and his business partner, Sheffield Polytechnic Economics Lecturer, Dave Wickett (1947-2012), becoming one of the first ‘Real Ale Freehouses’ in the UK. In 1989, Dave bought out the share owned by Bruce.
A plan dated 1914 shows a layout of a corridor from the front door with a terrazzo floor, a small public bar on the right, a small smoke room at the rear, and a tap room on the left. A plan dated 1941 details changes by Wm Stones brewery (architects Wigfull, Inott and Ridgeway, Sheffield) which include the amalgamation of the two small rooms on the right into a U-shaped public bar with a new servery and the blocking-up of the corner entrance door. The present layout is little changed since 1941.
The bar fittings in the public bar are mostly from 1941 such as the left hand mirrored back fitting. The wood around the staff entrance to the servery plus the half-height door and shelving is also old. In 1981 there were changes to the servery with a canopy including coloured glass over, and a clock under, also a rounded pediment was added – this is believed to be a payment settling kiosk brought from a Co-op butchers in Rotherham. Counter tops are recent.
There is a Victorian green tiled, cast iron and wood surround fireplace at the rear, fixed seating (date?) at the front. Between 1941 and 1982 doors were added at either side of the fireplace to access the toilets. In the 1980’s, the right-hand internal door which led directly to the urinals was removed; customers were thus compelled to visit, via the corridor.
The tap room on the left has fixed seating that dates from the 1950/1960s and a Victorian style fireplace with tiled base. A 1982 plan shows that the 'Scullery,’ 'Pantry' and 'Coals' have changed into an extended 'Gents,' and a new 'Ladies W.C.' and 'Stores.' The 'Tap Room' has also became the No-smoking room, one of the first in a British pub - this fact was mentioned in the House of Commons by Bassetlaw MP Joe Ashton and therefore recorded in Hansard. The Fat Cat is one of a number of pubs which was flooded in both the 1864 and 2007 Sheffield floods.
On the first floor is a small dining room (originally the club room) with an old cast iron wood surround fireplace.1999 plans (Melling Ridgeway and Partners, Sheffield) show the conversion of the original Kelham Island Brewery into a Visitors' Centre. This was built in 1990 and was the first new independent brewery in Sheffield for over fifty years. The brewery relocated 100 metres into the adjacent car park in 1999, Pale Rider (5.2% abv) becoming CAMRA Champion Beer of Britain (CBOB) in 2004. Kelham Island Brewery went in to liquidation in Spring 2022. The following September, the assets were purchased by Kelham Island Brew Company, Kelham Island beers been subsequently brewed by Thornbridge Brewery (Bakewell).
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This Pub serves 8 changing beers and 1 regular beer.
Fat Cat, Sheffield: Kelham Island
Changing beers typically include: Neepsend (varies) , Thornbridge (varies)
Source: National
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...