An award-winning true free house, this well presented village pub has a beautiful wood and glass horseshoe bar serving both the main lounge area and snug. Guest beers are mainly from regional microbreweries. Quiz nights are popular as are Thai nights and soul nights. This pub is dog friendly and has a large covered outdoor drinking area where you can enjoy the flower bedecked exterior.
Two star - A pub interior of very special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
This award-winning pub was built in 1911 by the local Grimshaw Brewery whose wares are proclaimed in some of the window glass panels. The layout is a classic northern one of a lobby wrapping round the servery and with four rooms leading off (cf. the Victoria, Great Harwood). The pub is enriched by a fair amount of dado tiling. The impressive servery has retained most of its rising glazed panels. Its surrounding terrazzo floor continues into the front right space (the 'Glass House'?) which has tiling on the counter front while the other bar counter fronts have fielded panelling.
Rebuilt in 1911 by the local Grimshaw Brewery, the layout of a lobby around a screened servery and four rooms off is little changed. Dado tiling in the entrance lobby. Terrazzo floor around servery and in the front right (called the 'Glass House'?) it has tiling on the counter front and dado tiling on walls in front section. other bar counter fronts have fielded panelling. There is an opened-up room at the rear right with a 1920s stone fireplace and fielded panelled walls, the fixed seating looks inter-war. 'Ladies' etched panel in door. Opened-up / wide doorway to the tap room at the rear left (in c.2000?) where the fixed seating looks more Edwardian and there is a good wood surround but new tiles and interior fireplace. There were cupboards where the door to the tap room was.
Wide doorway on the front left into the dining room where the fixed seating is possibly inter-war, but looks more post-war and there is a 1950/60s stone fireplace. The impressive servery has intact rising panels on the lobby side but has lost all but one in the front bar. The counter top is a copper one all the way around it. Note the 'bar' deep etched panel in a closed position. One door has a 'No 2' deep-etched panel in it. Excellent 'Grimshaw's Ales & Stout', 'Crooked Billet', 'Grimshaw's, and 'Wine & Spirits' windows at the rear. The toilets have been modernised but the passage to gents' has dado tiling and a etched and frosted panel declaring 'food' in the door from the lobby bar. Ideally we need to see some plans - it maybe that the rear right opening up took place in the 1930s?
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 2 regular beers.
Crooked Billet, Worsthorne