Built in 1896 and said to be the oldest pub in town, this interesting high-ceilinged and friendly traditional Scottish drinking shop has been tastefully updated. The bar has bare floorboards around a mahogany bar, carpeted areas and a welcoming atmosphere enhanced by a real fire in winter. The gantry has four carved pillars and supports six old numbered whisky casks. The through lounge has varied seating, a pool table and pictures of sporting heroes. It is the closest pub to the Firth of Forth so handy for the beach and harbour area and it supports the RNLI.
Sadly, the two windows shown were vandalised but have been replaced by good reproductions.
Built 1896 (date on the top front of the building), this town centre pub has a little altered high-ceilinged bar with a spirit barrel gantry but is now opened-up having lost two separate rooms in recent years. The public bar retains its original three-bay mirrored gantry with eight carved pillars having decorative capitals and six old spirit barrels perched on the top, The three water taps on the bar counter no longer work, unusually, there is another on the left-hand side of the gantry. Most lower shelves have been replaced by fridges. At a quiet time, if you can get permission to look from within the servery you can see the pipework that used to come down from the room above to the spirit taps on the gantry – the barrels were filled by bottles in later years. Other old features include the two tall front windows with pictorial etched panels, panelled walls to two-thirds height and a good cornice. The bar counter was replaced in the early 1980s. The left-hand side lounge was originally two rooms and had been much modernised but is now opened-up to the main bar – the hatch with sliding window that served the room is still there on the left-hand side of the servery. In 2008 the small little-used darts room situated directly behind the servery served by a hatch was converted into a kitchen. In recent years parts of the vestibule entrance have been removed leaving only a L-shaped low partition.
Built 1896 (date on the top front of the building), this town centre pub has a little altered high-ceilinged bar with a spirit barrel gantry but is now opened-up having lost two separate rooms in recent years. The public bar retains its original three-bay mirrored gantry with eight carved pillars having decorative capitals and six old spirit barrels perched on the top, The three water taps on the bar counter no longer work, unusually, there is another on the left-hand side of the gantry. Most lower shelves have been replaced by fridges. At a quiet time, if you can get permission to look from within the servery you can see the pipework that used to come down from the room above to the spirit taps on the gantry – the barrels were filled by bottles in later years. Other old features include the two tall front windows with pictorial etched panels, panelled walls to two-thirds height and a good cornice. The bar counter was replaced in the early 1980s. The left-hand side lounge was originally two rooms and had been much modernised but is now opened-up to the main bar – the hatch with sliding window that served the room is still there on the left-hand side of the servery. In 2008 the small little-used darts room situated directly behind the servery served by a hatch was converted into a kitchen. In recent years parts of the vestibule entrance have been removed leaving only a L-shaped low partition.
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This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 1 regular beer.
Auld Hoose, North Berwick
Changing beers typically include: Broughton (varies) , Spey Valley (varies) , Three Brothers (varies)
Source: Regional