This Pub is Temporarily Closed
Reported CLOSED after cessation of tenancy. Ownership has now passed to McMullen's, who have said the pub will reopen in summer 2025. It is not known when the planning app work outlined below, will start. Further updates welcome.
Planning app 23/08448/FULL was permitted 7 Mar 2024 in spite of objections from CAMRA: "Use of the second and third floors from ancillary public house (sui generis) to residential accommodation (Class C3) comprising 2x1 bedroom units; replacement of windows with double glazed sash windows; and the installation of two air conditioning units with associated screening on a flat roof area at rear first floor level."
Previous description follows.
Licensed in 1767 and rebuilt in 1897. Now a small and popular pub with a U-shaped counter, tucked away at the top end of Rathbone Street. Background music; quiz nights.
Historic Interest
Used by the wartime Fitzrovia literary crowd who gleefully described encounters with razor gangs and in particular the novelist Anthony Burgess is thought to have used his wife's 1943 experience of them in his later novel, Clockwork Orange. The story goes that his wife Lynne witnessed a razor gang rampage when they poured beer on the floor and when she complained, they pulled pint after pint and forced her to drink them. When Lynne managed to do so the gang was vastly impressed and gave her the money for all the beer they had wasted. Perhaps the drinking feat was easier with the watery wartime beer? In the 1940s and 1950s landlord Major Alf Klein used to initiate male customers by snipping off their ties; his collection grew to over 1500. His great dane, named Colonel, starred in the title role in the film Hound of the Baskervilles. It was partial to drinking customers' beer. Later on in the 1960s the South African Blues Notes quintet played here, escaping apartheid and influencing the British jazz scene of the time. Singer/songwriters Donovan and Ian Dury were also regulars here, as was David "Del Boy" Jason in the 1980s. Not but a few authors have given the pub a mention in their memoirs, including Anthony Burgess and Jeffrey Bernard. 20th century pop 'legends' who have drunk here over the years include Rod Stewart, Paul Jones, Johnnie Ray, and John Lee Hooker. Moving forward to the 21st century, the pub was featured in the Strike TV series as “The Tottenham.”
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 1 regular beer.
Duke Of York, London
Source: National
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