Traditional local at the confluence of the one-way system. Public bar to the front, pool room to the left and small lounge at the back. Steep steps lead down to the toilets and beer garden.
Historic Interest
Added to the South Yorkshire Heritage List, September 2023.
One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
Behind a stone frontage of decent dignity and possibly purpose-built around 1900, the Travellers Rest preserves the basics of its original layout scheme of three rooms off a central hall-cum-lobby.
Especially notable are the near-intact back lounge (with good bench seating), the tiled entrance lobby, and leaded glass suggestive of an inter-war refurbishment. It was briefly owned, from 1909 to 1918, by Strout’s, a small Sheffield brewery of the time, and the front window engraved with their name could be unique.
Behind a stone frontage of decent dignity and possibly purpose-built around 1900, the Travellers Rest preserves the basics of its original layout scheme of three rooms off a central hall-cum-lobby. The entrance lobby has a dado of Victorian tiling and there is good stained and leaded glass in the inner door screen. On the front right the tap room has old fixed seating, the bar back looks to date from the inter-war period, the counter may be old with some modern panels added (?) but the fireplace is a replacement.
The front left room with 'Bar Parlour' etched and frosted windows has no old fittings and is home to a pool table. Ahead of the front door is a carpeted lobby with a quarter circle bar that looks to date from at least the 1950s. The most intact room is the back lounge on the right with good bench seating of age, early twentieth century green tiled and wood surround fireplace, a counter front which looks to date from at least the 1950s but has lost its door. There is a good colourful 'Ladies' stained and leaded panel in the door and the rear left room has the wording 'Kitchen'. The Travellers was briefly owned, from 1909 to 1918, by Strout’s, a small Sheffield brewery: the front window engraved with their name could be unique. Strouts were founded in 1865 and were taken over by Tennants in 1918. They also owned the Commercial in Chapletown. The pub was taken on by Samuel Smith from Whitbread East Pennines Ltd. in 1982. The following year, the rear left lounge came into use as a public room, replacing a domestic kitchen. The rear left Living Room became a Catering Kitchen (plan by Samuel Smith Architects Department). The handpumps at the Travellers were removed in March 2015.
Travellers Rest, Sheffield
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...