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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Guest Date: 23 Jan 03 - 07:21 AM Then there's that one..in Bree I think..The Prancing Poney? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: jimlad Date: 23 Jan 03 - 07:33 AM We also had/have The Strangled Leper and The Septic Ferret The longest pub name in England is/was... The Thirteenth Derbyshire Light Infantryman Arms |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Schantieman Date: 24 Jan 03 - 11:05 AM There are a number of "The Case is Altered"s, but I can't recall where I've seen them (see 'aging' threads). Another pub in Ormskirk was (is?) Th'Buck i'th'Vine. I think they usd to have a folk club there too! Steve |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: The Walrus Date: 24 Jan 03 - 08:21 PM There has been mention of "The Antigallican". I seem to recall that there was a pub of that name between London Bridge Station and Tower Bridge some 15-20 years ago (it might still be there), I only ever went in there once and that was enough (imagine all that is worst in an urban pub and it was there<1>). Regards Walrus <1> Except the wide screen TV belting out football and/or continual MTV, in those days |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Taggart Date: 29 Oct 04 - 07:31 AM In Waltham Abbey,Essex is The New Inn.So what,there's New Inns everywhere,but the pub sign has a picture of a Wildebeast(Gnu). |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST Date: 29 Oct 04 - 07:39 AM In Bloomsbury Way,London WC1 is the recently boarded up Bull and Mouth,derived from another of Henry V111's sorties into France.The bull is Boulogne and the mouth is the estuary adjacent.Henry fought and won an engagement there opening up the route into Europe for him and his troops. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Taggart Date: 29 Oct 04 - 07:45 AM In Bishops Castle,Shropshire is The Three Tuns,which brews it's own beer and very good it is too.Whats odd/unusual about it is,that the local railway preservation society started there about 25 yearts ago,but the local railway last ran a train in 1932. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Taggart Date: 29 Oct 04 - 08:21 AM Yes The Princess Alice was eventually rebuilt,my mate Dave Berry(no not the famous one) got married there in the early 1990's. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Gurney Date: 29 Oct 04 - 03:35 PM We used to go to a club in Leamington Spa long ago, held at The Virgins and Castle. I don't think that I ever saw it in daylight.... Then I was involved in a club at The Cock and Bear in Nuneaton. It doesn't take much imagination to see what it was sometimes called, after lubrication. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: grumpy al Date: 29 Oct 04 - 03:44 PM Liz, sadly the knights in the bottom has been renamed the Victoria Original eh? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: grumpy al Date: 29 Oct 04 - 04:09 PM just remebered a pub in Reading I think, called The World Turned Upside Down |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Gurney Date: 29 Oct 04 - 04:30 PM And I just remembered The Rat Pit in Aldershot. It still had the pictures of a rat-killing-against-the-clock-by-a-man-and-a-terrier when I was there in 1959. (1959!!!!!) |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: fogie Date: 30 Oct 04 - 05:09 AM Great thread Way out in the sticks near where I live between Clun and Newtown- about as far from the sea as you can get, there stands a closed pub of great local fame called the Anchor that the wild Welsh used to cross the border to when their area was dry. It used to run rock music gigs late into the night. I cant remember how many times it was raided and closed down because of what went on in the early hours, but I do remember the pet fox that was chained up outside the door and used to scare the wits out of you if it jumped at you! |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Joe_F Date: 30 Oct 04 - 08:14 PM "The Blue Bull, the Dragon, the Star of Wales, the Twll in the Wall, the Sour Grapes, the Shepherd's Arms, the Bells of Aberdovey: I had nothing to do in the whole wild August world but remember the names where the outing stopped and keep an eye on the charabanc." -- Dylan Thomas, "A Story" "The Moon under Water" -- name of a fictitious pub described in loving detail by George Orwell in one of his columns. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Nigel Parsons Date: 31 Oct 04 - 09:33 AM "Moon Under Water" maybe fictitious for George Orwell, but a quick Google will find several in London, One in Manchester, Milton Keynes, Cannock.... Perhaps an allusion to Orwell, but perhaps earlier legend of the Moonrakers and the film "The Moonraker" (1958) had something to do with it. CHEERS Nigel |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Auldtimer Date: 31 Oct 04 - 12:45 PM In Kilmarnock, well known for it's conections with Robert Burns, there is a pub/resturant called The Parched Poet. However it is better known as The Poached Parrot. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Snuffy Date: 31 Oct 04 - 01:29 PM Nigel, I think you will find that all the Moon Under Water pubs are operated by Wetherspoons and have either beeen re-named or used to be banks, post offices etc. The name is definitely Orwellian. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Noreen Date: 31 Oct 04 - 04:29 PM Re Taggart's post about the New Inn whose pubsign pictures a gnu, I have this evening driven through the village of Newbald in the East Riding of Yorkshire where The Gnu. public house is directly opposite The Tiger. Some competition there, I'll warrant! And Snuffy, I believe you're right- the Moon Under Water Wetherspoon's "pub" on Deansgate in Manchester was previously a cinema. Nice place to drink, put I wouldn't call it a pub. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Joe_F Date: 31 Oct 04 - 08:58 PM "But now is the time to reveal something which the discerning and disillusioned reader will probably have guessed already. There is no such place as `The Moon under Water'. "That is to say, there may well be a pub of that name, but I don't know of it, nor do I know of any pub with just that combination of qualities [scil. draught stout, china mugs, open fires, cheap meals, a garden, motherly barmaids, no radio, the solid comfortable ugliness of the nineteenth century, & the availability of pipe tobacco, aspirin, & stamps]." -- George Orwell, _Evening Standard_, 9 February 1946 Did the Wetherspoons pay attention? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Nigel Parsons Date: 01 Nov 04 - 02:20 PM I accept that the pub name seems to be in use following on from George Orwell's writings. However, my comments about "The Moonrakers" give it a certain credibility as a pub name. Did Orwell just pluck a name from thin air, or was there a thought of this at the back of his mind. Nigel |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Mikey joe Date: 02 Nov 04 - 05:58 AM I like the pub names from Little Britain: The Scarecrow and Mrs King & The Chaka Demus & Pliers |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: muppitz Date: 02 Nov 04 - 06:48 AM Nottingham has a pub somewhere in the city centre called "The Frog and Onion", and once upon a time we had a "Slug and Fiddle". Also, not really an odd name, but our "Pitcher and Piano" is a converted church! muppitz x |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Bernard Date: 02 Nov 04 - 12:39 PM The Swan With Two Nicks... This is often seen as 'The Swan With Two Necks', which is an incorrect interpretation... In the UK, all swans belong to the Queen by law, with the exception of the Vintners' swans on the Thames which have two 'nicks' (or notches) in their bills as distinguishing marks. This may well be more widespread (or even inaccurate!) than I've indicated, but is given as the explanation of the pub name... |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Black Bitch Linlithgow From: GUEST Date: 20 Mar 05 - 05:42 PM |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Haruo Date: 20 Mar 05 - 05:59 PM I always thought "Pig & Whistle" was a strange one (though not unique, as I know there are identically named premises in (at least) Seattle, San Francisco, Pattaya (Thailand) and London. However, at least as odd as the image the name conjures up is the etymology, from "Piggin (and) Wassail" of peripatetic Christmas toasting fame. Haruo |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: mandoleer Date: 20 Mar 05 - 06:53 PM The UpSteps in Birkdale, Southport was originally Bankfield House, but as you have to go up steps to get in (very unusual in Southport pubs!) the name stuck and has officially been changed. The Guest House is a bit odd as a pub name, and Southport also has The Cheshire Lines (despite having been in Lancashire - now Merseyside) because it was near a terminus of the aforesaid railway. The Eureka in Ormskirk is in Halsall Lane, and so far as I know, Ormskirk still has the unique Snig's Foot (a snig being a grass snake). Liverpool has The Flat House, and The Paraffin Oil Store, apart from The Roscoe Head and Doctor Duncan's. Liverpool also has a modern pub called the Cockwell, which for the first part of its existence had the word Inn after it's name. For some reason it was changed... Further afield, just outside Drybrook in the Forest of Dean there is The Wonky Donkey. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Bill the Collie Date: 20 Mar 05 - 11:02 PM There used to be a pub in Bristol called "The pen and filofax", much frequented by the suits. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Paul Burke Date: 21 Mar 05 - 08:19 AM Years ago, when the daughter was 3,the Boy asked about a slightly odd pub name (the Hurt Arms in fact).. I explained about where pub names come from. Daughter stayed very quiet .. then when I'd finished piped up "I know some pub names Daddy... the Flying Snail.. the Tree Snail... the Ground Snail.. the Flat Horse and Slug" I don't know why gastropods figured so strongly, but I've never come across a better name than that last one. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: JennyO Date: 21 Mar 05 - 08:50 AM Then there was that pub in Canberra in Oz, where Mudcatters met a couple of years ago at the National - called the Wig and Pen. Sounds like a pub for lawyers. I don't know, but I suspect that might in fact be the reason for the name. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,furg Date: 21 Mar 05 - 09:14 AM There are two pub's in Leuven in Belgium one called the 'Nod' and around the corner and up some stairs 'Wink' - why these names are not in the local language is i believe linked to the fact that they do (or at least once did) belong to an Irish seminary in the same time. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST Date: 21 Mar 05 - 10:37 AM I have seen two pubs round here in the Midlands called "The Gate Hangs well" which always struck me as odd but my favourite pub name is from a few years ago when I lived in London. There was a fairly grotty bar under the arches of Cannon St Railway Station called "The Bouncing Banker" which of itself was not very interesting until Roberto Calvi, God's Banker, was found swinging from a rope under the same bridge. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,The Barden of England Date: 21 Mar 05 - 10:58 AM There's 'The Dirty Habit' just by trhe Pilgrims Way in Hollingbourne, Kent. My favourite nickname was 'The Trout & Knacker' for the Salmon & Bull that was on the corner of Bethnal Green Road and Cambridge Heath Road in the East End of London |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Don(Wyziwyg)T Date: 21 Mar 05 - 02:16 PM Two in the Maidstone area of Kent. The "Who'd have thought it", and the "Duke without a head". Don T. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Cats Date: 21 Mar 05 - 05:12 PM There used to be a pub somewhere near Brighton called the 'Jovial Whippet'.. Is it stil there? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Snuffy Date: 21 Mar 05 - 07:55 PM Daughter (aged 4): What's that pub called, Dad? Me: It's called The Sun Daughter: What's it called at night, then? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Paul Burke Date: 22 Mar 05 - 09:19 AM "I have seen two pubs round here in the Midlands called "The Gate Hangs well" " This used to be on the Gate Hangs Well between Whaley Bridge and Chapel en le Frith: This gate hangs well And hinders none Sit down, refresh, And travel on. The reference is to the turnpike gate, where you had to stop to pay road tolls up to about 1880. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Raggytash Date: 22 Mar 05 - 09:48 AM There was/is a pub named the Blue Lion somewhere on the south side of Manchester, which I seem to recall being told was the only one of that name in the country |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Noreen Date: 22 Mar 05 - 10:23 AM Hey Raggy, a Google search is useful to check the veracity of such sweeping statements.... How's my clock? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Big Mick Date: 22 Mar 05 - 10:32 AM From the first minute I met you, Noreen, I wondered how your aul clock was!!! ....singing tooraloora-loora, tooraloora-loora, tooraliay Mick, ducking and running for cover. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST Date: 22 Mar 05 - 10:40 AM Lamorna's Wink..In Cornwall. |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Noreen Date: 22 Mar 05 - 11:12 AM Oh Mick- I thought you'd never ask! *grin* |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: 8_Pints Date: 22 Mar 05 - 08:40 PM The Davenport Arms in Woodford, Cheshire bears the coat of arms of the local gentry. They had the right of summary execution of anyone caught trespassing in their woods. The point was graphically re-inforced by the felon's head with a noose around it, mounted above the shield on said coat of arms. Consequently, the pub is known by the locals as the 'Thief's neck'! (or simply the 'Thieve's') Bob vG |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: mad2 Date: 23 Mar 05 - 01:22 PM how about The Gate Hangs Well -? great isn't it - why on earth would you name a pub after a spot of DIY ? |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: GUEST,Andrew Date: 23 Mar 05 - 05:49 PM Not as good as lots here but I like the Dirty Duck in Stratford on Avon, or the White Swan if you approach it from the other direction |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Raggytash Date: 23 Mar 05 - 06:40 PM Your clock is wonderful, I cannot wait to wind it up again ! |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Big Mick Date: 23 Mar 05 - 07:06 PM That ain't right, Raggy. I asked first. Tried to get her to stay an extra day in the States. I could have had that clocked fixed, wound, and purring along. But she had to get back to UK..... .... singing tooraloora-loora, tooraloora-loora, tooraliay Mick, the clockwinder |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Noreen Date: 24 Mar 05 - 06:50 AM Told you before, it runs on batteries! |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: mandoleer Date: 24 Mar 05 - 07:15 PM The Blue Bell at Barton (West Lancs) used to have a blue bell hanging with a similar legend, but with This bell hangs well And injures none Refresh yourself, pay And travel on. One more not far from that, by the way, that I've never seen elsewhere, is the Running Horses. This is a canal pub, not far from the former Maghull racecourse, and by coincidence, it's in Bells Lane... Oh, and the Red Lion at Scarisbrick seems to have become the Blue Elephant, but I'm still trying to find out if it's become an Indian restaurant.... |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Leadfingers Date: 24 Mar 05 - 07:45 PM Worst renaming of Pubs is down round here - At least six pubs within five miles of me are now called MacDonalds !! |
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Subject: RE: Folklore: Odd pub names From: Peter Kasin Date: 24 Mar 05 - 07:46 PM There's one near my hometwon called "The Office." That's so you can call home and say, "I'll be home late. I'm at the office" and you wouldn't be lying! Chanteyranger |
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