Sunday, 28 February 2010
039. Churchills, Chorlton Street
038. Vine, Kennedy Street
One of three pubs next to each other (Waterhouse and City Arms being the others), this is a popular little pub, but without the beer choice of next door. It is set on three floor, with the bar being on the ground floor, the cellar usually only used for functions these days. There is no pool table but there is a dartboard on the upper floor which is unusual for a city centre pub. Very popular in summer also, when the punters will spill out onto the pavements outside as there is almost no traffic. Well worth visiting, take them all in on the same day.
037. Tiger Lounge / Oscars / Linekers / Slice, Cooper Street
I've been in here many times, but rarely does there ever seem to be more than about 10 people in.
Manchester briefly had its own Linekers bar, named after the unlikely figure of the housewife's favourite footballer, Gary Lineker.
Linekers, Cooper Street. (c) Paul Dean with permission.
Linekers, Cooper Street. (c) Paul Dean with permission.
036. Rising Sun, Queen Street
035. Old Nags Head, Jackson's Row
034. Sir Ralph Abercromby, Bootle Street
033. Salisbury, Wakefield Street
The Salisbury, Wakefield Street, 2009. (c) Gene Hunt at flickr.
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Set behind Grand Central on Oxford Road (virtually next to the Thirsty Scholar), this very old pub is a favourite with bikers and rockers and has been for many years. These photos from 1959, 1970s and 1994 are datable by the motors that site outside. The sign inside also confirms the historically significant area of town this is - Little Ireland - as well as explaining who the place is named after. The 1849 map shows that the Salisbury was originally named the Tulloghgorum Tavern (it also shows the grim-looking back-to-back houses crammed next to the River Medlock in Little Ireland of Great Marlborough Street - Wakefield Street, Anvil Street, Frank Street and William Street) [1].
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The Salisbury, Wakefield Street. (c) Panoramio.
032. Thirsty Scholar / Archies Bar, New Wakefield Street
Archies Bar, New Wakefield Street. (c) rico323 at MDMA.
The beer was also in good condition, and whilst you might not sit in here for a session, it was good enough for a stopping off pint. The only complaint would be that it's a bit pricey; over £3 for a pint of bitter. They also have music nights here upstairs in The Attic club but I wouldn't be able to tell you whether the beers upstairs are the same or not. The drinking terrace out the front beneath the railway arches is handy for smokers. Another visit here for the Thursday night gig session. Again, great ale and a decent crowd for the local beat poet and bands.
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031. Odder, Oxford Road
Quirky little bar situated directly opposite the BBC building, previously known as Zumeba, which used to put music and comedy on upstairs. It possesses a small selection of real ales, three on at the time of our visit, and there were in good condition but a little pricey at £3.10 a pint. Popular with students in the evening, there is a separate floor with music on upstairs and a much quieter shop front bar downstairs. Nice bar for a drink prior to going for something to eat in Zouk or Nandos and quite close to Oxford Road station also. Its sister bar is the original Odd in the Northern Quarter and Oddest has just opened in leafy Chorlton.
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030. Lass O' Gowrie, Charles Street
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Lass O' Gowrie, Charles Street, 1990 & '00s. (c) deltrems at flickr & Scottyweb.
An odd sign on the River Medlock side of the pub states that "Here was the site of Manchester's pissotiƩre, retained for posterity, last used AD 1896." A pissotiƩre is, as you can guess, an outdoor urinal! Also note the Hogshead sign which has recently been painted over - most likely a reference to the hogshead unit of ale, which is 54 gallons (other units feature in Manchester pubs past & present - firkin, tun), rather than the name of this or another pub.
Lass O' Gowrie, Charles Street, 2007. (c) markydeedrop at skyscrapercity.
All live matches are also shown here, and literally all sports. There is also a nice little beer garden converted on the side of the building, but this gets a bit whiffy in summer as it sits over the heavily polluted River Medlock. Also a quirk, there are half a dozen table-top arcade games for back in the day gamers such as Scramble, Donkey Kong etc. and these are also all free. This place is now run by a former regular who snapped it up a few years ago after the pub lost popularity. Well he's certainly turned it around, and is one of the finest and therefore busiest alehouses in town - worth searching out the Lass if you haven't been before.
Lass O' Gowrie, Charles Street, 2009. (c) deltrems at flickr.
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Website: www.thelass.co.uk.
Friday, 26 February 2010
Railway Hotel / Runcorn, Worsley & Wigan Boathouse, Deansgate
Former location of the Railway Hotel, Deansgate (c) Google 2010. View Larger Map.
Judging from this 1910 photo from the archives, the Railway Hotel stood here where nowadays the pedestrian steps up to the GMEX (edit: now 'Deansgate-Castlefield') tram stop are. The second railway bridge seen in the 1910 photo is the one that used to cross Deansgate at Great Bridegwater Street for the old line into Central Station's good yard, the Great Northern Warehouse. The 1849 map shows that his pub was previously called the mouthful, the Runcorn, Wigan & Worsley Boathouse and later on the Packet House Tavern under the stewardship of Samuel Hague [1].
New Boars Head, Withy Grove
Seeing as the Old Boars Head was demolished in the 1920s for the building of the Withy Grove newspaper empire, the New Boars Head will probably have opened around the same time across the road on the corner of Corporation Street.
New Boars Head, Withy Grove, 1974. (c) NAH1952 at flickr [1].
Seen here in 1920s and later in the 1970s, the New Boars Head, finished life as a Tetley's house (as seen below and in Manchester in the '70s [1]) was also demolished along with the rest of this side of Withy Grove to make way for the Arndale Centre.
New Boars Head, With Grove, 1971. (c) Arthur Brougham with family's permission.
1. www.flickr.com/photos/59342697@N06.
2. Manchester in the '70s, Chris Makepeace (2007).
John Bull, Brown Street
2. The North Will Rise Again: Manchester Music City 1976-1996, John Robb (2009).
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Falstaff Hotel, Market Place
Falstaff Hotel, Market Place. (c) KEASBURYGORDON at youtube.
1. http://manchesterhistory.net/manchester/gone/marketplace.html.
2. www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcPAZTIR00s.
Fox Hotel, Victoria Street
Coronation Inn, Old Millgate
Old Shambles, from Market Place. (c) John L Chapman.
1. Underground Manchester, Keith Warrender (2007).
Black Boy, Old Millgate
1. Memorials of Manchester Streets, Richard Wright Proctor (1874).
Thatched House, Market Street
Thatched House, Market Street. (c) jazzworld.
Pictured here in 1805, the original Old Thatched House was demolished in 1823 to be replaced by the Thatched House pub, which itself lasted until the 1972 to make way for the Arndale Centre. The original building was used as a post office as well as its main function as a watering hole. It originally faced onto Market Stead Lane, which later became Market Street. In the vaults of the new Thatched House were discovered tunnels dug into the sandstone bedrock, leading off towards the Cathedral one way and Spring Gardens the other [1]. The old Guardian Building stood right in front of the pub as seen in 1955, so it was not surprisingly a popular haunt of thirsty Evening News and Guardian staff. The Guardian Building was pulled at the same time as the rest of the area, as seen here in 1972 (Thatched House on the left down the alley).
Thatched House, Market Street. (c) Manchester Local Image Collection. Click here to view full image.
This image shows the Thatched House from the site of the now-gone Guardian Buildings, looking back towards Market Street. The pub is seen in happier days in 1970 with a Guardian truck motoring around the corner. The punters of the Thatched House further back in the past may also have had happy times, as the pub was known as a hangout of prostitutes: "living then in Market Street, I had opportunities of seeing the hookers swarm about the doors of the Thatched House, the White Bear, and similar inns every morning, besieging the head waiters with the view of ascertaining who had arrived overnight [2]. In the 1950s the pub was a popular jazz venue, and a photo of the Crescent Jazz Band playing in the Thatched House is shown above.
Bolton Arms, New Bridge Street
The Bolton Arms at 83 New Bridge Street (now Trinity Way), north of Victoria Station, is seen here as a Youngers house in the 1970s. It was once owned by the literally literary-named William Shakespeare Yates. It's claimed there was a tunnel leading from the pub cellar to the nearby Cathedral, which had been bricked and whitewashed over [1]. In the 1970s it was a Scottish & Newcastle pub selling Tartan keg beers, and not surprisingly, was popular with Scottish folks. A few years earlier it had served Youngers by beer engine, indicative of the near-death of real ale in Britain in the '70s [2].
1. Underground Manchester, Keith Warrender (2007).
2. The Manchester Pub Guide, Manchester & Salford City Centres (1975).
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Manchester Arms, Long Millgate
Seen in 1899, in the 1900s, and here in 1904 (note the Jepson's Temperance Hotel next door for the more straight-laced customer), the Manchester Arms was converted from a house of residence to a public house at the end of the 19th century. Here are a couple of rear views from 1904 and 1910 from the Corporation Street side. The Manchester Arms was demolished in the mid-1970s to make way for the Picc-Vic cross-town underground scheme, which of course, never materialised.
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The Picc-Vic Manchester Underground. (c) wikipedia.
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Manchester Rapid Transit, 1967. (c) MarkO at skyscrapercity.
1. www.images.manchester.gov.uk.