Monday, 24 May 2010

079. Crown & Anchor, Cateaton Street


Crown & Anchor, Cateaton Street. (c) markydeedrop at skyscrapercity.

Once a bit of a hole frequented by ne'er-do-wells and old soaks, now a Holts flagship boozer in this grand old building, with the usual good beer and a surprisingly mixed client base. Sharing the area around the new Shambles Square, al fresco drinking in the sunshine or evening is the norm at this pub, which dates back to 1793 in this historic part of town now often referred to as "the Cathedral Quarter".
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Crown & Anchor, Cateaton Street. (c) Tony Worrall Foto at flickr.

As for beer, it's Holts, so as we'd expect there is both Holts Bitter and Dark Mild on draught, and both excellent pints, albeit served in plastic pots if you want to sit outside. I'm guessing there is a bylaw here insisting on plastic, as this isn't the requirement at Kro in Piccadilly where you can also drink outside with your pint pots. Two-roomed pub with a posh, modern side and an old-fashioned side for the old boys. There is no pool table or dart board, but if I'm honest, it's probably too crowded generally to fit one in. Good boozer, considerably better than the nearby Sinclairs, Mitre and Wellington in our opinion.

The Crown & Anchor had a stint as the brilliantly-named Mr Chesters Pie & Ale House back in the early 1990s before Holts took it over. Going back further it was a Whitbread house in the 1970s and before that, a Threlfalls house, as shown in 1965. Note Browns butcher's next door which apparently became a nightclub for a time but has since been incorporated into the modern day Crown & Anchor.


Mr Chesters Pie & Ale House, Cateaton Street, 1990. (c) deltrems at flickr.

3 comments:

  1. I Can't see how Brown's butcher's was ever a nightclub. It had been a hardware shop for a time and the rooms above used by the Mitre. It was a rental video shop (the only one in the city centre for a few years when I worked there until 1992. It had two cellars, the first cellar was complete with a butcher's chopping table and the second one apparently led to the Cathedral, even the rat catcher was frightened to venture into that. It was a great pub and the landlord used to bring me soup and a bread roll every day.

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  2. I can't remember it being a nightclub.

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  3. Brown's was a nightclub which you entered through the corner door on the Mitre pub. It was a cellar bar and unusually cheap to enter in the late 80's (£1.00).
    I was there on the last night when it closed it's doors forever.
    You can still go down there as The Mitre pub now uses the space and you can just about recognise the layout.

    Top bar, well missed.

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