Vegas Seagull
New member
- Jul 10, 2009
- 7,782
The rot started setting in in the mid to late 80s. I can remember as a teenager the weekend started on Thursdays, and f you got to a town centre pub after 8, then there was NO chance of getting a seat. We often used to meet upstairs at the Quadrant at 7:30 and it was already getting packed. I don't think it was a lack of community spirit that made people stay at home and drink rather than go to the pub, it was increasing unemployment, along with increased taxes on alcohol making drinking in the pub unaffordable. It was the fault of government and circumstance rather than the breweries. There was a also a concerted effort to stop thr monopoly on pubs that breweries held, which while it was well inentioned, backfired badly. Forcing breweries to sell off pubs didn't result in lots of privately owned freehouses as was hoped, it led to the creation of chains of pubs owned by companies that weren't breweries, who often tied themselves to breweries anyway.
What rot?
A few (brighton has the lowest closures in the UK) run down pubs being replaced with glorious buildings 10 x the size like The Font (800) The Post & Telegraph simply moving the capacity around. NO great ones have shut ie Cricketeers, Pump House, Sussex in the same area. Licences venues haven't gone down just more cafes & restaurants (music library to wonderful room of Cote)etc