mona
The Glory Game
Brighton is the place where the cult of changing pub names is most evident. It's a bit like the imperial colonisers who had to change Saghamurtha to Everest. Hey ho.
Unbelievable, Petworth, my local town, now has 3 pubs. It has lost 21 pubs over the years. They used to like their drink back in the day.
Here's a question for you. I know Phoenix Breweries sponsored the Albion for a while in the 1980's. when exactly did they close? and where was the brewery?
i think this touches upon one of the major and often overlooked reasons for the loss of pubs: its no longer the main lesuire activity for many. time was that, other then cinema, going to the pub was the only thing people "did". now there is so much more, that mean the pub is the default for spare time. this combines with a number of factors, home drinking, stricter on drink driving, duties etc, are all contributing. there no one thing really, but i as i sit here reading NSC with a bottle of Hophead i think how many more things i could be doing than my Dad's generation who had shit all on TV, maybe some hobby, and the Pub to keep them entertained.
Closed around 1990, Free Butt was its former brewery tap, brewery located near The Level, behind the houses in Lewes Road and bounded by Southover Street to the north and Newhaven Street to the east. Now a mixture of housing and student residences.
The franklin still does stink of beer on a Saturday night, although it has been done up now, I live about 3 houses upMy uncle ran one of the now defunct Brighton pubs in the 50s and early 60s: the Lewes Road Inn. It stank of beer. As a five year old in 1963, I absolutely loved it
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[MENTION=26444]Wrong Direction[/MENTION] lives opposite.
According to my Dad he was in St Lukes School air raid shelter when the pub was hit
Here's a list of pubs in Brighton in 1859 I posted here a few months ago:
https://nortr3nixy.nimpr.uk/showthread.php?328196-Historic-Brighton-Pubs
I'm currently trying to find as many old pubs as I can within the old parish boundary of Brighton and have currently found around 600 dating from the 1820s onwards. From the 1830s onwards there were two types; the inns and public houses licensed to sell beer and spirits and the beer houses which were limited to beer but could be set up by anybody in their front room for a small fee. Numerically, Brighton pubs reached a peak in the late 19th century and then began to scale back; losing out to the growth of cinemas, the First World War licensing laws, and particularly from the 1920s onwards the huge scale slum clearances. Another factor was the contraction in the number of breweries, initially small scale in the 1850s and 60s, these were eventually purchased or amalgamated with what became the main two; the Kemp Town Brewery and the Phoenix Brewery. Smaller pubs and brewery taps were often closed after purchasing. A similar thing occured when the main two were themselves swallowed up by the main national breweries, Charrington and Watney respectively, in the 1950s, with more smaller pubs closing particularly in the 1960s and 70s.
The Keep in Falmer is a splendid source of information. There will be local guides and directories stretching back that far.
My home area of Queens Park/Hanover is a classic. If you look at a number of end of row houses you can tell they once served another purpose- namely pubs. The place was full of them.
The James Gray photographic collection will have pictures of some that were pre-slum clearance. Some of the slum clearances occurred during the later 60s building projects on the east side of town. Pubs may have been lost there. At one stage Edward Street was a huge pub crawl.
Edit: Just seen the thread. Looks like you have seen that amazing photographic collection. I've spent hours on those pages.
It's not that at all, at least not the major contributor, it's the Pubco scenario that is doing the following.As soon as successive governments raised the tax rates so much, pubs' days were numbered. It's a shame as they are quintessentially English.
I hadn't realised that. Seems like tied pubs are doomed to failure.It's not that at all, at least not the major contributor, it's the Pubco scenario that is doing the following.
1) Tied pubs are restricted to buying a limited choice of booze at high prices.
2) This strategy forces tenant landlords to turn the pub into food pubs to make any money at all.
3) Tied pubs that don't conform to the food model, fail because of the high prices required to make any money at all.
4) Pubco rents are so high that little improvement investment is possible by tennant landlords....another reason pubs become less attractive.
Down my way, it's only the partial tied, and the freehouses that thrive, fortunately in the village that I live in, pop 3000 there are three thriving pubs, 2 free of tie, and one partial.
In the next village only 1.5 miles away, there are 4 tied pubs, all failing. Enterprise and punch have a lot to answer for.
Indeed they are....and the Pubcos are carrying so much debt that they borrowed to buy all these businesses in the first place, it then becomes an easy decision to offload for a profit when approached by a housing developer.I hadn't realised that. Seems like tied pubs are doomed to failure.
No mention of "Strip" at The Ship, Lewes Rd . Used to be next door to Mithras house.
And now the chaplaincy; very different clientele now .... or maybe not
The killer for pubs was not the government as many suggest but the advent of the pub co Inntrepeneur, Punch Taverns etc in the late 80s early 90s,. Until then brewers realized that there was a lot of wasted floor space in a pub and also sold their beer so made the rent realistic. The pub companies took the floor space and based their rents on that with complete disregard for trading conditions and that was the start of the down turn in pubs and the basic cause of closure.
Somebody once told me in Hanover you can spot which end of row houses were pubs, because their front doors will be at the corner of the building and run at an angle rather than parallel to the roads. Which is just about every end of row house.
I have to disagree about the shop deregulation...it added a new dimension certainly, but if you have a properly run freehouses pub, serving good beers, wines and ciders. ... they thrive.....in almost all cases, the pubs that are failing, are tied Pubco pubs with sky high prices, limited choice, disinterested managers and often kids running round and 2 for a tenner deep fried or microwaved everything.You forgot to mention the supermarkets selling cheap booze and in some instances selling the booze at a loss! Supermarkets also pay less tax on booze than establishments in the hospitality business. This changed people's habits and meant people frequented pubs less, combine this with sky high rents, pubco debt and the property value of pubs and you get the demise of many pubs unfortunately.
I have to disagree about the shop deregulation...it added a new dimension certainly, but if you have a properly run freehouses pub, serving good beers, wines and ciders. ... they thrive.....in almost all cases, the pubs that are failing, are tied Pubco pubs with sky high prices, limited choice, disinterested managers and often kids running round and 2 for a tenner deep fried or microwaved everything.