Sunday, 29 December 2013
67 The Lamb - Heywood
First visited : 29 December 2013
This is slightly further along York Street towards Rochdale. At some point in the past it was re-named The Wishing Well and is still going strong under that banner.
The 'Well seems quite a friendly pub geared towards a metal-loving music crowd. It's quite old-fashioned with some interesting nooks and crannies. It's tidy enough and the service was OK
Simon befriended another little lad in there and we all had a go at the Pointless option on the quiz machine. So it's generally a thumb's up for this one.
Thursday, 26 December 2013
66 The Ship Inn - Heywood
Not visited
The Ship Inn was situated at York St, the road out towards Rochdale. In the 00s it had a makeover as Legends Sports Bar but this closed in 2008. It is now a sort of health-cum-social centre for local residents.
65 The King's - Heywood
First visited : 26 December 2013
The King's is a fine Georgian building which would grace a nicer town. It is currently decorated with flags and the exterior lit up with spotlights at night to pleasing effect.
Inside it's rather disappointing, spacious but charmless. The bar staff are scruffy and so too are the clientele although I admit that Boxing Day might not be the most representative day I could have picked to visit. Incongruously there was a transvestite at the bar who seemed to be eyeing me up so I moved away rather quickly after being served.
There was also "entertainment" in the form of a karaoke singer working her way through some seventies pop classics at deafening volume although she didn't have much of an audience. The guys huddled round the three TV screens covering City vs Liverpool would clearly have preferred her to put a sock in it. Her vocal tone was alright but her phrasing was awful and before the end of her murder of "Whiskey In A Jar" I left.
Saturday, 14 December 2013
64 The Freemason's Arms - Heywood
Not visited
This mock-Tudor pub is currently standing empty and forlorn in the town centre so I'm guessing its demise was relatively recent. There's a good review of it dating from 2007 on pubutopia.com.
63 Britannia Hotel -Heywood
Not visited
As can be seen from the picture what was the Britannia Hotel on Bridge Street is now a vet's.
62 Dresser's Arms - Heywood
First visited : 14th December 2013
Now we come to the pubs right in the centre of Heywood. It looked touch and go for this one at one point but in 2010 it reopened as The Grant's Arms.
It's still got its attractive white stone exterior but inside it's a brash, noisy, modern town centre pub with a DJ booth in the centre, flashing lights, not too much seating, warning posters about drugs and deafening music. When I went in around 5.30 pm most of the customers were there for a 21st birthday party. They were Irish to judge from the music being played and there was a buffet under wraps near where I sat - the only seating option that didn't make it look like I was trying to gatecrash the party.
It's OK if you like that sort of thing but I probably won't be back.
Saturday, 7 December 2013
61 The Stonemason's Arms - Heywood
Not visited
It's a similar story with this pub which was near The Bridge Inn on the left hand side of the A58. It shut down in January 2009 ( a commenter on beerintheevening.com in 2004 said it was too pricey for the area ) but was continually attacked by vandals and seriously damaged by fire a year later. It was finally demolished earlier this year and replaced by a Tesco Express.
60 Bridge Inn, Heywood
Not visited
This architecturally flamboyant pub was further down towards the town centre on the right. Some time after 1978 it's name was changed to The Brick House. It shut down around 2004 and since then has been an eyesore subject to constant vandalism.
59 The Crown - Heywood
First visited : 7 December 2013
The Crown is on the right side of the A58 as you get closer to the centre of Heywood.
It's rather nondescript on the outside , the most notable feature being the enclosed beer garden. Though not especially busy at 7.30 pm on a Saturday the pub does appear to be thriving. It's clean and tidy and looks to have had a fairly recent makeover. The board outside promises "Good Food" although I saw no sign they were serving anything while I was there.
Saturday, 2 November 2013
58 The Horse And Jockey - Heywood
First visited : 2 November 2013
The Horse And Jockey is further down towards the centre of Heywood on the same side of the A58 and the third of our pubs in a row to have survived.
Unfortunately the Horse And Jockey is pretty horrible. It's meagrely-stocked, drably painted, untidy and shabby. The floor is filthy, the seating on its last legs and the toilets unspeakable. The clientele on a Saturday tea-time were reasonably civilised but the two bar staff particularly the foul mouthed female were as rough as they come. The board outside laughably claims it is a friendly family local but the statement above it about CCTV inside and out gives a better hint as to what it's like.
What it has got going for it is a decent looking chippy just behind it but I would wander down from the Hark To Towler rather than pop in this one.
Saturday, 12 October 2013
57 Hark to Towler - Heywood
First visited : 12 October 2013
This pub is just a stone's throw from the Summit on the same side of the road so I was reliant on the other lads spotting it while I scribbled down the previous pub's name. I actually remember them struggling to get across this unusual name to me ; it's funny how little details like that stick in the mind.
I must confess I have no idea who Towler was or why he / she should be worthy of anyone's attention but it's certainly a name you remember.
I visited it today with my son Simon after the match. It's a long building with a small lounge at one end of the bar and a basic games room at the other. It's an old-fashioned , slightly shabby, working class pub. It was reasonably busy for a Saturday teatime and the locals were friendly. The Halloween decorations were already up and were actually quite impressive particularly the two life-size figures facing the bar. The tray of free sandwiches ( quite good ) was another nice touch.
Saturday, 28 September 2013
56 The Summit - Heywood
First visited : 28 September 2013
After Heap Bridge the A58 starts a long climb up to Heywood and the pub at the top of the hill is called appropriately enough The Summit. The building is not particularly attractive with its cream-covered cladding but it's in a relatively nice area, is still open and looks to have had a fresh coat of paint recently.
I visited it at tea time this afternoon after watching Dale make hard work of a 3-2 victory over Wycombe from being 3-0 up after half an hour. It was still reasonably busy with a football-watching crowd catered for by three separate screens. The décor is fairly Spartan but it's clean and comfortable. There are live bands most Saturday nights and a quiz night on Mondays.
Saturday, 21 September 2013
55 Old Boar's Head - Heap Bridge
Not visited
The Old Boar's Head was just a few yards further up the road from The Bridge. It has now been demolished .
54 Bridge Inn - Heap Bridge
Not visited
Anyone familiar with the area will realise that we missed the Roach Hotel ( still open ) and the Seven Stars ( now Automoney ) on Rochdale Road before arriving in Heap Bridge.
The Bridge was unmissable, a large detatched red brick building serving this small industrial community. At the time we were passing through the huge Yates Duxbury paper mill nearby was still open but it fell in the Thatcher recession of the early eighties.
I'm not sure when the pub closed but the building is now Emerald House, the headquarters of an import/export firm.
53 Peel Hotel - Bury
First Visited : 21st September 2013
At last we've come to one that's still open ! The Peel Hotel survives amid mainly Asian-owned businesses on Rochdale Road. I visited on a Saturday lunchtime and found it friendly and quiet with a few unthreatening middle-aged regulars knocking about. It's reasonably clean although the toilets could do with a lick of paint and there are what look like original glass fittings over the bar. The walls are decorated with some mildly interesting photos of old Bury.
Sunday, 15 September 2013
52 New Road - Bury
Not visited
This one was situated on Rochdale Road at the junction with Heywood St opposite The Crown, not as I recorded in Heap Bridge. There is now a car park where the pub stood.
51 Crown Hotel, Bury
Not visited
This one was situated a bit further along Rochdale Road. It closed sometime between 2010 and 2012. This is getting a bit depressing isn't it ?
50 The Claybank - Bury
Not visited
This was situated on Rochdale Road as you left the town centre. It has now been demolished.
49 The Royal Huntsman -Bury
Not visited
This was a large pub which was demolished as part of the town centre redevelopment in 1985.
48 George Hotel, Bury
Visited : ?
We have now reached Bury town centre with this one overlooking the bus station. It closed down around four or years ago I think and had a rough reputation. It is now a card and balloon shop.
I put a question mark against this one because I have a vague memory of popping into a town centre pub in Bury in August 1987 to kill time prior to a pre-season game at Gigg Lane ( I recall our new signing Mark Gavin looking impressive ) and this pub is a good candidate.
Saturday, 14 September 2013
47 The Derby Arms - Bury
Not visited
I think we missed one called The Wellington which lies in between the Jolly Carter and this because it doesn't look new.
The Derby Arms lay just before the junction with Ainsworth Road which is where I turn off for home coming back from Rochdale games. Although I never patronised it, it caught the attention by painting the gable end showing in the photo above with a St George Cross whenever England were playing in an international tournament. I think it shut down a year or so ago. It has now been demolished and the site is a car park for a car showroom.
46 The Jolly Carters - Bury
Not visited
The Jolly Carters ( which I misrecorded as The Holly Carters ) was on the left hand side of the A58 as it starts dropping into the centre of Bury.
When I started this blog it was an Indian restaurant, the Mumbai Lounge and the reason for the lack of movement here for the past couple of years is simply that I couldn't afford to go there. They didn't offer any sort of deals at quiet times and it seemed too self-indulgent to buy a pricey meal while I was ( and still am ) underemployed. However they've now solved the problem by shutting down so we can move on. It was never in the right place to be so expensive and so the building is currently vacant.
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