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This piglix contains articles or sub-piglix about Pubs in the Royal Borough of Greenwich
piglix posted in Food & drink by Galactic Guru
   
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Cutty Sark (pub)


The Cutty Sark is a Grade II listed public house at 6–7 Ballast Quay, Greenwich, London.

It was built in the early 19th century.

Coordinates: 51°29′11″N 0°00′02″W / 51.48631°N 0.00045°W / 51.48631; -0.00045




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Kings Arms, Woolwich


The Kings Arms is a public house in Woolwich, London that was bombed in 1974 and is now a landmark on the route of the London Marathon.

Standing at 1 Frances Street by Woolwich Dockyard, it was built in the nineteenth century. In the 1881 census it is listed as the Kings Arms Hotel.

A bomb made of 6 lb of gelignite with the addition of shrapnel was thrown through the window into the bar on 7 November 1974. Two people were killed in the explosion; Gunner Richard Dunne (aged 42), of the Royal Artillery and Alan Horsley (aged 20), a sales clerk. 28 people, including the landlady, Margaret Nash, were injured. Opposite the pub are the Royal Artillery barracks and the pub is used frequently by soldiers from it, which is why the IRA attacked the pub.

Responsibility for this bombing was subsequently claimed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) and specifically by part of the Active Service Unit apprehended at the Balcombe Street Siege. Some of the Guildford Four were wrongfully charged with involvement in this bombing. In 1981 it became one of the pubs on the route of the London Marathon.

Coordinates: 51°29′15″N 0°03′22″E / 51.4874°N 0.0561°E / 51.4874; 0.0561



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Spanish Galleon, Greenwich


The Spanish Galleon is a Grade II listed public house at 1 College Approach, Greenwich, London.

It was built in 1836.

Coordinates: 51°28′54″N 0°00′36″W / 51.4816°N 0.0099°W / 51.4816; -0.0099




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Sun in the Sands


imageSun in the Sands

The Sun in the Sands is a public house between Blackheath and Shooter's Hill in London. The pub gives its name to the adjacent road junction, where the A2 between central London and Kent meets the A102, which provides access to the Blackwall Tunnel. Several Transport for London (TfL) bus routes pass close to the junction.

There has been a meeting point at this location since the Middle Ages. It was allegedly a stopping point of King Henry VIII when riding from Greenwich to Shooter's Hill with his Queen and several Lords. The present pub dates from around 1745 and its name comes from the sight of the setting sun amidst dust, kicked up by sheep herded by drovers from Kent travelling towards London. It was originally an isolated inn on heathland, frequented by highwaymen known as "the Trojans", who regularly engaged in pickpocketing.William Hazlitt was known to visit the inn.

The junction was built in stages, due to various 20th-century projects to bypass the old Roman Road between Blackheath and Dartford. The A2 to the south was constructed as part of the "Shooters Hill By-Pass" which took most of the 1920s to complete. The modern roundabout interchange dates from the late 1960s.

As well as the road junction, the pub has also given its name to the nearby Sunfields Methodist Church and to the adjacent Sun Lane, a former caravan repair site which now hosts a garage.

In August 1995, Greenwich Borough Council announced that the area to the east of the junction, including the pub, would become part of a Conservation Area, defined as an area "of special architectural or historic interest, the character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve or enhance."



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Trafalgar Tavern


The Trafalgar Tavern is a Grade II listed public house at Park Row, Greenwich, London, situated on the south bank of the River Thames, east of and adjacent to the Old Royal Naval College.

The 'Trafalgar Tavern', designed by architect Joseph Kay, opened in 1837, having been built on the site of 'The Old George Tavern'.

It was familiar to novelist Charles Dickens, who set the wedding breakfast in Our Mutual Friend there. It also became well-known as the venue for political whitebait dinners for the Liberal party in Victorian times, the last being held in 1883.

In 1915, the Tavern closed, and served as a home for aged seamen during World War I, later becoming a working men’s club between the wars. It reopened as a pub in 1965, and in 1996 was voted the Evening Standard Pub of the year.

Coordinates: 51°29′04″N 0°00′15″W / 51.4845°N 0.0043°W / 51.4845; -0.0043



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