Coordinates: 51°31′07″N 0°08′05″W / 51.5186°N 0.1347°W
The Fitzroy Tavern is a public house situated at 16 Charlotte Street in the Fitzrovia district of central London, England, to which it gives its name.
It is currently owned by the Samuel Smith Brewery. During a period spanning the 1920s to the mid-1950s, it was a meeting place for many of London's artists, intellectuals and bohemians such as Jacob Epstein, Nina Hamnett, Dylan Thomas, Augustus John, and George Orwell.
It is named either directly or indirectly after the Fitzroy family, Dukes of Grafton, who owned much of the land on which Fitzrovia was built.
The building was originally constructed as the Fitzroy Coffee House, in 1883, and converted to a pub (called "The Hundred Marks") in 1887, by W. M. Brutton. In the early years of the 20th century, Judah Morris Kleinfeld became licensee. He rebranded it "the Fitzroy Tavern" in March 1919.The licence then passed to his daughter and her husband Charles Allchild who ran it into the 1950s His granddaughter Sally Fiber who worked behind the bar from a very young age eventually wrote a history of the pub "The Fitzroy: The Autobiography of a London Tavern" with the help of Clive Powell-Williams.