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George, London

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Cask Ale
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Operator: Greene King
75-77 Borough High Street, Borough Market, London, SE1 1NH (View on Google Map)
  • Historic Interior

Dating from the 17th century this public house is London's last remaining galleried inn and not surprisingly is Grade I listed. The building is owned by the National Trust and leased to Greene King. Large outdoor seating area in the cobbled courtyard in front of the pub. Various ground floor drinking areas to explore and an upstairs Gallery Bar which is not always open. The courtyard is shared with the separate former Heeltap bar that is now renamed The George and run as a sports bar.

Historic Interest

The Grade I-listed George was rebuilt in 1676 after a major fire in Southwark and is the last galleried coaching inn in London – but even this is but a fragment of its former self. It used to extend round the four sides of a courtyard. Part of it was demolished in 1889 to make way for the construction of railway warehousing. The galleries gave access to the first and second floor rooms. The upstairs rooms are panelled and are particularly fine. Most of the pub’s spaces involve modern fittings but the Parliament Bar has some of the oldest woodwork purpose-fitted for a pub anywhere (some of it might even date back to the rebuilding of the inn).

Information for this venue is provided by the South East London Branch of CAMRA
Previous Names
George Inn
Local Authority
Southwark
Last updated
Last surveyed
14/02/2023
Leasehold owner
unknown
Freehold owner
Greene King
Pub ID
SEL/10467
Asset of Community Value

Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance

Listed status: I

One of Britain’s only two galleried coaching inns, the other being the (now much-altered) New Inn in Gloucester. The George was in existence by the mid-16th century and was one of several inns in Southwark that catered for travellers entering and leaving from London via nearby London Bridge (until 1750 the only one across the Thames). A terrible fire destroyed much of Southwark in 1676 and the George was rebuilt immediately afterwards. Today we have but a fragment left as the other parts that made up a courtyard were demolished in 1889 for railway development. Most of the interior is modern but the Parliament Bar, the first on the right, has remarkable old woodwork (might some of it even be late 17th-century?). It evidently comprised two rooms at one time. Nearest the street there is full-height horizontal boarding and simple fixed seating plus a venerable fireplace. Here coach passengers might have waited and could tell the time by the one-handed clock. Such large clocks appeared in inns and taverns from the mid-18th century but acquired the name ‘Parliament clocks’ after 1797 when a short-lived five shilling clock tax was introduced, which encouraged the provision of public ones at the expense of private ownership. At the other end of the room is a highly unusual glazed-in servery with a very rare set of (disused) Victorian ‘cash-register’ handpumps (this servery tends to be used Wed-Sat).

General information about historic pub interiors

An amazing survivor from the days when Southwark was a major terminus for the coaching trade between London and southern England. The George was rebuilt in 1676 after a major fire in Southwark and is the last galleried coaching inn in London – but even this is but a fragment of its former self. It used to extend round the four sides of a courtyard – just as the New Inn in Gloucester does to this day. Part of it was demolished in 1889 to make way for the construction of railway warehousing. The galleries gave access to the first and second floor rooms have plain, white-painted balusters. The upstairs rooms are panelled and are particularly fine. Most of the pub’s spaces involve modern fittings but the first bar you come to has some of the oldest woodwork purpose-fitted for a pub anywhere (some of it might even date back to the rebuilding of the inn). The two fireplaces suggest it was two rooms at one time but they have been amalgamated.

The larger part of this room has a mighty fireplace and a glazed-in servery with vertical sashes. Inside you can see a now disused set of ‘cash-register’-style Victorian handpumps (the handles move in quadrant-shaped slots to draw the beer) - they are reported as still being in use in the 1970s. The maker’s name – South of Blackfriars Road – is prominent. A working set in daily use is at the
Old Crown, Kelston, Somerset;

In the part nearest the road is full-height horizontal boarding; simple fixed seating against the walls and in the window; and an ancient fireplace with a wooden hood. The tap room houses a 'Parliament clock' - in 1797 a tax of five shillings was levied on people who possessed a watch or clock. Not surprisingly many disposed of their timepieces and relied on clocks in public places. The one at the George was one such. The pub is owned and leased out by the National Trust which acquired it in 1937.

General information about historic pub interiors
Monday
11:00am - 11:00pm
Tuesday
11:00am - 11:00pm
Wednesday
11:00am - 11:00pm
Thursday
11:00am - Midnight
Friday
11:00am - Midnight
Saturday
11:00am - Midnight
Sunday
Noon - 11:00pm
Monday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Tuesday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Wednesday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Thursday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Friday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Saturday
11:00am - 10:00pm
Sunday
Noon - 9:00pm

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Current beers

This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 1 regular beer.

Regular and recently seen

Greene King - IPA TasteMatch Prediction

View beer
GREENE KING IPA PUMP CLIP FRONT
Greene King - IPA Session Bitter • 3.4%
GREENE KING IPA PUMP CLIP FRONT
Greene King - IPA

This beer is served regularly at George, London.

ABV 3.4%
Style Session Bitter
Colour
Vegan No
Gluten Free No
Changing

Changing beers typically include: Greene King (seasonal) , Southwark (varies) , Timothy Taylor - Landlord

Source: National


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Facilities
Lunchtime Meals Lunchtime Meals
Evening Meals Evening Meals
Garden Garden
Family Friendly Family Friendly
Function Room Function Room
Smoking Smoking
Wi Fi Wi Fi
Features
Cask Ale Cask Ale
Real Heritage Pub Real Heritage Pub
Cask Marque Cask Marque
Member Discount Scheme Member Discount Scheme
10% discount off cask beer for CAMRA members
Cask Marque Beer and Cellar Hygiene rating
Cask Marque: Beer and Cellar Hygiene rating 5 out of 5
Transport
Close to bus routes (150m)
Many routes all stop nearby.
Nearby Station (300m)
London Bridge
Close to London Underground/Overground/DLR (300m)
London Bridge

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