Traditional London Pubs
Great Britain, Great Beer in Great Pubs. Nowhere will you find the Great British spirit and 'olde Englishe traditiones' more alive and more comforting than in a traditional London pub. Relaxing with a pint of real ale on a lazy Sunday afternoon with one sleepy eye on the cricket playing out on the village green, toasting muffins over an open fire as midwinter roars through the shires or quietly reading the daily newspaper in a traditional London pub, while all around you London life charges ever more busily onwards.
There are so many inspirational and historic traditional London pubs. Many so steeped in history that you can almost feel the touch of characters through the ages.
Keats, Shelly, Byron and Dickens are all said to have drunk and written in the Spaniards in Hampstead.
Charles de Gaulle 'occupied' the French House in Soho during the Second World War and Winston Churchill enjoyed the hospitality of The Blue Anchor in The City. Tradition is where tradition does and for a truly traditional London Pub, there's nowhere better than The Dove at Hammersmith, poet James Thompson first wrote Rule Britannia whilst being served from the smallest bar in the United Kingdom.
Surviving The Great Fire of London, The English Civil War, Victorian Penury, The Blitz and even The Swinging Sixties, the traditional London pub is and always will be open to serve fine ales, the best steak and kidney pies and the most enjoyable of conversations.
The list of truly traditional London Pubs is endless and a few of the more notable and notorious London pubs are: The Blue Anchor on Hammersmith Bridge, The George Inn Yard, London Bridge, The Ship Tavern, Holborn, The Blue Anchor, off Chancery Lane in the City of London, The Dove in Hammersmith, The White Hart, Covent Garden, Guinea in Mayfair, Jerusalem Tavern in Clerkenwell, Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese on Chancery Lane, The Lamb & Flag in Covent Garden, The George in Soho, Prospect of Whitby in Wapping.
Just in case the hospitality of the traditional London pub is a little 'too much', don't worry, because LTH Hotels is able to offer a the perfect choice from 4 superb 4 star hotels under the Hotel Indigo, Mercure Hotel and Quality Crown Hotel brands where comfort, luxury and a warm welcome await.
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There are so many inspirational and historic traditional London pubs. Many so steeped in history that you can almost feel the touch of characters through the ages.
Keats, Shelly, Byron and Dickens are all said to have drunk and written in the Spaniards in Hampstead.
Charles de Gaulle 'occupied' the French House in Soho during the Second World War and Winston Churchill enjoyed the hospitality of The Blue Anchor in The City. Tradition is where tradition does and for a truly traditional London Pub, there's nowhere better than The Dove at Hammersmith, poet James Thompson first wrote Rule Britannia whilst being served from the smallest bar in the United Kingdom.
Surviving The Great Fire of London, The English Civil War, Victorian Penury, The Blitz and even The Swinging Sixties, the traditional London pub is and always will be open to serve fine ales, the best steak and kidney pies and the most enjoyable of conversations.
The list of truly traditional London Pubs is endless and a few of the more notable and notorious London pubs are: The Blue Anchor on Hammersmith Bridge, The George Inn Yard, London Bridge, The Ship Tavern, Holborn, The Blue Anchor, off Chancery Lane in the City of London, The Dove in Hammersmith, The White Hart, Covent Garden, Guinea in Mayfair, Jerusalem Tavern in Clerkenwell, Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese on Chancery Lane, The Lamb & Flag in Covent Garden, The George in Soho, Prospect of Whitby in Wapping.
Just in case the hospitality of the traditional London pub is a little 'too much', don't worry, because LTH Hotels is able to offer a the perfect choice from 4 superb 4 star hotels under the Hotel Indigo, Mercure Hotel and Quality Crown Hotel brands where comfort, luxury and a warm welcome await.
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