List of pubs named Carpenters Arms

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List of pubs named Carpenters Arms

The following list is for Public Houses commonly called "pubs" in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, entitled (or once entitled) "Carpenter Arms." Some of these date back to the development of "true English Pubs" created by English alehouses.

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Signage for the Carpenters Arms Dental Practice, Dunstable, Bedfordshire, housed in the premises of a former public house
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Stone plaque commemorating the site of the former Carpenters Arms at Henley Bridge (Remenham)

Bedfordshire

Berkshire

  • A pub in the village of Burghclere which is owned by Arkell's Brewery.[4]
  • A former pub in Reading located on the corner of Orts Road and Arthur Road, which was closed and demolished c.1975 as part of the Newtown area redevelopment.[5][6]
  • A former pub in Remenham, on the Berkshire side of the River Thames next to Henley Bridge. The pub was demolished in 1984 and the headquarters of Henley Rowing Club built on the site. A plaque and foundation stone remain in its place.[7]
  • A pub and French restaurant located in Sunninghill near Ascot.[8]
  • A pub in Windsor owned by the Nicholson's chain. The pub was built in 1518 and has passages from its cellars that ran to the nearby Windsor Castle but have since been bricked up.[9]

Bristol

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O'Donoghue's Irish Bar, Spittal Street, Marlow, formerly The Carpenters Arms. In 2017, the pub was renamed The Butcher's Tap.

Buckinghamshire

  • A former public house in the village of Chalfont St Peter.[15] Located on the High Street, it has since been demolished.[16]
  • A pub in the town of Marlow which is a Grade II listed building from the early 1600s.[17] This Carpenters Arms pub issued a 15mm copper farthing trade token that had the Carpenters Arms Coat of Arms of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters on one side. These quarter of a penny tokens along with a half penny trade token were produced from about 1648 to at least 1673.[18] These trade tokens should not be confused with the 15.6mm copper trade tokens issued by George Carpenter, of Wapping, in the 1650s.[19] In 2009, the pub was rebranded as an Irish bar and renamed O'Donoghue's.[20] In 2017, it was confirmed that chef Tom Kerridge had purchased the pub which was renamed The Butcher's Tap.[21]
  • A former public house in the hamlet of Saunderton Lee, near Princes Risborough,[22] which is now a private residence.
  • A public house in the village of Slapton. It is a half-timbered construction begun in the 16th century under a thatched roof.[23]
  • A pub in the village of Stewkley, which also doubles as an Indian restaurant.[24][25]

Cambridgeshire

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The Carpenters Arms, Coates
  • A pub located in Victoria Road, Arbury, Cambridge, owned by Punch Taverns[26] which closed in 2011,[27][28] but re-opened in 2013 as a gastropub.[29][30]
  • A former pub on King Street in the city of Cambridge, which closed in the early 1900s.[31] The street is noted for a pub crawl named "The King Street Run", although this pub had long closed before the crawl was devised.[32]
  • A pub in the village of Coates.[33]
  • A gastropub in the village of Great Wilbraham. The building is Grade II listed, dating back to the 1640s and has been a pub since 1729.[34]
  • A pub in the town of Soham on Brook Street.[35]
  • A pub in Stanground, a residential area of the city of Peterborough, located on South Street.[36]
  • A former pub in the village of Tydd St Giles, near Wisbech, which was situated on Buttersmith Alley.[37][38]
  • A former public house in Whittlesey which is known historically as Whittlesea, about six miles (10 km) east of Peterborough. The pub, now a private dwelling was located on Station Road.[39]
  • A pub in the village of Wimblington, Cambridgeshire. The building was constructed in the early 17th century and was named the Carpenter Arms by 1724.[40]
  • "Carpenters' Arms", Wisbech. A pub that may have gave given its name to Carpenter's Arms Yard. The last reference to the pub itself was in the 19th century.[41]

Cardiff

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The former Carpenters Arms in Rumney, Cardiff

Carmarthenshire

Ceredigion

Cornwall

Derbyshire

  • A country pub in the village of Dale Abbey, near Derby and Ilkeston which is over 300 years old and has been in same family for more than 80 years.[52]

Devon

  • A former pub in the town of Dawlish, now a private residence, on Old Town Street.[53] The pub was originally tied to the Dawlish Brewery, who passed it onto the Heavitree Brewery in the 1920s.[54]
  • A pub in the parish of Ilsington situated on the eastern edge of Dartmoor.[55]

Dorset

East Yorkshire

  • A country pub in the village of Fangfoss on the edge of the Yorkshire Wolds.[57]
  • A former pub in Hull, on Great Union Street. First mentioned in 1806, it was known for a time as The Shipwrights Arms and was owned by the Hull Brewery when it closed in 1937. The building was bombed in 1941 and the current site is now occupied by a second-hand car lot.[58]
  • A pub in the town of Market Weighton.[59]
  • A former pub in Skirlaugh, which closed in 1968 and was located at the southern end of the village.[60][61]

Essex

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The Carpenters Arms in Rawreth
  • A former pub on South Street (formerly Lower Railway Street)[62] in the town of Braintree.[63][64]
  • A c18th pub for sale in the parish of Danbury.[65]
  • A pub located in Smarts Lane in the town and civil parish of Loughton in the Epping Forest district of Essex.[66] The pub has two bars – the back bar a public bar and the front bar a saloon bar.[67]
  • A pub located in Gate Street, Maldon. The building has been in existence since the 1340s and was purchased by the Maldon Brewery in 1847, eventually becoming its brewery tap until the brewery's closure in 1952.[68]
  • A pub/restaurant in the village of Rawreth, near Wickford, currently known as The Carpenters Restaurant.[69]

Gibraltar

Gloucestershire

Hampshire

Herefordshire

Hertfordshire

Kent

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The Carpenters Arms at Eastling

Lancashire

  • A pub in Lancaster dating back to the 18th century. Noted for being one of a handful of pubs with an upstairs gravity fed cellar. It changed its name to The Three Mariners' in 1986.

Lincolnshire

London

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The Carpenters Arms, Kings Cross Road, Kings Cross
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The Carpenters Arms, Seymour Place, near Marble Arch. This pub is a Free House.
  • A pub in Seymour Place, off Edgware Road in London near Marble Arch. The pub has been in existence since 1776 and was rebuilt in 1872.[110] The pub is a Free House and is also home to the London branch of CAMRA.[111]
  • A former pub on the corner of Bridport Place and Rushton Street next to Shoreditch Park. It is uncertain as to when the pub opened, however it was in operation in the 1850s.[112] The pub, known as Rushtons at the time of closure, was converted to residential units circa 2002, however the building still retains its pub signage.[113]
  • A tavern in St. Marylebone, run by the parents of Edward Coxen in the mid-1850s to 1882.[114] Originally situated at Gray Place, later becoming Picton Place, the pub changed name to the Three Cheers before closing in 2004 and becoming a Chinese restaurant. The current address is 29a James Street.[115]
  • A pub on Cambridge Heath Road in the Stepney district of the East End.[116]
  • A former pub in Woolwich High Street, now demolished.[117] The pub dated from the early 1800s and was rebuilt around 1925.[118]

Middlesex

Monmouthshire

Norfolk

Northamptonshire

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The Carpenters Arms in the village of Middle Barton, Oxfordshire
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The former Carpenters Arms at Appleford, Oxfordshire

North Lincolnshire

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The former Carpenters Arms, Botley, Oxford, now converted into a McDonald's restaurant

North Yorkshire

Nottinghamshire

Oxfordshire

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The former Carpenters Arms in Jericho, Oxford, now converted into two private dwellings
  • A former pub in the village of Hailey, near Witney.[150] Located on Middletown, the pub closed in the 1960s or 1970s and has since been converted to a private residence.[151][152]
  • A former Morrells brewery pub in the Jericho suburb of Oxford which closed in the 1990s and has since been converted into two houses.[153]
  • A pub in the village of Middle Barton. The building dates from the 17th-century and is grade II-listed.[154] In 2017 the pub was converted to a Middle Eastern restaurant called The Cinnamon Stick.[155]
  • A pub in Witney located on Newland (formerly Oxford Road).[156][157]

Somersetshire

Suffolk

  • A pub in Great Bricett in the C18th. ADVERTISEMENTS. To be Lett. A very good Publick House, known by the Name of the Carpenters Arms in Great Briset, with a new Malting Office, and an Acre and half of Land, all Freehold.[160]

Surrey

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The Carpenters Arms, High Street, Camberley, Surrey

Warwickshire

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The Carpenters Arms Public House in Kineton, Warwickshire

Wiltshire

See also

References

Sources

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