In the same hands for many years, this pub is popular with university and hospital staff. Dating from the mid-19th century, its interior is dark and dimly lit, with a small front snug bar (the original pub), main drinking area and a bar billiards table. A working train set links the main bars! The pub features in the CAMRA Heritage Pubs of the South-West book. Outside is a large, heated patio and garden with impressive floral arrangements. Good-quality food is served every lunchtime and evening (except Sunday evening). Owned by Young's, but allowed some freedom with guest beers. Toilets are down steep stairs into the original vaults. Dogs are welcome in the front snug and the first room of the main area.
Historic Interest
On CAMRA's regional inventory.
Two star - A pub interior of very special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
A mid-19th-century pub with a narrow frontage. At the front is a lovely, tiny snug with a Victorian counter and mirrored bar-back plus dado panelling and bench seating painted dark green and a fine set of 1936 handpumps. Inner doors lead into a passage with a split door (which perhaps served as an off-sales), panelled dado and wall benches. The rear bar has an inter-war counter, old bar-back fitting and panelled dado. In the early 1980s, a sympathetic extension added another two rooms. Rumour has it that prisoners would have their last meal here before meeting their maker on the gallows at the top of St Michael’s Hill.
Mid 19th century pub that retains two little altered bars despite being extended back in the early 1980s (by Bristol United Breweries?).
There is an excellent tiny snug at the front with a bare wood floor, old, possibly Victorian bar counter with elaborate brackets in gold on the dark green painted front, the bar top looks to be more modern and has a fine set of 5 Gaskell & Chambers hand pumps with a date of 1936 on them. The dado panelling and wall bench seating on the front and right hand side are also painted dark green. In recent times the render has been taken off the right hand wall to reveal bare brick. The very old bar back fitting is of two bays with three narrow mirrored panels and a gilded decoration in relief - a third bay is a doorway for staff. There is a further section of mirrored back fitting on the right hand wall which is of a different design and added at a letter date.
Inner doors lead into a passage that runs down the left side of the pub and on the right is a split door that may have been the off sales. This area has been enlarged by removing the wall between what was probably a private passage to the left and has an old looking panelled dado and wall bench. The private passage would have run all the way down to the rear so the other rooms are now much larger than originally.
Doorway leads into the bare wood floor rear bar with an old counter but with much plainer brackets than the front one so maybe from the inter-war period? The bar back fitting is old with the top part held up by brackets and covered in tat. The panelled dado painted dark brown looks old.
The rear bar was the extent of the original pub but in the early 1980s a sympathetic extension saw the creation of another bare boarded room with fixed benches - the left hand side being an alcove created by a partition wall. There is a good long narrow table on the right hand side. Up two steps is another bare boarded room with a panelled dado painted dark brown and beyond this a patio area.
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 3 regular beers.
Highbury Vaults, Bristol
Changing beers typically include: Goff's (varies) , Teignworthy (varies) , Young's (varies)
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