A deservedly popular community pub, the Crow's is a smallish pub which has three separate and distinctive rooms (bar, snug and lounge) arranged around a central serving area. Guest beers are usually from the Heineken guest portfolio, but there is now one beer from a local brewery allowed which is usually available from Friday evening. A buzz of conversation thrives in all the rooms as no piped music is allowed. although football highlights may be shown in the bar. There are outside benches and tables for fine weather. The pub still retains evidence of its former ownership by Higsons.
Historic Interest
Grade 2 listed. Public house. Late C19; altered. Probably brick, with green glazed tiling at ground floor and roughcast render above. Deep rectangular plan formed by double-depth front range with back extension. 3 storeys and 2 windows, symmetrical; 2 bands between 1st and 2nd floors, with terminal pilasters, parapet with stone coping. The ground floor has 2 round-headed doorways flanking a pair of wide rectangular windows, all in a tiled surround with dark green pilasters and light green panels, with a painted fascia and moulded cornice; and this treatment carries round the left return wall, with a doorway towards the rear flanked by windows. The 1st floor has tall 12-pane sashed windows with moulded architraves, plain friezes and cornices in the lower of the bands, and a hanging inn-sign in the centre; the 2nd floor has square 12-pane sashed windows with plain surrounds. Gable chimneys.
Two star - A pub interior of very special national historic interest
Listed status: II
An impressive Edwardian remodelling for Higson’s Brewery. Much attractive internal woodwork and glazing remain. The names of the different rooms appear in the window glass and the layout can readily be discerned, although the off-sales has been incorporated into the snug (front left) and the wall dividing the two rear spaces has been cut back slightly. The wide opening in front of these rear spaces, with its fringe of glazing, is an original feature and is akin to such openings at other Merseyside pubs, notably the Primrose in Liscard and Volunteer Canteen at Waterloo, both of which also belonged to Higsons. The rear right-hand space operated as a 'Men Only' domain prior to the 1970s when such segregation became illegal.
Has a brick and rendered first floor with green glazed brick frontage on the ground floor added in Edwardian times, when the pub was refitted and is little altered since then. Note a good display of etched glass – the name of Higsons the brewers in the front windows and the names of rooms in several other windows. The public bar and snug are excellent intact survivals. Front right entrance leads into a vestibule with both etched and frosted and stained and leaded panels and a 'Snug' etched and frosted panel in the door. The door from the left of the vestibule originally led into the off sales - the ceiling indicates where the partitions were originally so the hatch on the front was the off sales one. The snug is entered from the right-hand doorway and is an intimate, L-shaped space with 'Higsons Genuine Ales' exterior windows. It has an Edwardian bar counter with match striker and over it a screen containing both etched and frosted panels left and right, and three stained and leaded ones above an arch shaped opening for services similar to that at the Prince Arthur. The snug has old dado panelling but locals say the fixed seating was added in recent times, and there is a 'Snug' etched and frosted panel in the rear door.
A part-glazed partition separates the snug from the public bar on the front left. The screen has both decoratively etched and frosted panels and stained ones above. There is another smaller opening in the screen on the street side. The public bar has a 'Bar' in the vestibule door and the one from the passage at the rear. It retains the original counter (but modern pot shelf) and fixed seating, an 'Higsons Genuine Ales' exterior window.
At the rear a passage ran all the way along and in the 1970s a partition was removed to open-up the two rear small rooms to the passageway. There is old fixed seating in both areas and a Victorian-style fireplace in the right hand area. The rear right room operated as a 'Men Only' space prior to the 1970s and the left hand room was used by women. Down the left side of the pub are both 'Parlour' and 'Lounge' etched and frosted exterior windows - in this part of the country 'Parlour' is the local word for 'Lounge'. The present glass and woodwork over the corridor is modern work. Service to the rear rooms is from a doorway and flap to the back of the servery. In this pub you can still get table service in the rear right lounge most days, but not when busy, particularly not on Fri and Sat - only a handful of pubs still do this regularly including the nearby Volunteer Canteen, Waterloo.
This is one of the last pubs using a filtration system to return beer to the cask. Using tight sparklers means that froth as a glass is filled runs into a deep tray - separate ones for each beer. Every hour or so beer is carefully placed into marked and clean stained steel buckets and put back into the cask using a filter. This system has been in operation here for many years. The outside gents is still in use.
This Pub serves 3 changing beers and 2 regular beers.
Crows Nest, Liverpool
Guest beers tend to be light in colour, dark beers are rare. Timothy Taylor Landlord is put on sale on Friday for the weekend.
Changing beers typically include: Timothy Taylor - Landlord
Source: National