This website is currently in beta. If you wish to go back to the current site please click here. To provide feedback or find out more about this site, please click here.
Let us know your thoughts by leaving a score
Classic 1930s building opposite the ancient town hall in England's smallest town and overlooking the River Stour. The large bar has a lovely open fireplace, a long bar and bar stools, and there is a separate oak-panelled dining room.
It became a gastropub when it changed hands in January 2018, and after only 9 months, it has been awarded one Michelin star. But it is still a pub, and the beers are reasonably priced. More prestigious awards are being collected.
There is a pleasant riverside garden. The Stour Valley Walk is nearby, and boat trips on the river leave from outside the pub.
Two star - A pub interior of very special national historic interest
Listed status: Not listed
Attractively set beside the Great Stour river, this is a fine, well-designed 1930s pub, faced with narrow red bricks and having a symmetrical frontage facing the Fordwich’s old town hall. Curiously the public rooms are smaller than one would expect for a pub of this size. The public bar is long and narrow and runs parallel to the street. The two doors into it surely indicate that once it had a partition. The servery has a panelled counter and simple back-fitting. At the rear left is a dining room with high-quality panelling. A corridor from the public bar to the river terrace has very low original panelling. Note the old brass penny-in-the-slot devices in both the gents’ and ladies' toilets. Three original fireplaces.
This Pub serves 2 changing beers and 0 regular beers.
Fordwich Arms, Fordwich
Changing beers typically include: Shepherd Neame - Master Brew , Timothy Taylor - Landlord
Source: Regional