RE the Raeburn Bar, formerly the dean bar on dean st which was mentioned earlier in the thread. It got its windows tanned in the other night and it turns out the current owner or manager is Norval Barclay, good hibs man who recorded the Back Home To Leith track prior to the 2012 cup final.
http://m.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/...pree-1-3785525
Results 211 to 240 of 329
Thread: Roughest/Worst pubs in Edinburgh
-
28-05-2015 07:52 PM #211
-
28-05-2015 09:16 PM #212This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
28-05-2015 09:33 PM #213This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
29-05-2015 05:36 AM #214This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
29-05-2015 06:07 AM #215This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
29-05-2015 09:07 AM #216
- Join Date
- Jul 2002
- Location
- Don't actually know right now
- Posts
- 8,587
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Certainly is."You opened the box....and your soul belongs to me...."
-
-
05-06-2015 11:02 AM #218
We certainly have some dives in bad areas, particularly in the past, but overall Edinburgh has nothing on pubs I've experienced in other places, namely Glasgow and Manchester. Without doubt the worst pub I've ever seen was called the Butcher's Arms in a poor part of Manchester. Went in there twice with an uncle who thought he'd give me an eye opening experience, and by God were my eyes opened. On both occasions the place went up in the air - fully up in the air - free for alls, like a western saloon: bottles, pool cues, chairs across the room, women fighting men. The most frightening violence I've seen. I think was place was shut was down by the council because it was happening every week.
HIBERNIAN FC - ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF HISTORY SINCE 1875
-
06-06-2015 08:25 AM #219
Not Edinburgh but my memories of the Eagle & Child pub in Liverpool are pretty scary. Finally closed in the 90's, they had a bowling green so went there a couple of times each season. Scary place, where outsiders not welcome, folk mugged in the toilets, firearms, and other weapons on show, famous quote from there, "I was minding my own business watching a fight, when a snooker match broke out".
-
-
13-06-2015 08:52 PM #221This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
What's left pub wise in the immediate area now with the Ferry Boat long gone, The Gunner gone and am I right in thinking the Doocot is closed as well?PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
-
13-06-2015 09:27 PM #222
- Join Date
- Jun 2009
- Location
- East Stand
- Age
- 40
- Posts
- 32,881
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Both these pubs appeared to be very much open for business when I went past on the bus 3 weeks ago
-
14-06-2015 05:03 AM #223This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'm abroad and can't read the bit about the gunner but it's a shame in a way. They are focal points for communities regardless of location and it's a step in the wrong direction for neighbourly relationships. The guy who pops in once a month might not be on speaking terms with someone who lives a few doors down if they didn't both have a chat about nonsense in their local.
Maybe it's just the way we are heading in general with transient populations and cheap beer from supermarkets.
-
14-06-2015 07:32 AM #224This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 07:58 AM #225
Punch Taverns and alike want massive returns from their landlords, some pubs are viable but landlords cannot cope paying massive sums every month.
-
14-06-2015 09:55 AM #226This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 10:50 AM #227This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 12:48 PM #228This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 03:24 PM #229This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Mackenzie's pub in Davidson Mains (just been taking over by new owner) seems to be the popular choice for most folk nowadays.
-
14-06-2015 03:33 PM #230This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
TELEVISION stars and footballers propped up its bar after it achieved notoriety at the hand of one of Scotland’s greatest authors.
But now The Gunner in Pennywell Road – which once served the likes of Jonathan Ross and former Hibs players Anthony Stokes and Derek Riordan – has closed.
Heartbroken landlady Maria McGovern, 52, claimed she had tried “everything” to keep the pub – a haunt of characters in Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting – open and blamed the loss of hundreds of homes bulldozed in the regeneration of Muirhouse. Maria, who has run the pub for nine years with partner John Burrell, added: “I’m all for regeneration – but at what cost? It could have been saved and it could have worked if they hadn’t knocked those houses down in one go.
“They have ripped the heart out of the community.
“They knocked 950 houses down in the area between 2008 and 2010. That’s 950 potential customers gone. There has been no support for local businesses.”
John, 56, said the pub had lost more than £1 million in the past four years, forcing them to plough their own money into the business just to keep it running.
Customers have been left devastated by the news, with shocked punters turning up to find signs reading ‘Closed until further notice’.
Maria said: “I have had customers at the door crying in my arms.
“There is one guy who has drank in here for 47 years, and I had to watch him standing outside reading the [closure] notice.
“Those are the ones I care about. What are they going to do?”
Maria also pointed to a lack of funding from leaseholder Punch Taverns, which claims it is “impossible” to commit to investment in the pub.
A Punch Taverns spokesman said: “We can confirm that our licensee at The Gunner has made the decision to leave as she no longer feels the business is viable for her.
The area and demographics around The Gunner has changed. With that level of uncertainty as to the future, it makes it impossible for us to commit to invest in the pub with any surety.”
More than £40m is being pumped into the area as the council builds 700 new homes.
And there may be a late reprieve for the pub, with ward councillor Steve Cardownie seeking to broker a deal to save it at a meeting tomorrow with city chief executive Sue Bruce.
He wants to see the city become “sympathetic” landlords to the licensees, adding: “When the council took away all those houses it reduced their customer base and they have not been recompensed in any way by the council.
-
14-06-2015 06:52 PM #231
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
- Posts
- 4,989
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 07:14 PM #232This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
14-06-2015 07:30 PM #233
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
- Posts
- 4,989
This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
-
14-06-2015 10:25 PM #235This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
-
04-07-2015 01:07 PM #236
- Join Date
- Feb 2010
- Posts
- 426
Good companions oxgangs
-
07-07-2015 08:41 PM #237
Boy that was a long and entertaining read. Been in many of those mentioned without bother. Clock Inn in Dalry Rd definitely full of portraits by Picasso. Scariest place I've ever been in was (I think originally) the Green Tree on Gorgie Road the boozer Robbo took over and apparently full of the fascist no surrender chapter of the Jambo's. It's a Monday, 5:00 3 people in the bar and I want to use the phone (1980s). Could feel the eyes drilling in my back as I made a 30 second call so necked a fresh orange and left with a fast shuffle.
Sent from my Lenovo TAB 2 A10-70F using Tapatalk
-
04-06-2019 01:05 PM #238
Just had a wee re-read of this thread (and what a great read it is) and thought it was time for a few updates from our younger posters.
-
04-06-2019 01:45 PM #239
The Hop Poles in Tulse Hill, London.
Early 70s. Very heavy place.
I think in Edinburgh the worst pub was halfway down Leith Walk on the left. I can't remember its name.
I went in there once in the 80s and there was an Indian guy flaked out on the floor, his turban in disarray.
I made my excuses and left.
-
04-06-2019 01:50 PM #240This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Log in to remove the advert |
Bookmarks