I spent
Saturday afternoon and early evening in London.
I won’t go into too much detail as to why I was there, but I was accompanied by
a million or so of my fellow citizens, and just before 5pm I found myself in Parliament
Square.
Although the addresses to the crowd had finished, people
were still flooding into the area. I decided it was time to find somewhere
quieter and somewhere I could enjoy a well earned pint or two. Westminster Underground Station was understandably closed, so I cut through to St James’s
Park, glad of the open space and less people.
With a one day, all-zones London Travel Card tucked into my
wallet I decided that my best bet was to get out of Central London
for a while, find a place for that quiet drink I craved, and let the crowds die down,
before taking the train home. Having just walked from Hyde Park
to Westminster, I also didn’t fancy
having to trudge much further to find a suitable watering-hole.
St James’s Park station was open, so I headed down onto
the platform and jumped on the second westbound District Line train (the first one was
bursting at the seems). My plan was to make for the Dove; the historic
riverside pub, owned by Fuller’s. It had been many a year since my last visit,
but whilst I had a London A-Z in my rucksack, I couldn’t remember the location
of the pub.
With no Wi-Fi and no 4G signal on my phone, I was a bit
stuck, but as the train edged towards South Kensington I
suddenly had a brain-wave. I remembered an old favourite from the early real
ale scene in the capital, and that particular pub was the Anglesea Arms. What’s
more I remembered the pub’s address as Selwood Terrace – funny how certain things lodge in one’s
sub-consciousness.
A quick scan of the A-Z before the
train pulled into South Kensington showed the pub was only about 10 minutes walk
away; perfectly do-able, even for a weary and foot-sore “citizen of nowhere”,
so after alighting from the train and exiting the station, I made my way along
the Old Brompton Road towards my destination.
I must admit my heart sank a little,
as when I saw the crowd of people milling around outside, all thoughts of a
quiet drink vanished. However, having come that far I was determined to at
least have one pint, even though the crush at the bar was several people deep.
There were individuals in front of me, ordering all manner of fancy cocktails,
so when it came to my turn, I’m sure the barman was relieved that I only wanted
a pint of biter.
I opted for a pint of Hopfest, a
3.8% Pale Ale from Mad Squirrel Brewery. It set me back £4.70 and, as with the
offering I had from Bedlam Brewery the other night in Tunbridge Wells, the beer
was a disappointment. It wasn’t off or lacking in condition; it just lacked the
hoppiness promised by the name.
I found a ledge amongst the throng,
where I could rest my pint and take a few photos. I was especially pleased to
see the lovely old pub mirror still in place, advertising Salt & Co.’s
Pale & Burton Ales. The
rest of the interior was also pretty much as I remembered it, although I don’t ever
recall seeing the pub so packed.
Given the crowds I decided that one pint was sufficient and
I should head back into Central London, for a pint close
to Charing Cross. Unfortunately both the Chandos and the
Harp, my two pubs of choice close to the station, were equally packed, mainly
with people who’d attended the same event
as me.
Not wishing to fight my way through to the bar for a second
time, I gave up and caught the 19.30 train back to Tonbridge, where son
Matthew was waiting to give his old dad a lift home from the station.
Footnote: The Anglesea Arms is a legendary free-house, which
was one of the first pubs in London
to capitalise on the growing interest in "real ale", by
offering a selection of beers which could not be found anywhere else in the
capital.
Following my first visit in the summer of 1974, the Anglesea Arms
became a regular place of pilgrimage over the following few years and,
certainly during my student days, no visit to London
was complete without a trip to South Kensington in order to see what was
on offer there. To walk in through its doors and be greeted with a new set of
pump clips was always a pleasure, and for a lad who was just approaching his 20th
birthday, it was like an Aladdin’s Cave.
I have fond memories of many a happy summer’s evening spent
on the outside terrace, enjoying a selection of new and interesting ales in the company
of friends, and now, four and a half decades on, it is good to see this lovely
old pub is thriving, and is still as popular as ever.
7 comments:
A million people my arse|!
Ghost of Drabwash, looking at the helicopter footage, you might well be right. I could have been two million.
TBH, I was sceptical too, but I'm glad that you place trust in Full Fact.
How about checking a few more claims, such as this?
https://fullfact.org/economy/membership-single-market-and-lower-wages/
Whatever the actual figure Drabwash, it was far greater than the miserable turn out for Farage's sad little show.
I would sometimes drink in the Anglesea when I was a student. Bit post for me then. And still is come to think of it!
I was on a big demo in London last year for a different purpose. After the demo, we decided to go for a drink on our way back to Euston Station. A pub advertised "guest cask ales", so in we happily piled, only to be met by a solitary handpump serving Wainwright!
And it was £1 more than it would cost in the north west.
Definitely on the posh side Ed, and the fancy rum-based cocktails being ordered last Saturday did little to change that image. I don't recall it being that upmarket back in the mid-1970's, but I may not have been as observant then as I am now.
I would have preferred to have visited when the pub was quieter, just to get a better feel for the place and to soak up the atmosphere without all the crowds.
It's interesting that Greene King own the Anglesea now, and also ironic considering that on my first visit, back in 1974, my friend and I went to the pub specifically to track down GK Abbot; a beer that was extremely rare outside its Suffolk and Bedfordshire heartlands, and virtually unknown in central London.
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