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Its stained-glass windows and pulpit are not something you’d expect to find in a pub!
This pub has had many identities, including: the Rock Machine, Churchills, No10s and Winstons.
Dine in the ballroom which was intended as a replica of Buckingham Palace.
The pub is decorated internally with circular saws and saw-teeth motifs, inspired by the original Sawyer's Arms.
A ‘powder monkey’ was naval slang for the young boys who filled shells and cartridges with gunpowder.
Honiton is famous for its lace.
Discover the history of lace making in Tiverton.
This pub is named after the wicker baskets used to carry vegetables.
This pub is named after the heroine of Westward Ho!.
This pub is named after local fields which were known as the Mannameads.
This pub takes its name from a former owner of the land on which it stands.
The Talk of the Town was originally created by combining the Actina Café and Hamby Cafeteria.
Read about some local heroes.
Read about the history of Boots and its creator.
This former coaching inn is the oldest licensed premises in Tavistock and was originally two separate properties.
The White Hart Hotel stands on what was once known as Old London Road and supplied fresh horses for travellers on the next stage of their journey.
Ilfracombe’s St Nicholas Chapel is the oldest working lighthouse in the country.
This pub tells the story of Gig, Prince of Magog.
Read about Plymouth’s Sir Francis Drake.
This pub is closed permanently.
Take a look at old photographs of Plympton.
This pub is named after one of the four gates in the town walls.
This pub is a former clothes store.
“Rule, Britannia, rule the waves”