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Good Beer Guide
Heritage Pub

Barley Mow, London

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One of the oldest surviving pubs in Marylebone, dating from 1791, grade II listed and a CAMRA heritage pub. The interior, consisting of the main bar and a small snug (with a book exchange) at the rear, retains its original matchboard panelling, now displaying prints of 18th century Marylebone, and, most notably, two small drinking compartments fronting the main bar counter. Both bars, with their part bare wood, part carpeted floors, are furnished with upholstered pews, benches and stools. Discreetly positioned screens and an eclectic selection of background music complete the ambiance. The food offering is from the Pieminister pies range.

Six handpumps dispense up to five ales.

As of autumn 2023 it was reported that the quiz here now includes celebrity A-listers appearing by video, and that the quiz is so popular you will need to book in advance to participate.

Historic Interest

Grade II listed, Historic England reference 1381201.

Information for this venue is provided by the West London Branch of CAMRA
Previous Names
Premises Comment
Operator
Independent
Local Authority
Westminster
Last updated
22/03/2024
Last surveyed
07/02/2020
Pub ID
WLD/16750
Asset of Community Value

Three star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic importance

Listed status: II

A late 18th century pub containing two remarkable drinking booths.

A four-storey building of 1791 which houses an unique interior feature of extraordinary interest. There are two small drinking booths on the left-hand side of the bar, both surrounded by five-foot-high wooden screens and suggestive of heightened box-pews in a church. Each can comfortably hold only two or three people - although four or five might just be able to squeeze in. They are an extreme example of how the Victorians loved cosy drinking spaces. It is claimed the boxes were once used for pawn-broking although this is questionable.

The drinking booths form a narrow corridor between them and the wall, and over this are four curving metal stays attaching the booths to the left-hand wall panelling. This corridor leads to a small rear room served by its own counter, a continuation of the main counter at the front. This rear room has old half-height panelling on all walls. A pot shelf here is modern but done in a style that sits happily with the rest of the pub. A door from here is still in situ and leads into a small corridor off which is a doorway (door now gone) that connects back to the front bar.  Attached to the bar counter in two places are brass plaques which, unusually, list the names and prices of some drinks. Although now very worn, they are just about legible: “Pale Brandy, Old Jamaica Rum, Old Tom... Prices 2/6, 13/-” and so on. 

There are three sets of double doors at the front of the pub, evidence that what today is a deliciously small pub was even further sub-divided. The remnants of a small vestibule around the central doors contain etched, patterned glass whose raised surfaces suggest it has some age to it.

General information about historic pub interiors

A tall four-storey building of 1791 which houses an interior of extraordinary interest. What is now unique is the survival of a couple of small drinking boxes attached to the counter on the left hand side held in place with a couple of cast-iron stays screwed to the wall. They are a perfect illustration of how, at the end of the nineteenth-century, pubs, especially in London, were divided up into tiny spaces for different groups and classes of people. It is claimed that these boxes here were used for pawnbroking but whether there is any justification for this seems rather questionable. This was probably a late-20th-century explanation for features which can become otherwise inexplicable with the changes in pub layout and drinking traditions.

Beyond the boxes is a small room with old dado panelling and old bar counter but the pot shelf is modern. On the counter top is a very interesting feature - worn brass plates screwed to the counter and which display the prices of liquor - evidently old with rum at 15 shillings (75p) a gallon! There is another on the counter alongside the snugs. The side walls are completely panelled and the bar counter and bar back fittings are Victorian - it is a pity that most of the lower shelves have been replaced by a couple of fridges. Note on the bar-back a tap marked 'Old Tom', an extremely popular gin, which once drew gin from an overhead barrel. The pot shelf is modern but in style with the rest of the interior. The existence of three entrances in the shop front are clear evidence that there were other internal subdivisions which have now gone.

General information about historic pub interiors
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Opening
Food
Monday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00 & 18:00-21:00
Tuesday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00 & 18:00-21:00
Wednesday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00
Thursday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00
Friday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00
Saturday
Noon-23:00
Noon-15:00 & 18:00-21:00
Sunday
12:30-21:00
12:30-15:00
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Current beers

This Pub serves 4 changing beers and 1 regular beer.

Regular and recently seen

Barley Mow, London

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Changing beers typically include: Gales - Seafarers Ale , Timothy Taylor - Landlord , Windsor & Eton (seasonal)

Source: National

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Facilities
Sports TV Sports TV
Broadcast channels
Lunchtime Meals Lunchtime Meals
Evening Meals Evening Meals
Mon, Tue, Sat only
Garden Garden
Pavement tables with heaters
Family Friendly Family Friendly
Until 7pm
Disabled Access Disabled Access
Events Events
Quiz on Tuesday evenings
Games Games
Board games, darts (league matches played Monday nights)
Smoking Smoking
Pavement tables
Wi Fi Wi Fi
Free
Features
Real Ale Real Ale
Real Heritage Pub Real Heritage Pub
Transport
Close to bus routes (50m)
Nearby Station (600m)
London Marylebone
Close to London Underground/Overground/DLR (400m)
Baker Street
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