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Heritage Pub

Docks, Selattyn (Keys)

Operator: Independent
Glyn Road, Selattyn, SY10 7DH (View on Google Map)
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The building dating from the 17th Century has been a pub since 1840 and has a nationally important historic interior. Situated next to the church in a small village close to the Welsh border and Offa's Dyke. The cosy small bar with its quarry tiled floor and real fire is probably the soul of the pub and is the locals' favoured retreat, but these days there are four further rooms. The second quarry tiled room across the corridor from the bar has a piano and caters for music nights; the other three have features such as exposed original stone walls and log burners. The current owners took over at the end of 2019 and have given the pub a general refresh inside and out, including the name change. Just up the road from the pub, there's an example of the imaginative use of a redundant red telephone box as a book swap venue, and also houses an accessible and fully maintained heart defibrillator. The local CAMRA branch's Rural Pub of the Year in 2012, runner up in 2019 and its Branch pub of the Year in 2013, the Cross Keys is a little off the beaten track, but is a gem that makes the journey well worthwhile. It first made an appearance in the Good Beer Guide in the early days of 1976 and has been in 36 of the 45 editions since!. Was once one of the 8 pubs owned by J Edwards & Sons brewery of Weston Rhyn - one of Shropshire's long lost breweries!

Kitchen may close early is the pub is quiet

Information for this venue is provided by the Shrewsbury & West Shropshire Branch of CAMRA
Previous Names
Cross Keys
Local Authority
Shropshire
Last updated
07/06/2024
Last surveyed
15/03/2024
Pub ID
SHR/4624
Asset of Community Value

One star - A pub interior of special national historic interest

Listed status: Not listed

UPDATE 2020. A refurbishment has recently been carried out which requires a re-assessment. Please note - the photos are therefore out of date and the description is one written before the recent changes.

A traditional village pub situated just a mile from the Welsh border and Offa’s Dyke. The pub originally doubled as village shop up until 1994, hence the large window on the right-hand side of the building. Having only had three owners since 1939, the historic heart is the delightful small bar at the rear right beyond a tiled and dado panelled corridor.

It has some Victorian or early 20th-century fittings including the high bar counter and red and black quarry-tile flooring; the fireplace is perhaps of about 1970. Across the corridor is the Music Room, another atmospheric space with red quarry-tiled flooring. It is so called as it hosts live folk music on Thursdays and Fridays.

On the right are two further reception rooms, comprising a snug and small dining room which have been brought in to use whilst being renovated sympathetically and furnished in a contemporary style. A large function room occupies the former stables. The pub’s nickname comes from wartime and subsequent austerity, and apparently means black market goods (docks, of course, being a major source thereof): no doubt this wasn’t the only pub in the land where such wares were traded behind closed doors!

General information about historic pub interiors

UPDATE 2020.

A refurbishment has recently been carried out which requires a re-assessment.

Please note - the photos are therefore out of date and the description is one written before the recent changes.

A modest whitewashed building just a mile from the Welsh border which up to 1994 used to double as the village shop (see the big window on the right). The two original pub rooms and passageway are little changed due to there having been only two owners since 1939 - Bill & Peggy Jones ran the pub from 1939 to 1989 and Phil and Hilda Rothera from 1989 to 2015. However, in 2017 a significant refurbishment took place in order to attract the food trade and the floor area of the modern parts is now greater than the original rooms and passageway.

The front door leads into a small lobby with red tiled floor and on the right is a door with the number ‘2’ on it which leads to the what is called the ‘Music Room’ as this was the venue for Irish musicians every Thursday night (check). The left hand door is not in use but beyond it is a dining room - see later). The Music Room has a red tiled floor, good leather-covered very old fixed seating round the walls and an inglenook-style fireplace possibly from the 1930s and there is a piano. A doorway leads to a passageway with a red tiled floor and old dado panelling still with a door at the end but this is now permanently open making the modern parts clearly visible.

On the other side of the tiled passageway in the small public bar with a red and black tiled floor and old tongue and groove dado. The bar has a Victorian panelled counter and old top and the handpumps have a date of 1947 on them. The only recent change has been to the bar back fitting which was of four sections but the left hand part (which was a post-war addition) was removed in 2017 to create a doorway so staff could serve customers at a new small bar behind. The central upper part of the bar back fitting is genuinely old with mirrored panels but below it are some 1960s changes with modern shelves on a brick base so it looks like casks were stillaged here in the past.

The right hand section of the bar back looks old but not as old as the central section. In addition there is another section on the right hand wall which is definitely post-war. The public bar has fixed seating around the walls that might date from before or just after the war and the stone fireplace dates from c1970. This still remains very traditional with its Britannia type tables and log fires in winter.

Further back are two rooms that have been brought into use in modern times - a small games room on the left, formerly a living room; and In what used to be the stables there was a large entertainments room which could hold up to 90 and was used for Irish Set Dancing on a Thursday night before the musicians appear, and hosted occasional folk nights. It could also be converted to a skittle alley including a ball return made from plastic drain pipes!

The 2016-7 changes saw the ‘outside’ toilets replaced by new ones situated in the former shop area; the former games room (with a locked door from the front lobby) is now a small modern dining room; the former function room / skittle alley at the rear has been converted into a large dining room; and a new small bar added between the public bar and the new large dining room to serve diners.

General information about historic pub interiors
Seen some incorrect or missing details? let us know.
Opening
Food
Monday
Closed
No Service
Tuesday
Closed
No Service
Wednesday
5:00pm - Midnight
6:00pm - 8:00pm
Thursday
5:00pm - Midnight
6:00pm - 8:00pm
Friday
Noon - Midnight
1:00pm - 8:00pm
Saturday
Noon - Midnight
1:00pm - 8:00pm
Sunday
Noon - Midnight
12:30pm - 4:00pm
Spotted an error with the opening times? Let us know

Current beers

Regular and recently seen

Docks, Selattyn

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Facilities
Lunchtime Meals Lunchtime Meals
Evening Meals Evening Meals
Live Music Live Music
Garden Garden
Parking Parking
Dog Friendly Dog Friendly
In the bar
Events Events
Games Games
Real Fire Real Fire
Restaurant Restaurant
Separate Bar Separate Bar
Wi Fi Wi Fi
Features
Real Ale Real Ale
Real Cider Real Cider
Stonehouse Sweeney Mountain
Real Heritage Pub Real Heritage Pub
LocAle LocAle
Quiet Quiet
Transport
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