Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Sunderland Pubs - 2



Currently there are plenty of pubs closing, but in this post I want to highlight a few great pubs which are not only surviving, but are thriving, despite the best efforts of short-term planners and get-rich-quick merchants.



The Dun Cow, High Street West, in 1990.

This pub, built between1901and 1902, was designed by the renowned architect
B F Simpson. The bar is one of the few pub interiors of special historical interest in Sunderland. There is extensive Art Nouveau woodwork and a back bar that has been described by CAMRA as one of the most stunning in Britain.
 
 
The Dun Cow. The main front bar is separated from a small rear sitting room by a curved wooden and glass screen.

 

The fabulous back bar in The Dun Cow. One of the most ornate surviving back bars in Britain.



Fitzgerald’s on Green Terrace.
I’m not a great fan of pub chains, but the Sir John Fitzgerald group is a notable exception. This small, family-owned company has been in business for several generations and runs 15 pubs in the North East.
Fitzgerald’s in Sunderland is a traditional pub frequented by students, locals, regulars and visitors to the city and is a regular winner of CAMRA Real Ale awards, boasting a bar full of guest beers.
 



Two old friends of mine, Terry ‘Smudger’ Smith and Tony ‘Ginger’ Doyle, enjoy a swift half with Terry’s son, Chris. This photograph was taken in The William Jameson, a Weatherspoons pub in Sunderland, on the day when Sunderland played their first home game of the 2013/14 season against Fulham. As you can see by the smiles on their faces, this photo was taken before the game.
 



Another photograph taken in The William Jameson, this time showing another old school friend, Tommy Lee (right) and his wife, Janet (left) with a couple of their friends. Tommy was a great footballer at school and had trials for several professional clubs. He is the only lad I know who turned down a trial with Manchester United.

The last pub in this post is a real success story. A few years ago The Isis on Silksworth Row in Sunderland was an abandoned and dilapidated Grade II-listed Victorian pub. With great foresight, the owners, The Jarrow Brewery, have bucked the trend of pub closures and have invested £500,000 in a fabulous refurbishment.



This photograph of The Isis was taken in 1990 when the future of the building was far from certain.



The Isis reopened in 2011 and is now booming with a full bank of twelve hand pumps all delivering excellent ale. In truth, I didn’t try them all on this occasion, but the ones I did sample were in top condition. This picture shows the landlord, Christopher Taylor, in action.
 



Originally this pub was known as The Ship, but after the crew of a ship called ‘The Isis’ were regularly paid off in the bar, the pub officially changed its name to The Ship Isis. The Jarrow Brewery commissioned a specially made ‘Isis’ mirror which shows a beautiful image of the ancient Egyptian goddess.

The pub – reputedly the city’s most-haunted – showcases the brewery’s range of award-winning, traditionally brewed real ales, such as Rivet Catcher and Venerable Bede as well as many other beers from the region.

The Isis has featured in local history books and television programmes due to its reputation of being haunted. Mary-Ann Cotton, the Sunderland-born serial killer, is rumoured to have buried two of her children in tunnels which lead from the pub’s cellars down to the river bank.



Both downstairs bars were busy when I visited, but if you fancy a quiet pint there are further rooms upstairs.
After historical research, the Isis has been restored to its multi-roomed, original layout, and now has its original fireplaces.



The ship’s wheel draped in hops provides a dramatic ceiling decoration in the main bar and a link to the pub’s maritime past.



This view from the upstairs lounge in The Isis shows Sunderland football club’s Stadium of Light on the north side of the river Wear.