Record Detail
p01746 | |
Old Bradley Well public house, (now No. 150) Main Road, Darnall | |
Sheffield_Darnall | |
1910/12 | |
1900-1919 | |
Postcard postmarked 1911. This image was originally part of the Tim Hale Photographic Collection. It was purchased at auction in September 2019 through donations from members of the public and a grant from the Graves Trust. Information from S. Hedges: It is difficult to say when the original Old Bradley Well Inn was built, but it is very old. William Fairbank’s 1795 map of Sheffield shows the Inn in Darnall village, with just a scattering of dwellings around. The old inn was a two-storey building, painted white at the front, with a central front door with a large lamp above it and external wooden shutters to the ground floor windows. The original pub was demolished around 1907/10 and replaced with the current building. Initially, it retained the name of Old Bradley Well, but the name later changed to the Terminus Tavern. The building retains some original features, such as a mosaic porch floor emblazoned with THE OLD BRADLEY WELL. Inside there is a stained-glass picture of Windsor Castle, which was the emblem of Gilmour Brewery's Windsor Ales, as found on their old beer mats, trays, bottles and labels. It faced opposite Dunkirk Square cottages which were demolished in 1947. See images p01618, s00736 and s11655. |
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