I’m glad I didn’t throw my 50p off CAMRA vouchers away now. Very lovely.
Category: JD Wetherspoon
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Wetherspoons – Greater London (A-B)
As I bored everyone with here, my travel has meant that I’ve managed to visit a lot of JD Wetherspoons over the years. So in an attempt to remember them all, I’ve decided to try and write about them. As explained elsewhere, other perfectly good pubs are also available and of course should be visited 🙂
There are 111 JD Wetherspoon outlets in Greater London, and I’m not typing all that up in one go. So here, for my own amusement during the Covid-19 situation, are those in towns which start with the letters A-B. So, entirely arbitrary really.
Figures: (which are more for me than to interest anyone else):
Number visited : 7/11
Favourite pub in list : Goodman’s Field
Acton (Red Lion and Pineapple) – I visited this one a few weeks ago, just before the lockdown, so this one is easy to link to. I very much like it, a quirky design and a real sense of history to it.
Aldgate (Goodman’s Field) – This pub is the easiest to get a seat in for those in the Tower of London area of the city and it has quite a cafe bar feel to it, as well as lots of power outlets. I’ve visited here plenty of times over the last decade and it’s got one of the more relaxed vibes to it and it’s well-reviewed on TripAdvisor for a Wetherspoons. Well, relatively. The pub name harks back to when the area was fields that were once owned by Roland Goodman.
Barking (Barking Dog) – I always thought that this pub name was just a wry word-play about it being located in Barking, but the actual reason according to Wetherspoons is:
“For centuries, fishing was Barking’s most important industry. Its fishermen fished the high seas off Doggerbank and the coast of Iceland. If you shorten ‘Doggerbank’ and join it to ‘Barking’, you end up with the name of this Wetherspoon pub.”
The reviews for the pub are again relatively high on TripAdvisor, although it’s a shame that the poster didn’t explain what the mistake was.
“What an awful customer service by Manager Kerry. it was meant to be the perfect Sunday where I would enjoy a meal and a drink. Not the case wrong choice. I paid around £15 for meal and drink and realised i made a mistake. Bad Customer service from a poorly trained duck.”
But referring to a female staff member as ‘duck’ like that is probably all I need to know. A chunk of the negative reviews of this pub have all been written by the same person, I’m not sure why anyone would rate somewhere as 1/5 and then keep going back before then leaving more 1/5 ratings…..
Anyway, the pub is hardly the prettiest from the outside, at the base of a bland and modern office block, but it’s convenient for the next door underground/railway station. The interior is relatively large and about as much character has been added in the design as is likely realistically possible in such a modern building.
Barkingside (New Fairlop Oak) – Never been here….
Battersea (Asparagus) – This memorable pub name refers back to when in the nineteenth century the area around where the pub now stands was used for growing asparagus, which became known as Battersea bundles. It’s, I think, the only pub in the country with this name, and there’s something to be said for finding a unique and memorable name. The pub opened in 1998 as part of a new commercial building, but it’s not too garish and there is a beer garden out the back for those who like wasps.
Bexleyheath (Furze Wren) – Never been here….
Bexleyheath (Wrong ‘Un) – It was a nuisance to get to Bexleyheath when I lived north of the river in the east end of London, the lack of underground meant connecting to North Greenwich (which was already a DLR journey and an underground journey from where I was) and then getting a bus which seemed to take hours. And probably did. So, I’ve only been here once and I never made it to the other Wetherspoons in Bexleyheath.
And, since my sole visit was seven years ago, I’ve mostly forgotten everything about the pub. Which is why I now write the blog primarily, to remind myself of where I’ve accidentally gone before I forget. The pub name is a bit tenuous, it’s apparently because cricket was once played in the area and a Wrong ‘Un is a difficult delivery to play for the batsman.
I like the TripAdvisor review exchange with a customer complaining that he had been told to drink up five minutes before the pub closed, which to me isn’t an unreasonable request, but there we go. The review then accuses the manager of the below.
“The manager came out and his name is terry fitzgerald. I explained to him what happen and he reply qas well you are in England you should speak English. How dare they even suggest such a thing. The was more than willing to take our money over the bar.”
But, I like very much that the manager himself has replied:
“I take great issue with your comments as this incident did not happen, I lived in Spain and Portugal for a total of fifteen years and have great memories of the countries and the people I would not say anything so ridiculous and there is no proof from our head office that you complained to them. I do not what issues you might have but if you are going to review please tell the truth. Terry Fitzgerald ( and I am sorry for the late reply)”
Each person can decide who they believe, but I know who I’m with here…. Anyway, I digress again.
Another customer complained that they had been spoken to because they kept complaining about the food, and I do wonder why people keep going to pubs if they do keep complaining about the food. And another customer who complained about a staff member’s behaviour and demanded an apology, but the customer didn’t mention themselves that they had been filming him with a phone.
I must return to this pub, I like moderate drama like this, keeps things interesting.
Brixton (Beehive) – I’ve been here three times and it’s the only Wetherspoons I’ve felt unsafe in, given that there were fights on two of those visits (not involving me) and on the third a huge argument between an aggressive staff member and a customer. The toilets were on all three visits beyond unclean, the staff had entirely clearly given up. It’s the only Wetherspoons I’ve been to as well where there were “customers only – no public use” signs on the toilets, although by the time someone has gone in and reached the toilets I can’t imagine this sign would put them off. Having written that, I haven’t gone back in years and a few reviews have mentioned new security processes, so perhaps it’s a lot better now. It is quite a small Wetherspoons though, so given its central location in Brixton and cheap prices, it gets busy quickly. Or did when I last visited.
Brockley (Brockley Barge) – The pub name here is a good one, it’s a reminder that the Croydon Canal used to pass near to where the pub stands today, although a railway line has now been laid along much of the canal’s former route. I much prefer this new pub name to the Breakspear Arms, which was the pub’s previous name, and JD Wetherspoon re-opened this location in 2000 after a few years of closure. The closure was probably inevitably as media reports noted that the pub had established itself as somewhere with a poor reputation, so it’s entirely to JD Wetherspoon’s credit that they’ve managed to turn this place around.
The interior is homely, although not particularly notable, but the atmosphere is welcoming, even though the pub has been busy in the early evening on the times that I’ve visited. Perfectly decent pub though, the staff here have always been friendly when I’ve been in as well.
Bromley (Greyhound) – Never been here….
Bromley (Richmal Crompton) – Never been here….
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Wetherspoons – Hertfordshire
As I bored everyone with here, my travel has meant that I’ve managed to visit a lot of JD Wetherspoons over the years. So in an attempt to remember them all, I’ve decided to try and write about them. As explained elsewhere, other perfectly good pubs are also available and of course should be visited 🙂
There are nineteen JD Wetherspoon outlets in Hertfordshire, and two which have closed. I’ve visited four of the nineteen open pubs and neither of the closed two. So, a really half-arsed effort so far for Hertfordshire….
Figures: (which are more for me than to interest anyone else):
Number visited : 4/19 (open pubs) 0/2 (closed pubs)
Favourite pub in county : Moon and Cross
Admiral Byng (Potters Bar) – Not visited
Angel Vaults (Hitchin) – Not visited
Colombia Press (Watford) – Not visited
[Closed] Cross Keys (St. Albans) – Not visited, but it was originally opened by the company in 2006. The pub was sold by Wetherspoons in 2012, when it became a little surplus to requirements following the opening of the Waterend Barn. The building is now a Bill’s Restaurant.
Crown (Berkhamsted) – Not visited
Full House (Hemel Hempstead) – Not visited
Harpsfield Hall (Hitchin) – Not visited
Hart & Spool (Borehamwood) – Not visited
King James (Cheshunt) – I’ve visited here recently, so just as easy to point to my blog post about the pub.
Manor House (Royston) – Not visited
Moon and Cross (Waltham Cross) – I’ve visited here recently, so here’s the blog post.
Moon Under Water (Watford) – Not visited
Pennsylvanian (Rickmansworth) – William Penn lived nearby to where this pub now stands, and he was the founder of Pennsylvania, which is one of my favourite states in the US. I was mildly disappointed when the company said earlier in 2019 that this was one of the pubs that they were selling, although it still appears to be part of the chain at the moment.
Looking at Wetherspoons, I was pleased to note this review, “Was asked to either tone down my baby grandson who was being a bit vocal at the time or leave”. I’m one of those people who is very understanding of children making noise (well, sort of), but continuing to be a “bit vocal” isn’t very fair on neighbouring tables…. And another customer rushed to leave a 1/5 review, despite apparently walking out, complaining that the “short, dumpy female” serving hadn’t served her in turn. The pub is perhaps lucky if a customer with that willingness to mock staff has gone elsewhere….
It’s been a few years since I’ve visited this pub, but I liked it, although it seems that it is probably in need a refurbishment now, although if Wetherspoons do keep it, perhaps that will take place.
Port Jackson (Bishop’s Stortford) – Not visited
Six Templars (Hertford) – Not visited
Standard Bearer (Stevenage) – Not visited
Standing Order (Stevenage) – Not visited
Star (Hoddesdon) – Not visited
Three Magnets (Letchworth) – Not visited
Waterend Barn (St. Albans) – This is quite literally a barn of a place, with plenty of seating space across what is actually two former barns, one from the sixteenth century and the other from the seventeenth century. The interior is modern, albeit within an historic setting, and it’s a spacious and comfortable environment. Judging from the reviews, the standards here appear to be relatively high, although there are always some exceptions to the positivity…..
“Was having a byl of wine on Sunday, got told I have to finish it outside and then while still drinking have asked to use a toilet. Security guy advised me that it’s only ladies allowed to use it and guys can go round the corner and sort it out outside?”
The pub didn’t deny that this took place, so I’m with the customer, that’s not great….
“There was a lady on a table opposite who was awfully loud, and she felt it necessary to broadcast to half of the pub that she needed to use the toilet, and then called over to me and my family to watch her drink so that she could go out for a smoke, which I thought was pretty rude”
I’m not sure that it’s rude to ask someone to look after your drink, but each to their own…. I like characters like in the pub though, the awfully loud ones can often be quite entertaining when they’re doing their broadcasting.
“The bar has a one drink minimum rule per person after waiting half an hour to get anything.”
I’m not sure I understood this review, surely every bar has a one drink minimum rule per person? Otherwise it’d just be going over there for a chat with the bar staff.
[Closed] Wetherspoons (South Oxhey) – Not visited and not one of the most interesting names for a pub that JD Wetherspoon could have picked….
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Wetherspoons – Cambridgeshire
As I bored everyone with here, my travel has meant that I’ve managed to visit a lot of JD Wetherspoons over the years. So in an attempt to remember them all, I’ve decided to try and write about them. As explained elsewhere, other perfectly good pubs are also available and of course should be visited 🙂
There are nine JD Wetherspoon outlets in Cambridgeshire, and one which has closed. I’ve visited seven of the nine open pubs and the only closed one.
Figures: (which are more for me than to interest anyone else):
Number visited : 7/9 (open pubs) 1/1 (closed pubs)
Favourite pub in county : Sandford House
College Arms (Peterborough) – The older looking red-brick section of this pub was formerly the County Technology College, hence the name of College Arms. Wetherspoons opened the building as a pub in 1996, making it one of the earlier pubs which the chain opened outside of London. I’ve encountered some of the friendliest of Wetherspoon’s staff in this pub and the environment is comfortable, with a usually quiet small upstairs section.
Although I like the pub, the reviews aren’t particularly positive and they’ve suffered from the same debacle of poor quality 2019 Christmas meals that is littering the reviews of Wetherspoons across the country…. Not least:
“Went to the Collage Arms today for a Christmas lunch ,the meal was very poor quality, they forgot to put the pigs in blankets and peas on the plate and had to take the meal away to add the forgotten items. The roasted seasonal veg were clearly reheated in the very thick salty gravy and not like roasted veg and hidden under the very processed Turkey roll, mashed potatoes had clearly been over microwaved and the pigs in blankets cremated in a deep fat fryer.”
What completely surprises me is that there’s also a positive review of the same meal, so at least someone is happy with it somewhere in the country….
This review of the pub though seems just a little harsh….
“Smells of death and sick. Smells of men’s broken dreams drowning in tequila and death, with a side of sick. Gone to turtle bay.”
Draper’s Arms (Peterborough) – I can’t wait to come back here for another exciting night of quizzing…. What I hadn’t realised on my visit a few weeks ago is that the pub was about to close until February 2020 for a £1.4 million refurbishment which will increase the space available to customers by moving the beer cellar into, well, a cellar rather than being on the ground floor and adding a rear extension. There’s also going to be a new roof terrace garden and hopefully they’ll fix up the toilets which are currently too small and just a little rickety and worn. CAMRA report that this was the first pub in Peterborough to go smoking-free, all the way back when Wetherspoons took it over in 2005, and after it was a drapery (hence the pub name) it became the Old Monk pub in 1996.
George Hotel (Whittlesey) – It’s a while since I’ve been to the fine town of Whittlesey, it dates back to the late seventeenth century when it was named the George & Star. Formerly a hotel, although no longer, it’s a large venue with plenty of space.
I’ve heard this complaint a few times over the years:
“I don’t understand how I can have fried egg but i cannot have poached egg?? He said we have run out??? Do you realise how easy it is to make one?”
I don’t dislike that Wetherspoons bring in poached eggs which are just reheated, at least it leads to them nearly always looking the same and being appropriately cooked.
Anyway, that’s about as far as I can go about the George, primarily since it’s so long ago that I’ve visited, I can’t remember much about it…
Hippodrome (March) – I recognise that Wetherspoons is, by its nature, a generic chain in some ways, but they have a real ability to transform buildings and this is no exception. Formerly a cinema which opened in 1929 and could seat 900 people, it later became a bingo hall before finally closing in 2009. Wetherspoons reopened it in 2011 and also turned part of it into a hotel, with the whole refurbishment being sympathetic to the building itself. It’s a very well reviewed pub and I remember it being clean and organised, with particularly engaging staff.
I like reviews like the one below, as often this is my sort of pub….
“Shame they haven’t got a music license as it can become abit boring and the atmosphere in there well is rubbish!”
This is the entirety of a 1 out of 5 review, I hope it made more sense to the pub…
“Thursday curry John chicken balti Michael lamb durriage it cold we had 2 sweets its cold custery cold. i stroke sorry”
Regal (Cambridge) – This was apparently once the largest pub in UK, although I’ve never been entirely convinced by that, although it’s a bit irrelevant now the Wetherspoons in Ramsgate has opened. It’s spacious, although it’s still not always that easy to find a seat in. There are two bars which makes things easier, although I keep forgetting that the upper bar is there and stand like an idiot waiting at the lower bar.
Anyway, onto TripAdvisor:
“My partner and I went to one of the bodyguards to ask where we can leave our jackets to which he impolitely answered ‘no where’. My partner then answered that it’s crazy they don’t have a clock room open in such a big place so we were kicked out of the bar.”
I like the idea of Wetherspoons supplying bodyguards, and I’m also intrigued as to whether any of their outlets in the country has a cloakroom…
And, the review below probably has a really interesting back story, shame the pub didn’t reply to the customer’s comments as I like reading about dramas such as this.
“Was sitting with a good friend of mine, enjoying our time, some food and all, at one point the friend goes to toilet. Upon coming out the toilet he is met by Theo, a Duty Manager who accuses my friend of doing ‘naughty things’ in the toilet and that he needs to leave. Keep in mind that the friend is smartly dressed, and a lecturer at one of the universities here, in his 30s. Very rudely tells me to ‘shut up’, and tells us that someone reported he’s been doing… ‘cockaine’! Friend offered to be searched by said Theo, upon inspection finding NOTHIN”
Given the number of students in Cambridge, I’m surprised there aren’t once again two Wetherspoons in the city, but maybe in the future…..
Sandford House (Huntingdon) – This is my favourite pub in the county and is another really well converted building, half from a former chapel and the other half from solicitor’s officers, with a new connecting area between them. A combination of modern design with old buildings, it’s open and bright with plenty of space for customers. There’s also a hotel element to the operation and it has a more relaxed feel than some other pubs, with the manager saying on one review that “Since opening, no one has ever failed to find a table”.
I also like the pub’s review to one customer and their side of the argument seems more likely to me….
“On looking into this matter, I can say there are always two sides to a conversation. Our managers and staff always try to give perfect customer service. You may not always like the outcome but we all follow our company policies.”
Swan & Angels (St. Ives) – Never been here…..
[Closed] Tivoli (Cambridge) – This pub, formerly the Graduate, was once a cinema which was open from 1925 until 1956, before being used as a warehouse. It was turned into a pub in 1995, the Fresher & Firkin (what a horrible name) before Wetherspoons transformed it into one of their outlets in 2010 at a cost of over £1 million. Then a little incident happened and the damn thing burned down in March 2015, less than five years after it opened. And, it has never re-opened since. Wetherspoons have now sold the still fire damaged pub and plans were submitted in early 2019 to open it as a student orientated pub with crazy golf. A shame that it hasn’t survived as a Wetherspoons, but hopefully the new owners will ensure what is left of the art deco design can be maintained.
Weeping Ash (St. Neots) – Never been here…..
Wheatsheaf (Wisbech) – Not the most visually appealing either internally or externally, but entirely acceptable in terms of the food and drink. Since I’ve written about this pub recently, I’ll just link to that page 🙂
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Wetherspoons – Suffolk
As I bored everyone with here, my travel has meant that I’ve managed to visit a lot of JD Wetherspoons over the years. So in an attempt to remember them all, I’ve decided to try and write about them. As explained elsewhere, other perfectly good pubs are also available and of course should be visited 🙂
There are eight JD Wetherspoon outlets in Suffolk, and another three which have closed. I’ve visited seven of the eight open pubs and two of the closed three.
Figures: (which are more for me than to interest anyone else):
Number visited : 7/8 (open pubs) 2/3 (closed pubs)
Favourite pub in county : Willow Tree
Corn Exchange (Bury St. Edmunds) – Located on the top floor of the town’s corn exchange building which opened in 1862. There was a burst of these openings in the 1850s and 1860s following the change in the Corn Laws, but most started to fall out of use by the late nineteenth century, although many of the buildings have survived. The building was split into two floors in 1969 and it opened as a JD Wetherspoons in 2012, despite some ridiculous plans in the 1960s to entirely demolish the structure.
Incidentally, Wetherspoons have a minor issue with customers using the app to buy things for people at other tables, which is a potential nuisance if a table ends up with 13 pots of peas. Unfortunately, they’ve also had an incident where someone sent a customer a banana, which raised all sort of race-related issues for the company. Anyway, this review is where the pub thought something was a joke and wasn’t….
“Ordered a banana waited 45 mins went up to the bar for the staff member to tell me they didn’t bother bringing it because it’s normally a joke. Awful attitude why have it on the menu if you won’t bother bringing it.”
Cricketers (Ipswich) – This large pub has been a Wetherspoons for some time, a 1930s building formerly known as the Town House and Millars (or at least according to CAMRA that’s what it was called, I’ve known it as the Cricketers since I first went there in 2004).
It’s quite a vibrant pub, although I note a complaint was made on TripAdvisor by a customer who was with her children and was asked to leave in the evening because that’s a requirement of the pub’s licence. The woman then went to take photos of staff at the bar, which she admitted doing, although this seems like erratic behaviour for someone out with their children. Anyway, the pub responded and added “you have since returned on Saturday 22nd June 2019 at around 10am where you physically assaulted on our shift managers by throwing a glass in his face”. I feel more than sorry for the poor staff involved in this, I hope the police took action.
Although I’m also surprised that the pub charges for extra gravy at 75p, I’ve never encountered that at any Wetherspoons, although I’m sure it happens frequently as I don’t tend to go about asking for extra gravy that often.
Drabbet Smock (Haverhill) – This pub has more of a cafe bar feel, comfortable although perhaps a little soulless, although that’s perhaps primarily as it’s a conversion from a former butcher’s shop and shopping unit rather than a grand historic building. And a Drabbet Smock is a form of clothing which was made locally, a pub name that I rather like.
I love this review on TripAdvisor, primarily as there’s a photo of the broom which has been thrown down.
“I cannot believe it, now having dinner and the rude staff literally just cleaned the floor and the table next to us and without any hesitation just threw his broom down next to us and walked outside for a social without hatting an eyelid, blocked my passage of getting up and left all the stuff there, im disgusted and outraged and not an apology in sight.”
[Closed] Golden Lion (Ipswich) – I only went in here once, in around late 2004, with my memory of the pub being very hazy. This was one of the Wetherspoon outlets that was closed down, perhaps because it was just a little small to be viable (I say small, I can’t remember quite how big it was, but I always got the impression it was small), despite a handy central location in the town. Last time I walked by, the building was closed and no-one has yet to take it over, a shame as I’m sure it could work well in some sort of slightly large micro-pub (I accept that’s not actually a thing though) type arrangement. I have no recollection of note about the interior, but there’s been a hotel at this site since the sixteenth century, when it was originally known as the White Lion.
Golden Lion (Newmarket) – Popular with those working in the racing industry, or at least there always seem to be horse related conversation every time that I’ve been in, this is a slightly smaller Wetherspoons, albeit with a large pub garden. It was once the Golden Lion Hotel, and there was an ad in the Sporting Life on 3 February 1900 when the entire premises were up for sale. The advert read:
“An exceptional opportunity to purchase this old-established hotel public, which is in the market for a short time only, owing to a leading firm of brewers having purchased the same, and only wanting the beer trade, which is comparatively small to the large and very profitable wine and spirit trade that is done. As is well known, it is one of the leading hotels in this flourishing town, with a billiard room, and accommodates some of the leading sporting and other gentlemen and trainers, also having very extensive stabling, which are always readily to let to them. The property is leasehold and requires a cash of around £3,000.”
And, a little pop over onto TripAdvisor amused me (I’m so easily pleased it’s untrue):
“I waited 10 minutes overall to hopefully buy 2 coffees. By this time my husband who had been watching this unfold signalled to me to go back to our table and said ‘Look I need to speak to the manager as the staff are not serving properly or fairly. On returning to our table he was horrified as when he spoke to the ‘manager’ to say the service was unacceptable the manager rudely said ‘Oh all right. Goodbye then‘. Not the thing to say to a customer.”
I’ve long since muttered privately to myself, and indeed posted on this blog to the two people that read it, about slow service, but I’m not sure I’ve ever got a manager and told them that it’s unfair. Anyway, I was amused that the pub replied and said they were sorry and that it was actually a customer who said “goodbye then” and not a staff member…..
Grover & Allen (Sudbury) – I actually thought that I’d been here, but it transpired that I had muddled it up with the Haverhill pub. So, at some stage in 2020 I might manage to make my way here….
Joseph Conrad (Lowestoft) – Situated opposite the town’s main railway station, this always seems to be one of the cleanest Wetherspoons, although no doubt it has its moments as well. Named after the Polish/British author, I’ve heard a few people accidentally call this pub the “Heart of Darkness”, which is one of Conrad’s books. The pub also seems to fare better in terms of reviews than some of their other outlets manage, perhaps they just have a competent manager, unless the people of Lowestoft aren’t very demanding.
Although, to be fair, this customer wasn’t pleased on TripAdvisor….
“went in for a couple of beers and was told by a staff member what do you want customer service gone out of the window will not go back”
A staff member asking a customer what do they want doesn’t strike me as worthy of a 1 out of 5, but there we go. And another review is titled “Homophobe and Chips” and I’m sure there’s some likely quite exciting back story to this:
“A recent visit with family brought a surprising appearance in the shape of the duty manager.His purpose to inform me i was on their most wanted list of banned customers !The reason? I am allegedly a homophobic. I duly asked for the police to attend, because it was a false accusation.”
And another customer complained about a manager not committed to customer satisfaction. The pub’s reply tells me all that I really need to know.
“After our discussion I am very sorry that you disagree with our policy on drinking responsibility however as I said the staff are only doing their job and trying to ensure the safety of yourself and other customers.”
King’s Head (Beccles) – I remember this pub from before it was a JD Wetherspoons, and it was a much less interesting affair then that did have a tired feel. The pub has several hotel rooms above it, although there’s a limited space for customers for dining and drinking, so finding a table can be difficult at times, although I think that an extension was completed in 2019 to provide more space. The pub appears to me, if I may generalise in such a manner, to have a much more middle class customer base than some of the other pubs in the chain and it’s also in one of the higher price bands for food and drink.
My favourite TripAdvisor review for this pub was a customer who was livid as they had found grass in their meal and claimed that the pub had tampered with their food as they had complained about their meal.
“My Daughter found some grass, actual grass with little roots, in her salad, I have attached a picture taken of the said grass. Never before have I experienced anything quite like this.”
The pub were polite in their response, but it really doesn’t look like grass to me, it looks like mixed leaves. But, the photo is on TripAdvisor for those who want to make their own minds up about whether a staff member rushed outside to find some grass to chuck in a meal.
[Closed] Robert Ransome (Ipswich) – For a time this was the third Wetherspoons in Ipswich, although they’re back down to one as this and the Golden Lion both closed. This was a Yates before 2009 and they took it back in 2017, but it always seemed a strange purchase to me as Wetherspoons have the Cricketers located opposite, although I assume they wanted to operate this as more of a student venue. The building was once a carpet shop and it seemed to be quieter than the Cricketers when Wetherspoons operated it, which is perhaps why they closed it. But, I’m sure Ipswich could do with another outlet of Wetherspoons though, just one seems a little low at a time when the chain is looking to expand again.
Willow Tree (Stowmarket) – Although this is probably my favourite of the chain’s pubs in the county, it’s also the one that I’ve seen the most arguments and the most abuse to staff in. And they’ve had flooding issues when it rained on two occasions when I visited, but otherwise it’s a cheap and cheerful location which is spacious and is rarely as rammed as some other pubs.
The pub opened in 2012 and the building is entirely new, with the former offices that were on the site having been demolished in 2008. Just as Lowestoft and Beccles seem to be well reviewed on TripAdvisor and similar sites, the Stowmarket pub seems to be struggling in comparison, although maybe their locals have higher expectations.
And, on the matter of TripAdvisor, this lovely customer gave 1 out of 5 and wrote:
“Only me at bar 16.00 on Friday… No staff, then one appear to say having a drink because allowed. Dont argue that, but these ignorant specimens need to remember who pays there salary. On that, it will be a long time before I set foot in this worst managed WS in the country.”
The pub had a look at the CCTV and reported that the customer actually waited only 53 seconds. Unforgivable….
[Closed] Wolf (Bury St. Edmunds) – This was one of the earliest Wetherspoons outside the capital, but it had a relatively short life span as it only operated from 1996 until 1998. I had always assumed that it closed as the company opened the Corn Exchange, but it seems that there was a bit of a gap between the two events. The building has been used for various purposes since Wetherspoons left, but it re-opened in early 2019 as the craft beer bar, Tavern at St. John’s.
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Wetherspoons – Norfolk
As I bored everyone with here, my travel has meant that I’ve managed to visit a lot of JD Wetherspoons over the years. So in an attempt to remember them all, I’ve decided to try and write about them. As explained elsewhere, other perfectly good pubs are also available and of course should be visited 🙂
There are eleven JD Wetherspoon outlets in Norfolk, and another two which have closed. I’ve now visited all of the eleven open pubs and both of the closed two. Two of the pubs, the Whiffler and the Bell, opened in the 1990s, so were part of the early expansion of Wetherspoons out of London.
There is talk of opening an outlet in North Walsham in what were formerly the council offices, although it must surely be a close call as to whether a pub would be viable in a town of that size.
Figures: (which are more for me than to interest anyone else):
Number visited : 11/11 (open pubs) 2/2 (closed pubs)
Favourite pub in county : City Gate
Bell (Norwich) – The Bell was one of the first pubs that JD Wetherspoon opened up outside of London and it’s a former inn which has a central location in the city. It’s a large building and although it’s often known as the Bell Hotel, it no longer provides accommodation. There was a large expansion to the pub in 2017 which caused it to close for several months, which took over space in offices next door.
The pub, before the renovation, had customer areas on three floors, although it’s now just over two floors as the toilets have been closed on the top floor. There is a downstairs area to the pub which has its own bar, although unfortunately the quiet little seating area that was once down here has now been turned into toilets following the renovations.
The upstairs of the pub is now much larger, with corridors shooting off opening out into new rooms with plenty of space. It’s another well thought out design internally, with the introduction of many more power outlets for customers. Customers like me, who find it a handy location to do work in for a few hours.
The real ale selection is usually extensive, although sometimes rather lacking in darker ales. The staff have always seemed knowledgeable and interested in the selection of ales, only once did a staff member not know, but they sought out help immediately. Despite the extra seating areas, the pub can still fill up quickly, especially during lunch-times. It has a rather too busy feel to it for my liking, but it’s usually possible to find quiet areas.
I do wonder what they do with breakfasts here though, I’ve never been in a Wetherspoons where there are so many complaints about cold food. Perhaps their heat lamps need replacing…..
[closed] City Gate (Norwich) – This was always my favourite JD Wetherspoon outlet in Norfolk, primarily because it never felt overly busy. Although, that’s likely why they closed it, and it was quite an early closure, I think having opened in 1999 and lasting only for a few years. It was then taken over by another pub company who renamed the place the Regal and then turned into an all-you-can-eat Chinese restaurant, called Merge. I quite liked Merge, other than when they had someone singing on the stage, which didn’t really work. However, they received a poor food hygiene report, and although they turned it around, combined with the opening of Cosmo in the city, they couldn’t make it work. It’s now a part bar and part bowling alley.
The building has previously been a cinema, known as the Regal (explaining the later name change of the pub) and Wetherspoons converted it into a pub. Slightly ironically there was a pub next door called the Barn Tavern, which was closed in the 1990s. The City Gate was a slightly strange design internally, as although it had a lot of height, it didn’t have a great deal of seating space. The bar often got congested and although it was turned into a pub into a sensitive manner, it clearly wasn’t viable financially.
Glass House (Norwich) – This has always been my favourite Wetherspoons in the city as the building is quirky with lots of hidden little corners. It used to be a glass factory, hence the pub’s name, and it opened at a similar time as the Queen of Iceni at the turn of this century. It can be tricky to know where to stand for service as the bar is split into sections, although the far end nearer the pub garden is usually the best location.
There’s a usually quieter room upstairs which overlooks the road, as well as a balcony which overlooks the large pub garden. I find that the service in this pub is generally friendlier and more engaging than some of the outlet’s other pubs. Not that it’s of much importance, but I’ve never established whether the pub is called the Glass House or the Glasshouse, and Wetherspoons themselves seem to use both forms.
More recently they’ve ditched one of their grills, seemingly so they can make pizzas, which has meant the menu hs heavily reduced and steak club and chicken club have been lost.
Globe (King’s Lynn) – Now the only remaining JD Wetherspoon left in King’s Lynn, following the closure of the Lattice House, this is also a Wetherspoons hotel. It’s a large and cavernous building which has plenty of seating areas across the ground floor. The building dates to the eighteenth century, although the interior has been stripped of any historic interest by twentieth century renovations. These though took place before JD Wetherspoon purchased the building, otherwise I suspect they would have been kept.
It has always seemed a welcoming pub during my visits, seeming to be organised and well managed. I feel marginally sorry for the staff given the 2019 Christmas meal debacle, which seems to have been causing problems in many Wetherspoons outlets what with not supplying gravy and using unusually low quality ingredients. This review probably sums it up….
“What a mess the Xmas Dinner is trash says gravy but wasn’t and nincompoop staff says doesn’t come with any”
[closed] Lattice House (King’s Lynn) – This quirky little pub (and by quirky I partly mean that there were several bar areas, making it difficult to know where to stand to be served) is perhaps the most historic that Wetherspoons operated in Norfolk. Unfortunately they closed it in 2016 and it briefly became a Hawthorn Leisure pub, before closing for a period. It’s now a private restaurant, which has managed to hit the news for banning anyone under the age of 23. I’m unlikely to go there now, not because I’m under 23, but because there happen to be many people in that demographic who like fine dining and appreciate it, and I can’t see why they can’t enjoy it.
The pub was formerly a private residence which was built in the medieval period, and archaeological investigations over the last couple of decades have discovered that it has been extended and rebuilt on numerous occasions. The exterior and interior of the two-level pub kept that historic integrity and JD Wetherspoons did a rather neat job with the renovation. There are numerous original exposed beams and I recall the real fires adding character. It was though just a short walk away from their other outlet in the town, The Globe, which was larger and had hotel rooms.
The freehold of the building still appears to be owned by the local council, who has leased it for a long period. The bulk of the current building dates from the fifteenth century and it was already a pub when JD Wetherspoon took it over.
Limes (Fakenham) – I’ve never been to this pub when it has been anywhere near full, and I note that their menu prices are some of the lowest in the area. I’m not entirely sure how it justifies staying open, but since it wasn’t on the list of pubs that Wetherspoons sold off, it is clearly doing sufficiently well. I’ve received either exceptionally good service here, or pretty indifferent service, it’s rarely somewhere in the middle.
The Limes was a pub before JD Wetherspoon took it over, although it wasn’t one that I’d ever visited, although the internal renovations seem substantial from the photos I’ve seen. It opened as a Wetherspoon pub in 2012 and was also a private residence for a period before the 1980s, as well as having been a hotel.
Queen of Iceni (Norwich) – Located on Norwich Riverside and often still referred to as Lloyds, this is rather more pleasant on weekdays than on weekend evenings. The music goes up, most of the customers seem to leave and then, er, I’m not sure as I’ve already left. I’m still trying to establish why the pub moved its stairs a bit to the right last year, something which very much confused me when I tried to go upstairs…
There’s a corner behind the bar which overlooks the river, which is usually quieter than the rest of the pub. It’s also where a few months ago I sat whilst listening to an elderly woman say to her husband (or what I assumed was her husband) that “this is the worst meal I’ve ever had, it’s dreadful”. Thirty seconds later a staff member comes by to offer a check back and the same woman said “everything’s delicious”. She then berated her husband, after the staff member had left, for not saying anything.
The pub is rather open plan and lacking in any historic interest, although this is primarily because the site doesn’t have much history. Indeed, twenty years ago there was a road underneath what is now the pub.
Red Lion (Thetford) – Opening in 2012, this building had previously been used as both a pub and a restaurant, receiving an expansion when JD Wetherspoon took it over. They created a rather pleasant courtyard area in front of the bar, with the external wall they’ve cut through still clearly visible, although this is still a relatively small pub for Wetherspoons. It is though one of the better reviewed Wetherspoons in the county, perhaps excellent management, or perhaps the people of Thetford are just nice.
It’s a generally quite busy location, although I’ve never seen any trouble in there. It did though get national publicity in the years before it was a Wetherspoons when some thugs attacked it during some national football tournament, causing significant amounts of damage and injuring some inside. They committed the attack because the owners were Portuguese, and that apparently justified the violence and hatred.
And I like a bit of excitement in a pub, which I assume happened to this customer judging by the TripAdvisor review….
“This is the second time I’ve visited the red lion weatherspoons in thetford with my girlfriend, and the first time I have ever used the toilets. Upon arriving, I needed to use the toilet before I sat down to eat. My girlfriend said she also needed to go so we both made our way upstairs. I then left the men’s toilets with the intention of waiting outside for my girlfriend, however I could not locate them, I was faced with 2 other wooden doors that read ‘private’ and another semi-opaque divider with no sign whatsoever. I concluded that the female toilets were either downstairs or the entrance may be somewhere beyond the glass divider. I entered the mysterious glass doorway only to be rudely shouted at by the branch’s manager in a disgusted tone as if I was some kind of sexual deviant. Realising my mistake I then left the lobby/lounge/seating area of what I discovered to be the ladies toilet and enquired as to the lack of signage.”
Romany Rye (Dereham) – This pub opened in 2011 and was a conversion of the former Phoenix Hotel. It was a very comprehensive conversion as it’s hard to establish the pub’s former lay-out, but it has remained in use as a hotel. There’s a comfortable lower area at the front of the pub with more traditional tables, and there are higher tables in the back bar. The male toilets are slightly difficult to find, located right near to the entrance of the bar.
I’ve always thought that this pub has rather a relaxed and informal atmosphere, although I’ve seen more disruptive customers in this pub than in any other Wetherspoons outlet in Norfolk (other than Lloyds in Norwich) and I’m not quite sure why. The staff are always particularly knowledgeable about the real ale which is a substantial bonus, and there are usually some ales or ciders of interest that are a little different.
Troll Cart (Great Yarmouth) – Until 2017 I usually avoided this pub, but only because it was nearly always full. It had originally opened in 1996, making it one of the oldest Wetherspoons in East Anglia. The pub recently closed to incorporate offices which were located above the bar, which has now meant that there’s more space and there’s also a hotel at the Troll Cart.
The building isn’t of much historic interest, but the modernisation has greatly improved it, as well as making it much easier to find a seat. I’ve experienced problems ordering at the bar here, just by being overlooked, but this is no longer a problem as I can just order by using the app.
The pub is named after the carts which were used to navigate around the town’s narrow rows, scores (although I’m not sure if that’s just a Lowestoft and Beccles term) and alleys.
The Whalebone (Downham Market) – This Wetherspoons opened in 2018, and it took me a few months to get to visit it, and I’m surprised that there’s enough trade to justify it being here. However, when I went it was certainly busy enough, although another local publican has complained that the chain has destroyed the trade for other pubs in the town. There’s quite a modern feel to the pub, which happened to be rather untidy when I went, although the building itself is historic. The conversion into a Wetherspoons has been sympathetic, although this has long since been a pub, so it wasn’t a change of use. In the nineteenth century, there were whalebones placed outside the pub, but sadly these have long since disappeared.
Whiffler (Norwich) – This is one of the most untypical Wetherspoon pubs that I’ve been to in the country, let alone just in Norfolk. It’s an estate pub which is quite a way out of Norwich city centre, indeed, about three miles from their other central pubs. It’s a large pub which opened in 1938 and which was nearly demolished in the 1990s to be turned into some anonymous retail outlet.
Wetherspoons opened the Whiffler in 1999 and given the number of other local pubs which have closed, I suspect it wouldn’t still be trading without their involvement. It’s perhaps not a pub that they would purchase now, but there’s a strong community feel, which is hard for any large national chain to develop. The service is generally brilliant, one of the friendliest and most helpful of any of their pubs in the county.
The William Adams (Gorleston) – This opened in 2018 on the site of a former garage, although its construction was delayed following an archaeological dig which found a number of bodies. The pub takes its name from the local lifesaver and swimmer who it is thought saved around 140 lives. He died at the age of just 49 and was honoured at first with a road which was named after him, but now he has this pub.
There are a few pieces of artwork which liven the interior of the pub up, although it’s quite a bland interior in terms of the pub design. There’s a long bar long the right-hand side, a variety of different seating types internally and an external garden area. The toilets, as usual for a Wetherspoons, are upstairs. The staff seem enthusiastic and efficient, with the pub being clean and organised when I visited. There are a generous supply of power points around the pub, which are particularly useful for me.
As an aside, I’ve never seen such a high percentage of customers using the app to order food and drinks as I have here. That does have the advantage of meaning that queues at the bar seem minimal. Two younger customers managed to order meals here, I assume via the app, and the pub took the food off them and shoved it into boxes according to this review, not entirely classy….
“Was told you had to be 16 to order food, had passport with me and was 16. Was then told I had to leave because my friend was not 16 bearing in mind we had ordered our food already. Because our food was already made they didn’t give us a refund they put our food in cardboard boxes with no fork or kings and expected us to eat it as it was. The beans were mushy and the it was all cold. We also ordered 2 large Pepsi’s and they were put in tiny take away cups with the ice taking out and there was most definitely not the full drink inside”


