The Ship Tavern (London)
United Kingdom /
England /
London /
Gate Street, 12
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ London
World / United Kingdom / England
restaurant, pub / public house
www.theshiptavern.co.uk/
The Ship Tavern was established in 1549 & has been at the heart of Holborn's social scene for over 500 years. The original Tavern was then only half the size as it is today and constructed mostly from timber. Its main purpose was to quench the thirst of exhausted labourers who were tending to the nearby fields, now partly Lincoln's Inn Fields.
As well as being a public house, The Ship Tavern has served many purposes in its lifetime. Notably during the despotic reign of Henry VIII, Catholics would sneak into the Ship Tavern to attend mass, conducted by outlawed priests who would conduct mass from behind the bar. Lookouts would be posted around the neighbourhood, and a pre-arranged signal would warn the congregation when the king's zealous officials came in to view. The warning would, hopefully, give the priest time to escape into one of the several 'hidey-holes' (some of which still exist today) and allow the congregation time to take up their tankards and become just another group of regulars in a pub. Some priests were not so lucky and were discovered hiding in a tunnel in the cellar and were executed on the spot. Their chilling screams can still be heard to this day. The Ship has featured in many haunted publications on London.
The Ship Tavern was established in 1549 & has been at the heart of Holborn's social scene for over 500 years. The original Tavern was then only half the size as it is today and constructed mostly from timber. Its main purpose was to quench the thirst of exhausted labourers who were tending to the nearby fields, now partly Lincoln's Inn Fields.
As well as being a public house, The Ship Tavern has served many purposes in its lifetime. Notably during the despotic reign of Henry VIII, Catholics would sneak into the Ship Tavern to attend mass, conducted by outlawed priests who would conduct mass from behind the bar. Lookouts would be posted around the neighbourhood, and a pre-arranged signal would warn the congregation when the king's zealous officials came in to view. The warning would, hopefully, give the priest time to escape into one of the several 'hidey-holes' (some of which still exist today) and allow the congregation time to take up their tankards and become just another group of regulars in a pub. Some priests were not so lucky and were discovered hiding in a tunnel in the cellar and were executed on the spot. Their chilling screams can still be heard to this day. The Ship has featured in many haunted publications on London.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 51°31'2"N -0°7'9"E
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- The Sir Christopher Hatton 0.7 km
- The Saint 1.3 km
- Brasserie Zedel 1.4 km
- Davy’s at Woolgate Bar and Brasserie 1.9 km
- Doric Arch pub 1.9 km
- The Green Man 2 km
- Eastnor Castle 2.1 km
- The Huntley Centre 2.3 km
- Holborn 0.2 km
- St. Giles 0.3 km
- Covent Garden 0.5 km
- Strand 0.7 km
- Bloomsbury 0.8 km
- Central London 0.9 km
- Clerkenwell 1.1 km
- City of Westminster 3.1 km
- London Borough of Islington 3.4 km
- Camden Council 4 km