When I was in my last year at Manchester, back in the wild days of '87, we lived in an idyllic garden suburb urban bombsite part way between Moss Side and Hulme.
There was a lot of redevelopment work going on at the time behind Princess Elizabeth Way, and rows of extremely old terraced houses were being bulldozed wholesale - bit sad in a way.
Anyway, just for a few days there was a pub left standing in the middle of all this - the buildings on either side had been demolished, and its walls were propped up on each side with huge wooden buttresses. So a few of us decided to venture in. Blimey. It was like going back to the 1800's - chintzy wallpaper, bare floorboards and the 'toilet' was just out the back where one of the walls had been painted with about 50 coats of (I recall) gloss green and a rainwater gutter along the base.
I wish I could say with a tear in my eye that it was the best pint I ever had, but it was nothing memorable I'm afraid... but it's true that we must have been some of the last ever customers because the following day it had been flattened.
There was a lot of redevelopment work going on at the time behind Princess Elizabeth Way, and rows of extremely old terraced houses were being bulldozed wholesale - bit sad in a way.
Anyway, just for a few days there was a pub left standing in the middle of all this - the buildings on either side had been demolished, and its walls were propped up on each side with huge wooden buttresses. So a few of us decided to venture in. Blimey. It was like going back to the 1800's - chintzy wallpaper, bare floorboards and the 'toilet' was just out the back where one of the walls had been painted with about 50 coats of (I recall) gloss green and a rainwater gutter along the base.
I wish I could say with a tear in my eye that it was the best pint I ever had, but it was nothing memorable I'm afraid... but it's true that we must have been some of the last ever customers because the following day it had been flattened.