Mug House

Mug House - London Bridge - Wine Bar & Restaurant | Davy's

Pewter tankards hang from a characterful bar, a dining room and conspiratorial private room provide warm and genuine surroundings with service to match.

Popular with foodies, wine buffs and beer lovers alike and perfect for private dinners or exclusive parties.

http://www.davy.co.uk

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Mug House, London Bridge, London, SE1 2PF - pub details ...

Number 1 Bar, London Bridge (0.0 miles), Borough Bar and Dining, London Bridge (0.1 miles), All Bar One, London Bridge (0.1 miles), Cooperage, London Bridge (0.1 miles), Oast House, London Bridge Station (0.1 miles) - see more nearby pubs please note - reviews on this site are purely the opinion of site visitors, so don't take them too seriously.

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Mug House in London Bridge, London Pub Review and Details

Tucked away behind the thrills of the London Bridge Experience, sits the Mug House, a traditional Davy's bar & restaurant serving delicious lunches and dinners, as well as boasting an extensive list of wines, ales and champagnes.

Frequent comedy nights and wine tasting experiences makes Mug House a destination bar for friends and families alike.

The Mug House, 1 Tooley Street SE1 2PF

Mug-House Clubs in Georgian London

Review analysis
drinks   food   location   quietness  

Among the political Clubs of the metropolis in the early part of the eighteenth century, one of the most popular was the Mug-house Club, which met in a great Hall in Long Acre every Wednesday and Saturday, during the winter.

It was under these circumstances that the Mug-house Clubs volunteered, in a very disorderly manner, to be champions of order; and with this purpose it became part of their evening's entertainment to march into the street, and fight the Jacobite mob.

On the 4th of November in the same year, the birthday of King William III., the Jacobite mob made a large bonfire in the Old Jewry, to burn an effigy of the King; but the Mug-house men came upon them again, gave them "due chastisement with oaken plants," extinguished their bonfire, and carried King William in triumph to the Roebuck.

On November 17, in the same year, the Loyal Society met at the Roebuck to celebrate the anniversary of the Accession of Queen Elizabeth; and, while busy with their mugs, they received information that the Jacobites were assembled, in great force, in St. Martin's-le-Grand, and were preparing to burn the effigies of King William and King George, along with the Duke of Marlborough.

During the absence of the great mass of the members of the Club, another body of Jacobites, much more numerous than those engaged in Newgate Street, suddenly assembled, attacked the Roebuck Mug-house, broke its windows, and those of the adjoining houses, and with terrible threats, attempted to force the door.

Azzurro, London Bridge & Bermondsey

A lively wine bar and restaurant, Azzurro presents authentic Italian cuisine in vibrant surroundings opposite the London Dungeon.

Fine European beers are served up alongside New World wines.

Using fresh and healthy ingredients, Italian classics are given a contemporary edge at Azzurro restaurant in London Bridge.

The Mug House | Restaurants in South Bank, London

The Mug House ale and port house has the historic feel of a Dickens novel with pewter tankards hanging from a characterful bar.

The Mug House is popular with foodies, wine buffs and beer lovers alike.

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