Golden Eagle, Birmingham Explained

The Golden Eagle
Status:Demolished
Building Type:Public house
Client:Holt Brewery Company
Address:Hill Street
Location Town:Birmingham
Location Country:England
Opened Date:1930s
Demolition Date:1980s

The Golden Eagle was a 1930s public house in Birmingham, England, which became known as a venue for live music.

The pub stood on Hill Street, in Birmingham City Centre, between Victoria Square and the western end of New Street Station.

It closed in January 1984 and was demolished soon afterwards.

Architecture

The building, commissioned by the Holt Brewery Company (and later operated by their successors, Ansells Brewery), in art deco style[1] was clad in black stone, with a bas relief carving of a stylised golden eagle, by sculptor William Bloye, over the main entrance.

It was erected in the 1930s on the site of an earlier pub of the same name.[2]

Music

It was at the Golden Eagle, in 1963, that Spencer Davis met brothers Steve (then aged 14 and still at school[3]) and Muff Winwood, performing there as the Muffy Wood Jazz Band, resulting in them forming the Spencer Davis Group.[4] The Spencer Davis Group made their debut at the Eagle, and subsequently had a Monday-night residency here.[5]

Other bands who played there before going on to bigger things include Iron Maiden[6] and U2.[7]

For a year from June 1973, the pub was home to a folk club,[8] run by resident Birmingham folk/rock band Scotch Mist.

In 1974 another folk club ran by Alan MacEvoy and his resident folk group, Prima Donna hosted famous artists like Tommy Makem, Tim Harding, The JSB band and Dick Gaughan.

From 1976 to 1979, a club night, "Shoop Shoop", held on Thursdays.[9] [10] Shoop Shoop was run by Mike Horseman and Pete King, the latter of whom went on to manage Steel Pulse.[11]

Legacy

In August 2018, Birmingham-based Two Towers brewery launched a "Golden Eagle" ruby ale, in their "Gone but Not Forgotten" range, to commemorate the pub.[12]

The site of the pub subsequently became a car park.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Mourby . Adrian . The headbanger's guide to Brum . 15 October 2018 . . 15 February 2009.
  2. Web site: Golden Eagle, Hill street, Birmingham . PubHistory . 15 October 2018 . 16 October 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181016032649/https://pubhistory.co.uk/Warwickshire/BirminghamG/GoldenEagleHill.shtml . dead .
  3. Web site: It's 'About Time' for Steve Winwood . BBC. 19 August 2007.
  4. News: Lockley . Mike . Will legendary Spencer Davis Group reunite for one last gig in Birmingham? . 15 October 2018 . birminghammail . 17 July 2016.
  5. Web site: Spencer Davis Group / 1965 / Smallbrook Queensway . Havill & Travis . 15 October 2018.
  6. News: V. . Robin . Seven Birmingham venues where music history was made . 15 October 2018 . Time Out Birmingham . 10 April 2015 . en.
  7. News: Bentley . David . These are the latest pubs to close in Birmingham . 15 October 2018 . . 30 June 2017.
  8. Web site: Cross . Phil . Golden Eagle Folk Club . History of Folk Clubs in Birmingham . 15 October 2018.
  9. Web site: Chris Rhythm Doctor Interview + DJ Mix . Grapevine Birmingham . 22 March 2017 . 15 October 2018.
  10. Book: MIT Press. 978-1-906897-47-5 . Henriques . Julian . Julian Henriques. Morley . David . Goblot . Vana . Stuart Hall: Conversations, Projects and Legacies . 2017 . 225.
  11. Web site: Brouwer . Andy . Pete King - Steel Pulse's former Manager in his own words . 15 October 2018.
  12. Web site: Gone But Not Forgotten, Golden Eagle . Two Towers Ale . 15 October 2018 . 11 August 2018.