Ye Olde Cock Tavern Explained

Ye Olde Cock Tavern
Building Type:Pub
Address:22 Fleet St, Temple, EC4Y 1AA
Location City:City of London
Location Country:United Kingdom
Est Completion:-->
Destruction Date:-->
Management:or
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Ye Olde Cock Tavern is a Grade II listed public house at 22 Fleet Street, London EC4. It is part of the Taylor Walker Pubs group.

Originally built before the 17th century, it was rebuilt, including the interior (which is thought to include work by carver Grinling Gibbons),[1] on the other side of the road in the 1880s when a branch of the Bank of England was built where it stood.[1] [2] Shortly before the destruction in 1886, the dining room was captured in a lithograph by Philip Norman.

However, in the 1990s a fire broke out and destroyed many of the original ornaments, and the building has since gone through a restoration using photographs.

In 1930 the founding meeting of the Society of Industrial Artists, later renamed Society of Industrial Artists and Designers and now the Chartered Society of Designers, was held at the Olde Cock Tavern, and attendees included Sir Misha Black and Milner Gray.[3] It was frequented by Samuel Pepys, Alfred Tennyson, Andrew Newitt and Charles Dickens.[4]

The Olde Cocke has also become the meeting place for the world's oldest free speech society, or debating club, Cogers on each second Monday of the month.[5] In addition, the Sylvan Debating Club meets there on the first Monday of the month.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ye Old Cock Tavern, City of London, London EC4Y 1AA - Pubs.com Passionate about Pubs . 3 February 2010 . 13 November 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121113192005/http://www.pubs.com/main_site/pub_details.php?pub_id=1106 . dead .
  2. http://www.allinlondon.co.uk/clubs_bars/venue-500.php All in London - Olde Cock Tavern Info
  3. Web site: Chartered Society of Designers . Chartered Society of Designers . 2014-11-17 . 2021-07-13.
  4. Evans. J., The Book of Beer Knowledge,
  5. http://www.cogers.org/ The previous meeting place was the Old Bank of England