History in Structure

The Red Lion Public House

A Grade II* Listed Building in Lozells and East Handsworth, Birmingham

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.5041 / 52°30'14"N

Longitude: -1.938 / 1°56'16"W

OS Eastings: 404304

OS Northings: 289583

OS Grid: SP043895

Mapcode National: GBR 5Q0.Z6

Mapcode Global: VH9YW.CB95

Plus Code: 9C4WG336+MQ

Entry Name: The Red Lion Public House

Listing Date: 17 January 1985

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1276278

English Heritage Legacy ID: 409753

ID on this website: 101276278

Location: Black Patch, Birmingham, West Midlands, B21

County: Birmingham

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Birmingham

Traditional County: Staffordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Midlands

Church of England Parish: Handsworth St James

Church of England Diocese: Birmingham

Tagged with: Pub

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Description


SP 08 NW
6/11A
17.1.85

BIRMINGHAM
SOHO ROAD B21
The Red lion Public House

II*

Public house. 1901-2 by James & Lister Lea for the Holt Brewery Company. Brick and terracotta facade; brick to sides and rear. Welsh slate roof. End stacks. PLAN. Long public bar along the road with further bars to right and behind. Spacious staircase hall in right-hand part of the building. EXTERIOR. 3 storeys. Free Renaissance style. Pink terracotta ground floor with entrances at the ends and centre. Shallow canopies carried on human torsoes over the doorways. Windows under shallow 3-centred arches. Upper floors buff terracotta. First floor with 6 traceried windows of different sizes with engaged colonettes and under an elaborate Jacobean-style frieze. Above a polygonal corner tower with attic window and surmounted by a cupola. Two gabled attic windows of different sizes and detail. INTERIOR. Public bar with blue and yellow Minton tiling on walls and panelling ceiling. Exceptionally fine bar back combining mirror-glass and mahogany joinery, enriched with gilded and painted letters. Bar front painted and detailed in Neo-Renaissance style. Fixed seating. Door to smoke room with etched and gilded glass Smoke room with fixed seating. Walls completely tiled with a similar scheme to the public bar but with framed coloured lithographs of girls in pastoral settings. Coffee room with more restrained decoration polished wooden panelling above fixed seats (with bell pushes) and extending to ceiling; framed engravings of dogs and narrative paintings. Oval mirror in over-mantle. Staircase hall entirely tiled with several designs and repeating the colours in the public bar. Ornately detailed newel posts and turned balusters; coloured glass of 1902. A public house of unusual richness and completeness, with interior detailing. comparable to the best surviving examples nationally.
SOURCES: A, Crawford, M. Dunn & R Thorne, Birmingham Pubs 1880-1939 (Gloucester, 1986), pp. 118-9.

Listing NGR: SP0430489583

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