Kelham Island Tavern
The Kelham Island Tavern is a public house in Sheffield. It is the only pub to have become the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA) National Pub of the Year two years running.
Kelham Island Tavern | |
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The Kelham Island Tavern in 2005 | |
General information | |
Address | 62 Russell Street, Sheffield, S3 8RW |
Coordinates | 53°23′18″N 1°28′20″W |
Opened | 2002 (as Kelham Island Tavern) |
The pub lies on Russell Street, in the Kelham Island area of the city. It was constructed in the 1830s as part of a terrace,[1] and originally operated as "The Sawmaker". It was later renamed the "White Hart", and in the early 1990s became the "Kelham Island Tavern", but closed soon after.[2]
The derelict building was re-opened as the "Kelham Island Tavern" in 2002, specialising in real ales.[3] By the following year, the local press mentioned it as one of five pubs in the area among the "best real ale pubs in Yorkshire".[4] Following an inundation during the 2007 United Kingdom floods, it closed for a five-week refurbishment.[3] It won the CAMRA pub of the year award for 2008, and took the title again the following year, becoming the first pub to win the title two years running.[5] It has also won the Yorkshire Pub of the Year title in 2004, 2007, 2008 and 2009, and the Sheffield Pub of the Year award every year from 2004 to 2011.[6]
The pub has a small garden featuring palm trees, and is also a venue for traditional English folk music.[7]
References
- Andrew Tierney-Jones, "South Yorkshire Pub Guide: Kelham Island Tavern, Sheffield", Daily Telegraph, 13 November 2009
- "Top spot for reborn Tavern", Sheffield Telegraph, 20 February 2009
- Tim Hampson and Tom Stainer, "Pub of the year: Second time around", The Independent, 27 March 2010
- "Gondolas may go with the flow on revived riverbanks", The Star, 27 November 2003
- "Sheffield pub named best in UK by Camra for second year", 17 February 2010
- Kelham Island Tavern
- Melissa Cole, "Kelham Island Tavern: Sheffield", The Observer, 15 June 2009