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The King's Head, Fulham

1906 establishments in EnglandCommercial buildings completed in 1906FulhamGrade II listed buildings in the London Borough of Hammersmith and FulhamGrade II listed pubs in London
Pub stubsPubs in the London Borough of Hammersmith and FulhamScottish baronial architecture
King's Head, Fulham 02
King's Head, Fulham 02

The King's Head is a Grade II listed public house at 4 Fulham High Street, Fulham, London.It was built in 1906 in the Scottish Baronial style.The Post Office Directory listed it as owned by Criswick & Feaviour in 1919 and Feaviour & Co Ltd in 1938. The original address was 12 Fulham High St, but this was renumbered as No 4 by 1938.Since March 2012 till 2013, it was trading as Low Country an American style "bar & eating house". In recent years it has catered to a South African clientele as both Joe Cool's and Zulu's, and then traded as The Ramshackle. Previously, as The King's Head it was a popular live music venue. The venue is now known as The Courtyard since August 2017 (previously The King's Head & Courtyard) - and was voted 'The Best Place To Drink In The Sun In London' in the 2018 Time Out Love London Awards. The bar followed on to win 6 other Time Out Awards and 1 Design My Night 2018 Award. The cocktail bar is known for changing over their garden every 6 months and their indoor cocktail lounge that changes into a popular night club environment in the evenings.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article The King's Head, Fulham (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

The King's Head, Fulham
Fulham High Street, London Parson's Green (London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham)

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Wikipedia: The King's Head, FulhamContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 51.4715 ° E -0.2115 °
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Address

Lowcountry

Fulham High Street 4
SW6 3LQ London, Parson's Green (London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham)
England, United Kingdom
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Website
lowcountry.co.uk

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King's Head, Fulham 02
King's Head, Fulham 02
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Fulham High Street
Fulham High Street

Fulham High Street is a street in Fulham, London. It runs north–south, from the junction with the western end of Fulham Road in the north, where it continues to Hammersmith as Fulham Palace Road, past the junction with the western end of New King's Road, and ends in the south where it would have continued to cross the River Thames via Putney Bridge from 1729 to 1886. In 1886, a new stone bridge was built somewhat to the west of the existing bridge, and the old wooden bridge was demolished. The section between Fulham Road and New King's Road is part of the A219. The London historian, Barbara Denny, writes about Nos.49-55 having been the site of a tapestry manufactory in the mid 18th-century, run by the priest adventurer, Pierre Parisot. The reasons for bringing his factory to Fulham were twofold: the French Gobelins Manufactory was already established in Fulham and he wished to introduce a 'youth training scheme' for young draughtsmen, dyers and weavers. The site subsequently became a school.In his 1860 work, A walk from London to Fulham, Thomas Crofton Croker notes that Fulham High Street ran from London Road in the north to Church Row in the south, and was originally called Bear Street and sometimes Fulham Street. Croker notes that even in his day, several fine mansions had been demolished.There are several pubs, including the Golden Lion, the King's Head, the Eight Bells, and the Temperance, the latter having originally been a Temperance Billiard Hall. Other notable buildings include the Grade II listed Fulham House, dates to the reign of Edward III, and past inhabitants include Ralph Warren, the Lord Mayor of London in 1536, and the cloth merchant Sir Thomas White.