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Goldsmiths Tavern

The Goldsmiths Tavern
Map
Location316 New Cross Rd,
Lewisham,
London, SE14
Closed2003

The Goldsmiths Tavern was a pub and venue for both live music and comedy located at 316 New Cross Road, in the New Cross area of the London Borough of Lewisham in south-east London.

It was the original venue of Vic Reeves Big Night Out, a live comedy night he started there in 1986 before moving it to the Albany Empire in 1988, and also where Reeves met future comedy partner Bob Mortimer.[1][2] Whilst generally attracting a mixed clientele, it held gay nights in the 1980s and was considered an LGBTQ friendly space.[3][4] Paul O'Grady would also perform there.[5]

The building is still a pub, though now named The New Cross House as it had been previously.[6][7] Nathan Dews' book The History of Deptford from 1884 refers to a pub of that name "at the top of Clifton Hill", and so presumably in roughly the same spot. [8] An issue of the Berkshire Chronicle from 16 July 1825 also refers to an establishment of that name in Deptford.[9] In the 1960s Goldsmiths University students ran a folk club there.[10]

References

  1. ^ Mortimer, Bob (2021). And Away... Gallery UK. ISBN 9781398505308.
  2. ^ Hunt, Leon (2015). Cult British TV comedy: From Reeves and Mortimer to Psychoville. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9781526102362.
  3. ^ "Oral Histories: Richard Stableford". In Living Memory.
  4. ^ Spartacus International Gay Guide. Spartacus. 1988.
  5. ^ O'Grady, Paul (2012). Still Standing: The Savage Years. London: Bantam. ISBN 978-0-593-06939-4.
  6. ^ Birkett-Eyles, Rupert; Friend, Jack; Merrell, Harry (8 April 2024). "Discovering East London's lost music venues". East London Lines. Retrieved 3 September 2024.
  7. ^ Allen, Carl (2016). London Gig Venues. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 9781445658209.
  8. ^ Dews, Nathan (1884). The History of Deptford - In The Counties of Kent and Surrey. p. 307.
  9. ^ "Sales By Auction". Berkshire Chronicle. Vol. 1, no. XXV. 16 July 1825.
  10. ^ Bean, JP (2014). Singing from the Floor: A History of British Folk Clubs. Faber & Faber. ISBN 9780571305469.

51°28′32″N 0°02′13″W / 51.47551192933665°N 0.03690110366148678°W / 51.47551192933665; -0.03690110366148678

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