Over the last few years I have had occasion to pass by an old
pub on Leytonstone High Road in East London, I became aware of it first when it
was empty and then when the developers moved in and flattened it – see my
previous posts; Another One Bites The Dust 2/9/12; Gone 2/12/12. The disused (by the time I was aware of it) public
House known as “Lincolns”, formerly known as “the Elms” was demolished in 2012.
The Public House was thought to date from 1870 and historical
maps of the area show the site as open land prior to the construction of the pub.
The oldest map found for the site, dating from 1745, shows a secondary road
running east connected to the High Road, forming a corner plot which became the
location for the Public House. In 1936 the Rex Cinema was built directly
opposite the pub and must have brought in a number of customers.
However, as the pub lurched into the 21st Century
it had developed a reputation for anti-social behaviour (stabbings, firearms offences and the like) and its license was revoked and the pub closed down in 2008 following a police drugs raid. There was some talk of turning it into a “local community pub” but the developers sadly triumphed.
I was surprised when passing the pub one day to see that it had turned into an Indian restaurant, over-night. What had actually happened was that in November 2011 the building had been transformed into the Taj Tandoori restaurant for a film-shoot. The film, which was written by Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh, was The Magnificent Eleven, the Hollywood actor Robert Vaughan was actually on location filming at the old pub.All very exciting, but, the pub's short lived stardom couldn't save it and by December 2012 it was a pile of rubble, one of the over 1000 pubs that closed in the U.K. last year; all very sad I think.
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