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Irish Pubs
Irish Pubs
Tthe Irish pub is a phenomenon around the world. The wholesome blend of traditional, rustic decor, folk music, good-humour and Guinness seems to strike a note in many cultures. From its Dublin base, the Irish Pub Company has created more than 400 Irish pubs in over 40 different countries. The itinerant nature of the Irish means you'll often find a bona fide Irishman propping up the bar, and this is no truer than in London. With a large, tight-knit Irish community, London's pubs will be buzzing.

Waxy O'Connors
14-16 Rupert Street, W1D 6DFTacky O'Theme Pubs are busy enough on a normal week night, filled with all the office workers hoping for a pint and a snog, but come St Patrick's Day they get absolutely rammed to the rafters with jubilant revellers. The parade goes right by this one so this is perfect for a pit-stop. The cavernous interior, spreading across six levels, means it can only maintain a little bubble of atmosphere in each section, as well as a live band upstairs that won't disturb those who just fancy a bit of a blether. Nevertheless, the whole place will be a sea of Guinness, sing-song and good cheer on the day, with live music and reels from 5pm. You can also catch the rugby here, it's England v France on Sunday 15th March from 3pm. Make sure you stay close to your friends though - this place is massive and easy to get lost in.

Filthy McNasty's
68 Amwell Street, EC1R 1UUThe 'whiskey cafe', Filthy McNasty's, is a good straight talking pub to pick for St Patrick's Day. There's no doubt the Irish punk pub will be packed out with its usual mix of unkempt youngsters, ageing barflies and weird and wandering individuals celebrating the most Irish of days. It's pleasant enough inside with photos of counter culture and music icons hanging on the walls and a traffic light in one corner which looks like a set of particularly drunk students have dragged it in. They also do a decent pie for a fiver. The atmosphere in here is consistently loud and rowdy so expect March 17th to be squashed, beer-drenched and plenty of fun.

Corrib Rest
76-80 Salusbury Road, Queen's Park, London, NW6 6PANorth West London's Irish community will be out in force to celebrate their national day, which means the Corrib Rest will be awash with a green-clad mob. From lunchtime onwards there will be live bands enthusiastically twanging guitars and fiddling away right into the night and a showcase of Irish sport on the big screens including hurling and Gaelic football. Wait for the evening to get going when you’ll be treated to some wild, full-of-life Irish dancing. This is where the pub scenes in 'Spaced' were filmed, and they chose it because it's a proper, old-style London Irish pub, and a real change from the new gastro places that are springing up all over the area.
TIMES 21st May, 22nd May, 28th May and 29th May 2012 - 7pm PRICING phone for prices
Learn Irish dancing skills.... More about this event

TIMES Thursday 24th May and Thursday 31st May 2012 - 7.30pm PRICING phone for prices
... More about this event


Quinns
65 Kentish Town Road, London, NW1 8NYAt first glance you wouldn't put Quinn's down as an Irish pub - put the name aside and what you have is simply a great pub, not just another soulless Celtic-branded pub, a la O'Neil's. The Irish landlord and the fair smattering of punters from the Western Isle are what makes it Irish and this is reflected by the pleasant, convivial atmosphere. The beer selection will strike you (but not with its Irishness) - a long polished bar stretches away into the distance with over 20 pumps serving beers from all over the place, and possibly the best bottled selection in the capital. Of course you can get excellent Guinness, but the pub is particularly notable for German and Belgian beers. It gets pretty raucous on St Patrick's Day, so be prepared.

The Tipperary
66 Fleet Street, EC4Y 1HYAs London's oldest Irish pub, there's no better place to guzzle Guinness this St Patrick's Day. Founded in 1700, by Dublin brewer SG Mooney, this lofty, narrow, boozer was the first place to sell the black stuff, both bottled and draught. Suffolk's Greene King bought the Tipperary in the 1960s and restored it to its 18th-century beauty. The floor mosaic is intricately peppered with shamrocks, while the walls are panelled in a rich dark wood. Downstairs and up, the pub is slung with huge mirrors and faded prints of Dublin and Cork. Typically, you'll come across a whole bunch of tourists claiming some sort of vague Irish ancestry visiting this charismatic little pub. St Patrick's Day, as a consequence, will be a blast. Green hats, a whole host of rosy faced revellers knocking back Guinness and maybe even a fiddler. Arrive early, as it's a fairly small pub and will no doubt be crammed with very thirsty, very raucous patrons desperate to get to the bar.
Auld Shillelagh
132 Stoke Newington Church Street, London, N16 0JXThe Guinness in this soothingly dark little Celtic den is nothing short of exceptional. Smooth, bitter, creamy and rich - they serve up divine pints of the black stuff. Cavernous with cambered ceilings, this place feels endearingly authentic. A refurbishment has done no end of good without rupturing the age-old Irish artery that pumps Celtic tradition through the pub. Any revellers who step across its hallowed Gaelic threshold will receive one of the warmest welcomes in the capital. Guinness (that's all they expect you to drink) will be poured in its own time and brought to your table unprompted by staff employed to shower sincere smiles on their slightly inebriated patrons. St Pat's Day will be a proper big bash down in Stokey - heaps of hats, green shirts, dancing and, of course, drinking.

Coach & Horses
42 Wellington Street, WC2E 7BNOccupying a prime location just off Covent Garden Piazza, this pub promises a hedonistic St Pat's Party purely on the basis of its location rather than any particular effort on the pub's behalf. Jovial folk will pile into the pub early on the day having feigned sickness and escaped the confines of their nearby offices. Many a discerning Guinness guzzler has enjoyed a fine pint of the black stuff in this pub and even more argue they serve the best Guinness in town. Richly creamy, deliciously bitter and exquisitely smooth, they really do import it all the way from fair Dublin town. If Guinness isn't your favourite Irish tipple, revellers can still sample one of the 80-odd, mostly unheard of, Irish whiskeys behind the bar. We also recommend lining the stomach and gobbling down the chunky, stacked, piping hot Limerick ham sandwiches - they are delicious. Again, inside it's on the small side with only a mere clutch of stools for exhausted party people to rest their bottoms on. The decor is refreshingly unfussy, just a few theatre posters and a curious golfing theme adorn the walls. Anyway, it's not about the interior - it's about the best fresh, un-pasteurised Guinness in London. Yum.

Anam
3 Chapel Market, London, N1 9EZWe Londoners cherish the old, festering, traditional pubs of the capital (yes, we even love the stale smell of booze and sweat - now there's no smoke to mask it). However, you can add touch of glamour to your St Pat's Day celebrations at London's only Irish cocktail bar. Retro-trendy and always busy, Anam (Gaelic for 'life and soul') is a pioneering bar unlike any of the capital's other Irish drinking venues. It's the winning drinks list that really makes the place stand out. You just have to sample the collection of outlandish cocktails designed by famous mixologist Tony Conigliaro of Zuma and Shumi fame. From premium brand spirits like Belvedere and Grey Goose vodka to seriously rare whiskeys such as Kilbeggan, Tyroconnell and Middleton Very Rare, his creations come from the finest ingredients.
TIMES Friday 25th May 2012 PRICING £5, Free before 9pm
Resident DJs spin club classics, chart and disco.... More about this event

TIMES Saturday 26th May 2012 PRICING £5 after 9pm
Resident DJs spin club classics, chart and disco.... More about this event

TIMES 7th Jun, 14th Jun, 21st Jun and 28th Jun 2012 - 9pm-3am PRICING £3, NUS Free before 11pm, guestlist Free
Resident DJs play pop, house and dance.... More about this event


Did you know??
The Guinness Book of Records was first published in 1955, after a pub debate over the fastest game bird could not be settled using existing reference books. It's been a hit ever since with new records being added and old ones broken every year.
TIMES Friday 25th May 2012 PRICING £5, Free before 9pm
Resident DJs spin club classics, chart and disco.... More about this event

TIMES Saturday 26th May 2012 PRICING £5 after 9pm
Resident DJs spin club classics, chart and disco.... More about this event

TIMES 7th Jun, 14th Jun, 21st Jun and 28th Jun 2012 - 9pm-3am PRICING £3, NUS Free before 11pm, guestlist Free
Resident DJs play pop, house and dance.... More about this event

St Patrick's Day in London 2009
History
The Irish have observed St Patrick's Day as a religious festival for thousands of years. St Patrick is the patron saint of I...
The Festival & Parade
The official London celebrations - that's the ones that don't revolve around pubs, Guinness and more pubs - take place the weekend...
Events 2009
Spend St Patrick's Day in London and you can enjoy a huge variety of Irish entertainment. Listen up for live&n...
Irish Food
Whether you're sampling some fresh-as-a-morning-swim oysters, or the hearty mix of neck of lamb, potato, onion and seasoning in Ir...
Irish Shopping
London's shopping industry offers a colourful mix of global influences on our high streets. With Ireland’s rich heritage in fashio...
Catholic Churches
Going to mass on St Patrick's Day is a tradition that has spanned decades. Many of the Catholic churches in London ...
Irish Hotels
If you're coming to London for the St Patrick's Day festivities why not book yourself up an Irish hotel? After one too many pints ...
London Hotels
From cheap budget places to stay to luxury 5 star hotels see our special offers for hotels, including The Rathbone Hotel London from 69% off. |








