Denmark Arms

Pub Heritage Group have recently carried out a regrading of Real Heritage Pubs - click here for full details

Greater London East - East Ham

Two star - A pub interior of outstanding national historic interest

Listed Status: II

381 Barking Road
East Ham
E6 1LA

Tel: (020) 8552 4194

Email: denmarkarms@anticlondon.com

Website https://denmarkarms.com

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/denmarkarmse6

Real Ale: Yes

Lunchtime Meals: Yes

Evening Meals: Yes

View on: Whatpub

A pub of two halves - the ground floor has eye-catching green tiles on the dado, but what makes the pub special is a magnificent former billiards room upstairs with a spectacularly glazed skylight.

This is a late 19th-century building with a major 1903 extension along High Street North. Downstairs there would have been at least separate public and saloon bars - note the wrought iron ‘Saloon’ above the entrance on High Street North. The large central bar counter sitting on a plinth looks to be from the inter-war period with its red melamine top, but the bar back facing three directions looks a mixture of inter-war and modern work. There is a good corner vestibule with etched and frosted glass panels at the top.

On the left hand wall there is a wide decorative frieze with tendrils swirling round stylised rosettes, below which the dado has green tiles, some with statuesque rose bushes in relief. Between the tiles and frieze is a mottled alabaster band. The former saloon in the newer part of the pub at the rear has a ceiling divided into bold panels with deep cornices and a high-level frieze featuring caryatids. The columns in the two areas are also different – thin Corinthian ones in the older area, chunky Ionic ones in the newer. There are two marble surround fireplaces with modern tiled interiors and tall mantelpieces with plain mirrors.

On the left of the front room is the staircase from the street to the first floor, just inside of which is a unique feature for a pub - a ticket-booth style shop for selling cigarettes and drink. The upstairs area is now used as a function room, but originally the front part was a restaurant, and the rear a billiard room with its own separate entrance on High Street North above which is a sign in stone relief “Denmark Arms Hotel Luncheons & Lounge”. This area now has numerous mirrors above a mahogany dado, but the star of the show is the elaborate ceiling at the back topped with a magnificent skylight with exquisite painted glass panels.

A pub built in two parts – a late 19th-century building on the corner by Fredk Ashton (sourcs Pevsner London East, uncorrob) and a major extension of 1903 along High Street North. What makes this pub is special is the upper floor – ring ahead to arrange a visit at a quiet time – where the former billiard room has a stunning skylight, a screened servery, and walls lines with mirrors etc.

Downstairs what was the at least a separate public bar and saloon (note the wrought iron ‘Saloon’ above the entrance on High Street North) Above this entrance is a shield with ‘The Denmark Arms’ in stone relief with carved figures either side. The large almost an island bar counter looks to be from the inter-war period with its red melamine top and sitting on a plinth. The bar back, which faces three directions, looks a mixture of inter-war work and part modern with the middle section lost to tall fridges. There is a good corner vestibule with etched and frosted glass panels at the top.

On the left of the room is the staircase from the street to the first floor and on this encased area is a wide decorative frieze with tendrils swirling round stylised rosettes – recently painted cream (previously red). This frieze continues down the left hand wall and the dado here has plain green tiles and some with statuesque rose bushes in relief. Between the tiles and frieze is a mottled alabaster band. A widish gap leads to the rear area – the former saloon in the newer part of the pub. Here the ceiling is divided into bold panels with deep cornices and a high-level frieze featuring caryatids. The columns in the two areas are also different – thin Corinthian ones in the older area, chunky Ionic ones in the newer. There are two marble surround fireplaces with modern tiled interiors and tall mantelpieces with plain mirrors.

Upstairs is now used as a function room. Originally it was two rooms – the front part a restaurant with its entrance from Barking Road and also a function room (originally a billiard room) with its own separate entrance on High Street North above which is a sign in stone relief “Denmark Arms Hotel Luncheons & Lounge”.

The front section upstairs has on the right 5 and on the left 4 large mirrors above a mahogany dado and surround with (rosebud?) decoration between them. A folding partition can separate the two parts. At the rear is the impressive former billiard room with an elaborate ceiling topped with a skylight having painted glass panels. There are more of the large mirrors above a dado on three sides. On the right hand side is a (disused) screened servery which looks like it was an inter-war addition – all the glass panels remain including the ones that can be raised.

There are other good examples of (former) billiard room skylights at Boleyn Tavern, East Ham E6; – possibly the finest of them?; Salisbury N4; Great Northern Railway Tavern, Hornsey; and Duke of Sussex, Chiswick.

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