Pubs in Stourbridge
Discover the best pubs and bars in Stourbridge. Browse opening hours, menus, events, and more.
Found 56 pubs in Stourbridge — Page 1 of 5
Waggon & Horses
31 Worcester Street, Stourbridge DY8 1AT
A recent refurbishment has created a comfortable, welcoming alehouse. There is a small cask ale bar area to the front with a narrow passageway leading to a larger rear bar which may be hired for functions. To the side is a long cider bar with a small serving hatchway. Parking can be difficult in the narrow surrounding streets but there is a Tesco car park in the town centre with two hours free parking and is only a five minute walk. Two or more real ciders are usually available. 5% discount on cask beers and real ciders for card carrying CAMRA members.
Plough & Harrow
107 Worcester Street, Stourbridge DY8 1AX
Friendly former pub and cider pub of the year where the main priority is to serve well kept Real Ale and Cider. The u-shaped bar serves three separate areas and conversation is not interrupted by TV or loud music. Three real fires create a cosy atmosphere inside, where dogs on leads are welcome. Outside there is a garden with covered smoking area and a log burning stove. Car park (day times) at Mary Stevens park opposite. The bar layout has recently been modified and handpulls reduced to 6. Three Craddock's, two guests and a cider.
Stourbridge Lion
77 - 78 High Street, Stourbridge DY8 1DX
Now open after an extensive refurbishment. Aimed at younger cliental with numerous flat screens showing sports action. Real ale is only available in the front bar from four hand pulls. No food is planned. There is a member discount scheme using members 50p vouchers.
Princess
115-117 Bridgnorth Road, Stourbridge DY8 3NX
Popular community local situated in a pleasant shopping area. The pub has one large room divided into separate areas - floor boards, flag stones and carpeted areas are all to be found. A wide range of bric-a-brac adorns the walls and ceilings. Just reopened after a refurb. Beer range will be updated.
Longlands Tavern
24 Western Road, Stourbridge DY8 3XU
Small Banks's pub tucked away in the residential 'Old Quarter', this pub was the birthplace of the Stourbridge branch of CAMRA with its first meeting taking place in this traditional W & D houes. The layout is comfy lounge and traditional bar. Large garden, pool table up stairs
New Inn
2 Cherry Street, Norton, Stourbridge DY8 3YQ
Popular local, traditional two room pub, smart throughout. The lounge is decorated with different themes in certain areas, a patio and of course a welcoming bar. Apart from the fine range of real ales, there is an excellent selection of malt whiskeys. Food is served on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Cobs are available every day.
Katie Fitzgeralds
187 Enville Road, Stourbridge DY8 3TB
The History of Katie Fitzgerald's public house researched & written by John Richards Katie Fitzgeralds public houseOriginally known as the Golden Lion, Katie Fitzgerald's was a small one-roomed beerhouse, the property of Mary Faulkner. It was well positioned to attract travellers along the Stourbridge-Kinver turnpike road. The Duke of Wellington's Beer House Act, 1830, permitted a householder or ratepayer, on payment of two guineas to the Excise, to turn his private house into a public house. In an area then known as Mamble Square, the Golden Lion opened in competition to the Bridge Inn opposite. The first licensee was widow Mary Faulkner around 1844; she was recorded in the 1851 census aged 70, with her daughter Mary, 37, and son William, 32. They employed one servant. Victorian licensing hours were both long and demanding, 18 hours a day, 4 am to 10 pm, seven days a week. Closed only during Divine Service, Christmas Day, and Good Friday. Mary Faulkner's choice of sign is interesting; the Golden Lion was usually associated with either Henry I, or the dukes of Northumberland, the Percy's. She however, was Welsh, so her reasons were probably more pragmatic, as there were two Red Lions and two White Lions nearby. Like the Bridge Inn, the Golden Lion was a homebrewed house. The popular Victorian Stourbridge drink was a form of malty mild: heavy, dark, sweet and strong - that usually varied considerably from brew to brew. The average Black Country gravity was 1060 - the second highest in England. By 1853 Mary Faulkner had passed on, and her daughter Mary had taken over. She remained single, then unusual for a landlady - selling the business to Thomas Whiston in 1865. Locally born Thomas Whiston was documented in the 1871 census aged 45, with his wife Elizabeth, 46, and one servant. Stourbridge magistrates granted the Golden Lion inn status in the 1870's. This permitted the house to remain open as long as a bed was empty, offering basic accommodation, simple victuals, homebrewed ale, and stabling to the lawful traveller. Rated at £28 0s 0d in 1900, the beerhouse was granted a full alehouse licence two years later. This permitted the retailing of wine and spirits in addition to beer, stout and porter. A status most beerhouse keepers sought but failed to achieve. Brewing on the premises stopped when the Golden Lion was leased to Burton brewers Sidney Evershed Ltd, in 1902. In 1904, North Worcestershire Breweries Ltd, Stourbridge Brewery, Lower High Street, Stourbridge took the lease. Thomas Homer of Brierley Hill bought the Golden Lion in 1905, when brewing resumed. This continued through new owner John Auden until his death in 1924, when the Golden Lion became the property of Francis Joseph Matthews. Francis Joseph Matthews also owned the (Old) Crispin, in Windmill Street, now Church Street, Stourbridge. Son Francis John carried on the family tradition, brewing until 1947, when the family sold to Ansells Brewery in March 1961. Ansells closed the Golden Lion in 1984, and again in 1986, when it re-opened as the Stourbridge Lion, 4 August 1989. Structurally unchanged, the old Golden Lion Inn continues to be a popular freehouse, and is now know as Katie Fitzgerald's, who was the grandmother of owner Trina Keane.
Seven Stars
Brook Road, Oldswinford, Stourbridge DY8 1NQ
A magnificent Edwardian Grade 11 listed building, look out for the ornate tiling and timber bar on the interior. The recent refurbishment has changed the bar areas to how they used to look a few years ago. There are two bars with three rooms (lounge, bar and snug) plus a function room inside this huge pub with a spacious court yard and smoking area to the side. Hot bar snacks are available along with a separate restaurant menu. There are four letting rooms and more will be opened later. There are 25 handpulls split between the two bars, both featuring BCA beers but guest ales are different in both bars. Some of the pulls are used for cider.
Red House Boutique
21-26 Foster Street East, Stourbridge DY8 1EL
Large, single bar free house near to Stourbridge Interchange. Originally part of the Hogshead chain this refurbished pub has returned to being an alehouse. Beers from Enville, Fixed Wheel and Three Tuns will usually be available but may change from those listed. Wychelm cider is also available. A range of KeyKegs are also on sale plus rare lagers. Gourmet snacks are available at all times including gourmet scotch eggs and flavoured scratchings. Fridges behind the bar are stocked with many bottles from around the World. Runs monthly TTO's.
Shrubbery Cottage
28 Heath Lane, Stourbridge DY8 1RQ
Welcoming pub with a single, spacious, open room and a large u-shaped bar. There is a large screen television at one end which is often showing live golf or football matches. The pub provides full disabled access from the car park and has wi-fi internet access. There is a large garden area with a purpose built barbecue. Cobs are served.
Bird In Hand
Hagley Road, Stourbridge DY8 2JB
Traditional pub located on the main road out of Stourbridge. Originally a Banks's house it was in danger of being converted into a supermarket but was taken over by Bathams in late 2019 and now serving their own Bitter and Mild. The entire interior was refurbished during 2020 and consists of a basic front bar separate lounge. It has a large car park to the rear of pub alongside a greatly improved garden area containing multiple benches. Bathams XXX available winter only.
Crown
208 Hagley Road, Stourbridge DY8 2JU
A fundraiser for the nearby Mary Stevens Hospice, this small, often busy pub has a good selection of quality regular beers, complimented with a rotating guest. Weston's Scrumpy is also served. The central L-shaped wooden bar is overlooked by the distinctive wooden overhead glass rack and the large collection of spirit and cigarette branded mirrors on the wall. With a real fire both inside and outside in a large covered seating area, it's ideal for smokers and non-smokers alike.
