1
The Boat Inn, Lenton
Image: © Chris Whippet
Taken: 28 Jul 2015
0.01 miles
2
The Boat Inn
Former Home Ales pub (as you can see) on Priory Street.
A lot of the road names in this area reflect the fact that Lenton Abbey once stood here.
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 17 Apr 2017
0.01 miles
3
The sign of the Boat Inn
Image: © David Lally
Taken: 17 Apr 2017
0.01 miles
4
The Boat Inn
Boat Inn, Priory Street, Lenton, Nottingham. Architect: William Beedham Starr 1922-23
Image: © Andrew Abbott
Taken: 23 Feb 2019
0.01 miles
5
Priory Crescent, Lenton
This is a new high density development by Bryant Homes in Lenton. Despite the fact that this picture is taken from the side of one of the main commuter routes into the city of Nottingham one of the advertising posters on the hoarding says: "Set in a Tranquil Oasis"!
Image: © Oxymoron
Taken: 12 Jul 2008
0.01 miles
6
The Boat Inn, Lenton
Former Home Brewery pub on Priory Street. The name relates to its proximity to the Nottingham Canal. The ground floor façade and the name panel http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3720574 are in terracotta; the grey version was particularly favoured by the Home Brewery at this period.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 27 Oct 2013
0.02 miles
7
The Boat Inn, Lenton, name panel
See http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3720572 . Note the sculpted motif in the doorway pediment representing a classical oared galley - not a type that would have been found on the nearby Nottingham Canal!
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 27 Oct 2013
0.02 miles
8
Priory Street, Dunkirk, Nottingham
Apparently the Boat Inn featured in White’s directory in 1832. Originally the water used to make the beer was drawn from a well in the backyard adjoining the Priory church's graveyard. However, following Lenton's incorporation into Nottingham in 1877 the authorities condemned the well because of its close proximity to the graveyard and the publican was forced to use tap water. Home Brewery eventually bought the pub in 1916. The inn, it seems, was remodelled in 1922/23 and again in the 1970s.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 30 Jan 2016
0.02 miles
9
Priory Street, Dunkirk, Nottingham
Apparently the Boat Inn featured in White’s directory in 1832. Originally the water used to make the beer was drawn from a well in the yard adjoining Priory Church's graveyard. However, following Lenton's incorporation into Nottingham in 1877 the authorities condemned the well because of its close proximity to the graveyard and the publican was forced to use tap water. Home Brewery eventually bought the pub in 1916. The inn, it seems, was remodelled in 1922/23 and again in the 1970s. The pub is situated in a cul de sac - to the right - and within a stone's throw of the A6005, a.k.a. Abbey Road in the opposite direction.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 30 Jan 2016
0.02 miles
10
Tomb of William Stretton and family. Lenton Priory Churchyard
Sarcophagus tomb, dated 1828. Listed Grade II. William Stretton, a successful builder, built and lived in the nearby house known as Lenton Priory https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3920923 . The churchyard is on the site of the precinct of the Cistercian Priory of Lenton and is a Scheduled Monument
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 6 Aug 2021
0.02 miles