Manchester Venues 196 to 198

This week I am continuing the tale of my Manchester gig treasure hunt on the eve of Friday 29th August 2025. So, as you gravitate up Bridge Street away from Salford Central train station you traverse past the impressive People’s History Musuem before reaching the renowned day and night pizza parlour spot Crazy Pedro’s. In the 1960’s the latter location housed Edwardia, a boutique clothing store created by footballers of the day, George Best and Mike Summerbee.

Beyond there are two subterranean bars opposite each other across the street, the one on the right is the Gas Lamp which is housed in the former Manchester & Salford Children’s Mission building. Across the road was the Brink, a cracking real ale establishment opened in 2014 that had a mural of bees on the stairs painted by local artist Qubek, but unfortunately it never reopened after Covid.

 

 The Gas Lamp. Image Credit Time Out

Three doorways further down is a new venue on the block called Manchester No Vacancy. It is virtually an all-day establishment opening at 10am for breakfast and brunch before staging live music from 5pm onwards from Thursday through Sunday before finally closing the doors at 4am, hopefully they operate split shifts for the staff employed there! When I visited there was a local singer/songwriter called Trev playing.  

As Bridge Street hits Deansgate, there is Katsouris Deli with their belly busting portions, diagonally opposite the Sawyer Arms, which is believed to be Manchester’s oldest pub with a continuously held licence, dating back to 1730. Now this compares to the Old Wellington Inn which despite being built way back in 1552 it did not actually become a pub until 1830.  

A further couple of doors down is the Lost Dene public house which was one of my hero establishments during Covid. In the days where you had to book your two-hour boozing slots we visited with Jo and Paul and when we were upfront about having different addresses, they had no choice but to separate us initially but were then gracious enough to arrange adjacent tables so we could converse verbally instead of texting each other across the pub! These small human touches were gratefully appreciated in that bleak period.  Just beyond there is the atmospheric Rylands Library which certainly rocks a Harry Potter vibe.

The Ape and Apple. Image Credit Dreamstime.

If you then follow the route from Bridge Street onto John Dalton Street you shortly find yourself landing at the Manchester Ape and Apple. The hostelry which went through a £400k refurbishment in 2025 is a multipurpose venue with long running Comedy Balloon nights, salsa classes and Murder Mystery events and also contains a heated roof terrace. It was initially opened by the footballer Denis Law in 1997 after its previous life as a bank and is owned by the Manchester brewers Joseph Holt.

A lady called Jane Kershaw is the great great great granddaughter of Mr J Holt and on one dull soggy day at the age of ten, she was tasked with designing a sign by her father. That very sign depicting an ape balancing an apple in its hand whilst perching on a beer barrel still hangs over the pub entrance today and Jane is now within the sixth generation of the family to work for the company.  The walls also contain a blue plaque to honour the scientist John Dalton who has the moniker of ‘The Father of Modern Chemistry’.

I arrived before Marcus so ensconced myself in the homely room armed with a cheeky ale. He arrived just as a singer called Evan hit the stage who despite being acoustic was thumpingly loud drowning out our conversation, so we moved on after a couple of tracks.  

We then progressed onwards to our next port of call, Manchester Founders Hall which directly faces Albert Square. The hostelry was previously called Duttons for a decade from 2014 before JW Lees brewery took over the reins and they decked out the spacious beer hall with dark wood surrounds and black and white tiled floors. A lot of the furnishings were reclaimed from their 200-year-old Greengate Brewery.   

Founders Hall. Image Credit manchestersfinest.com

Alongside the plethora of tempting real ale options, they also have regular quiz nights and ambient DJ evenings. They also stage live music and on the night of our visit a three-piece act called Late Last Night were playing, who in their bio portray themselves as a Wedding band from Stretford. After my flurry of five new venues that evening, we then headed on to my sixth new venue and our feature gig of the evening, one that I will cover in a future blog.

Lancaster Venues 26 to 28

This week I continue the tale of my extensive visit to the 2025 Lancaster Live festival. The White Cross pub is situated in a refurbished cotton mill warehouse that was owned by Storey’s Cotton Mill who sensibly obtained a strategic and geographical position next to Lancaster Canal. They used to store oilcloth, linoleum and other chemicals there.

There are records dating back to 1820 which indicate there was a coach station located in that area at that time.  The name of the pub which opened in 1987 links to an original stone white cross that was located about 200 yards away.  It was initially a Bass Taverns establishment before the current owners Tim Tomlinson, and his team took over residency in 2004, and they have created a fine hostelry with over twenty rotating ales.

Lancaster White Cross. Image Credit Visit Lancashire.

Tim also now owns two other pubs Merchants 1688 and the Stonewell Tap in the city centre and is also involved in the organising of the festival I was attending. I recall first visiting in the 1990’s and also had a rendezvous there on my 50th birthday shindig after we had gravitated back after an overnight stop in Glasgow.

It is a pub accessed via the canal towpath from either one of the two adjacent bridges. It takes full advantage of its picturesque location by having extensive seating outside which can cater for up to 300 people. Even though it was an October day it was warm enough for us to grab one of those canal side tables and quaff one of their special brewed Festival ales. Munchies kicked in at that stage, and we dined on a fish finger butty which was sourced from nearby Fleetwood.

They do not as a rule stage live music however, they made an exception for the festival weekend, and they had acts playing at the Lancaster White Cross Acoustic Stage located just inside the doorway. Performing was a local artist and singer/songwriter Eleanor Bennett who alongside displaying her art, also undertakes sound and singing workshops.

Eleanor Bennett. Image Credit eleanorbennettsartstumblr.com

Further into the venue was located Lancaster White Cross Main Stage where another local 5-piece combo called Chimps of the Future took to the boards. They formed in 2021 and perform their own material and were in the rock mould. They were good fun and gathered quite a decent audience.

The owners of the White Cross have previously admitted in the past they have lived in the shadow of the more well known Lancaster Water Witch, which was our next destination. It is located about five minutes’ walk away and is another canal path hostelry.

The original Water Witch was not a boozer but was in fact a seventy six foot packet boat that plied its trade on the canal in the 1830’s with the premise of combatting the new railways. Alongside carrying people, they also transported parcels and mail, and they would set off from Kendal at 6am and arrived in Preston at 1pm, halving the journey time of previous packet boats and probably completing the trip in quicker time than some Northern trains do today!

They had scope to cater for up to 120 commuters who were housed in two heated cabins and stewards were on hand to provide refreshments, though unfortunately I don’t think butter pies would have been included on the menu at that stage. It travelled at a princely ten miles an hour and was pulled by horses who thankfully had an equine relay change every four miles. The fare for the cabins on the trip were three shillings for first class and two shillings for second class. 

  Lancaster Water Witch. Image Credit waterwitchlancaster.co.uk

The building itself was previously a canal company stable block and opened as a pub under its current name in 1978. It is a long narrow atmospheric public house with bare stone walls and floors and as a taller punter I have to crouch down a smidge on entering. It is a renowned food establishment and similar to the White Cross there are a plethora of outdoor seats.

It is a hostelry I have visited many times over the years, especially in the summer months and was our first port of call after we cycled the entire Preston to Lancaster canal in 2005. They occasionally have acts playing and, on our visit, there was a local acoustic duo called Outatime playing indie covers in a little window alcove about halfway down the bar area.