Showing posts with label Lord Nelson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lord Nelson. Show all posts

Monday, 3 March 2025

Hastings Fat Tuesday Tour 4th March 2025


Tomorrow evening, Tuesday the 4th of March is the day, Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras/Shrove Tuesday, whatever you want to call it, and Hastings hosts the biggest Mardi Gras festival in Britain: For the Fat Tuesday Tour 24 acts will be playing at 3 venues each from the following 12, from the Carlisle in the west/town centre to the Dolphin Inn in the east/old town, and all free, but don't forget to drink!😉

Albion, 33 George Street TN34 3EA;
Hastings and St Leonards Angling Association, Marine Parade TN34 3AG;
Carlisle, 24 Pelham Street TN34 1PE;
Dolphin Inn, 11-12 Rock-a-Nore Road TN34 3DW;
Dragon Bar, 71 George Street TN34 3EE;
First In Last Out, 14-15 High Street TN34 3EY;
Jenny Lind Inn, 69 High Street TN34 3EW;
London Trader, 4-7 East Beach Street TN34 3AR;
Lord Nelson, 1 East Bourne Street TN34 3DP;
Porters Wine Bar, 56 High Street TN34 3EN;
Pump House, 64 George Street TN34 3EE;
Royal Standard, East Beach Street TN34 3DW.

Each of the 24 acts will play 20 minutes sets in 3 of the venues, and each venue will have 6 acts, from 8.00 pm until 11.00/11.30 pm; please go to the Hastings Fat Tuesday website for greater detail for each act and each venue. In addition, from 8.00 pm until 1.00 am, opposite the Lifeboat Station at East Hastings Sea Angling Association, The Stade TN34 3FJ, will be the Reggae Room.

If you want to play it by ear, just walk around the Old Town and don't be surprised by the quality of free live music available, have fun and party. However, I recommend people consider their favourite venues and what they sell drinks-wise, consider who they'd like to see, then decide on getting to one venue early, and stay there, it will be busy!

For full details of all events (there is more!) go to the website.

If you haven't already read it, I wrote more about Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras and the history of Mardi Gras in last Thursday's blog.  

Enjoy free live music and party folks!


Monday, 12 February 2024

Hastings Fat Tuesday Tour 13th of February 2024


Tomorrow evening, Tuesday the 13th of February is the day, Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras/Shrove Tuesday, whatever you want to call it, and Hastings hosts the biggest Mardi Gras festival in Britain: For the Fat Tuesday Tour 24 acts will be playing at 3 venues each from the following 12, from the Carlisle in the west/town centre to the Dolphin Inn in the east/old town, and all free, but don't forget to drink!😉

Albion, 33 George Street TN34 3EA;
Hastings and St Leonards Angling Association, Marine Parade TN34 3AG;
Carlisle, 24 Pelham Street TN34 1PE;
Dolphin Inn, 11-12 Rock-a-Nore Road TN34 3DW;
Dragon Bar, 71 George Street TN34 3EE;
First In Last Out, 14-15 High Street TN34 3EY;
Jenny Lind Inn, 69 High Street TN34 3EW;
London Trader, 4-7 East Beach Street TN34 3AR;
Lord Nelson, 1 East Bourne Street TN34 3DP;
Porters Wine Bar, 56 High Street TN34 3EN;
Pumphouse, 64 George Street TN34 3EE;
Royal Standard, East Beach Street TN34 3DW.

Each of the 24 acts will play 20 minutes sets in 3 of the venues, and each venue will have 6 acts, from 8.00 pm until 11.00/11.30 pm; please go to the Hastings Fat Tuesday website for greater detail for each act and each venue. In addition, from 8.00 pm until 1.00 am, opposite the Lifeboat Station at East Hastings Sea Angling Association, The Stade TN34 3FJ, will be the Reggae Room.

If you want to play it by ear, just walk around the Old Town and don't be surprised by the quality of free live music available, have fun and party. However, I recommend people consider their favourite venues and what they sell drinks-wise, consider who they'd like to see, then decide on getting to one venue early, and stay there, it will be busy!

For full details of all events (there is more!) go to the website.

If you haven't already read it, I wrote more about Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras and the history of Mardi Gras in last Wednesday's blog.  

Enjoy free live music and party folks!


Friday, 19 August 2022

Fire Station Open Day, RNLI Vacancy, plus more this Weekend


On Sunday, the 21st of August, the Bohemia Road Community Fire Station, strangely enough up Bohemia Road, TN34 1EX, on the right as you go uphill, is having an Open Day. Doors will be open and visitors will be welcome between 11.00am and 4.00pm, with "fun for all the family" 🚒 and I know the son of a certain friend will be absolutely delighted to attend! 

"Crews will be showcasing their new Aerial Ladder Platform" and activities will be "going on throughout the day, including a Breathing Apparatus drill and Chip pan fire demonstration" and "firefighters will also be providing advice on road, water and home safety" (Hastings in East Sussex Town Guide).


And while we're talking about Emergency Services, you could always visit Hastings RNLI Lifeboat Station at The Stade TN34 3AR (facebook page). Indeed, I noticed that they are looking for a volunteer to join them in the role of Deputy Launching Authority. The closing date for applications is the 2nd of October 2022, and the role description and further details can be found at the website


Of course there is always plenty to do in Hastings, museums, art galleries, amusement arcades, crazy golf courses, parks, the beach and promenade, restaurants, cafes and pubs, and, of course, fish & chips, but beware of the gulls swooping down to pinch any food you may have, chips, ice cream, whatever, just look up and they're like vultures! 

Also, there is the award winning Hastings Pier too, great to extend your promenading on, but also with music from this evening until Sunday, see their facebook page for details. There's plenty more music around town too, always worth a wander around the Old Town any evening, certainly over the weekend/Sunday afternoon, including live music at St Mary in the Castle this evening and tomorrow, music at The Carlisle tomorrow evening and Sunday afternoon, local band Cushty playing at the Dolphin Inn on Saturday evening (it will be busy!), and the Martin Blackman Band will be playing at the Lord Nelson pub on Sunday from 5.00pm, but look out for more music elsewhere!

The weather should be okay over the weekend (Met Office), enjoy!


Sunday, 1 May 2022

Jack in the Green Procession and Old Town Pub Crawl plus!


I decided to tour the old town yesterday to take photographs for this blog, with pubs and other buildings dressed in greenery, ribbons and wreaths...

Of course the Hastings Traditional Jack in the Green Procession 2022 won't start in a pub, although many, including Bogies and attendants, may already have had a few pints of ale, but tomorrow's event (Monday the 2nd of May 2022) begins when the Jack is released from Hastings Fishermen's Museum (website) at 10.15 am. Bogies and attendants will gather around the Jack outside the museum, as he starts the dancing off, and their will be many dancing, and the procession will then start to form behind him and proceed westwards along Rock-a-Nore Road...


The first pub the procession reaches is the Dolphin Inn (website), 11-12 Rock -a-Nore Road TN34 3DW, which will have already been open for a couple of hours, and there will be a good audience outside on its balcony. The Dolphin Inn dates back to at least 1798, but was rebuilt in 1851 after, I believe, it had been damaged by fire, and further altered and extended in 1930. Situated opposite the local fishing industry beach, net huts, and fish market, and down the road from a large car park, means that it garners many passers by, and its south facing balcony is very popular, as will be witnessed tomorrow! Just past the pub the Jack meets up with the Giants and other musicians and dancers, and there will be drums and dancers aplenty!


The procession should be up to full length by now, and turns right into All Saints Street just after acclaimed seafood restaurant Webbe's (website), 1 Rock-a-Nore Road TN34 3DW. Oh yes, and Webbe's is situated in a Grade II listed Georgian property.


Almost immediately on its left, as the procession heads up All Saints Street, is the back of the Grade II listed Lord Nelson pub (facebook), 1 East Bourne Street TN34 3DP. The 2 buildings that merged and became the Nelson have deeds dating back to the 1740s, and the pub received its first licence by 1830, now a traditional local pub.


As the procession continues up All Saints Street it soon reaches The Crown on the right (website), 64-66 All Saints Street TN34 3BN. This was a coaching inn from 1794, but reduced in size at the beginning of the 20th century, and destroyed by fire in 1921, consequently needing to be rebuilt that year. Following refurbishment in 1985 it became a Harvey's tied house, but more recently became a popular freehouse.


A little further up on the left the procession will reach the Cinque Ports Arms, 105 All Saints Street TN34 3BE. This pub was formerly known as the Chequers dating back to 1642, but has not been a pub continuously since that time. It was first licenced as the Cinque Ports Arms in the early 19th century, but following a fire in 1925 it was rebuilt with its now 'mock Tudor' frontage and interior, indeed a very cosy pub.


The last pub you reach in All Saints Street is up, and raised up, on the right, the Stag Inn (website), 14 All Saints Street TN34 3BJ; you may have noticed that the house numbers aren't as per usual streets as they're not odds one side and evens the other side, but start up at the top on the east side with numbers 1, 2, 3 etc., coming downhill, then continuing back up on the west side of the street! The Stag is one of the oldest pubs in Hastings (see blog), in an interesting Grade II listed timber-framed building dating back to the 16th century, and is now a Shepherd Neame Brewery tied house.


At the top of All Saints Street is All Saints Church (blog), one of the old town's 2 stone built Norman churches, and which was rebuilt between 1417 and 1430 following 14th century French raids on Hastings. Across from here is where the Jack in the Green procession will cross The Bourne into the High Street.


The procession will carry on down High Street, passing many interesting buildings on the way, including this house, where the Rossetti family stayed in 1836 (including the Pre-Raphaelite artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti and poet Christina Rossetti when they were children - blog). Oh yes, and the numbers of houses run continuously down the east side, continuing back up on the west side of the street, as in All Saints Street.


But the next pub the procession will reach, now down on the left, is the First In Last Out (FILO - website), 14-15 High Street TN34 3EY, a pub with its own brewery, which used to be contained within the pub itself, but is now just a short distance away up Old London Road. The building is from the 16th century, but did not become a pub until it was licenced in the 1870s, now a genuine freehouse.


A little further down on the left is the Grade II listed Duke of Wellington, 28-29 High Street TN34 3EY, which was converted from 2 houses, and opened as a pub in the 1870s. The Duke of Wellington AKA Major General Sir Arthur Wellesley, had lived in Hastings when commanding a brigade from here, indeed, he brought his bride back to live with him in Hastings when he married her in Dublin in 1806.


The procession will carry on down High Street and usually has a break for about 45 minutes outside the Jenny Lind Inn (website), 69 High Street TN34 3EW, with more music and merrymaking. The Jenny Lind was built on the site of a much older pub that dated back to the early 17th century, The Bell, but with a gap whilst not a pub of 200 years, before the Jenny Lind started trading in the 1850s. It's named after the Swedish Nightingale, the famous opera singer who, under the wing of the German composer Felix Mendelssohn, became widely followed throughout Europe, including by Queen Victoria; she moved to England in 1855, where she lived until her death in 1887.


When the procession continues on its way again, it will continue down High Street, soon turning right up Swan Terrace, by Hastings second Norman church, the Church of St Clement (blog), then bending to the right behind the church into Croft Road, and upwards to the West Hill, passing no more pubs along the way. However, on the West Hill festivities will continue, including a craft and food fair, more music and dancing, and I believe the FILO will have a licenced bar up there too (website). 

Then, between 4.00 and 4.30 pm, the Jack is slain to release the spirit of summer...

Enjoy your day!

Monday, 28 February 2022

Slim Monday!


So, still a Fat Tuesday Music Festival 2022 event before tomorrow's culmination, free entry to the Lord Nelson pub, is Slim Monday, from 8.00 to 10.30 pm (website). Presented by Toby Barelli, aka King Size Slim, and featuring many guest acts, enjoy!

Saturday, 15 January 2022

New Year Drinking in the Old Town

By Steve the Beermeister

Rock a Nore View This Week

Well. we've had a few gorgeous days this week, so I've been walking around Hastings, thus time to write briefly about pubs I've visited (in the Old Town) since the New Year arrived. First, the Albion, in George Street, plus they have an entrance opposite the seafront. They sell 3 ales from Sussex and Kent brewers, normally Harvey’s Sussex Best and a pale bitter and a darker beer; one usually from Bedlam Brewery. If visiting make sure you have a debit card with you (or other electronic payment device, how thinks change!) as they do not take cash. Oh yes, and great pasties too (below & blog).



I'm writing this in alphabetical order, so next the Dolphin Inn, Rock-a-Nore Road, with its balcony virtually opposite the Fish Market, and which has recently changed its ale range from 3 regular and 3 guest ales to 2 and 4 respectively. The regulars are Harvey’s Sussex Best and Dark Star Hophead (sometimes a different pale session ale from another local brewery too!), and the guest ales have been including a dark beer (Winter/Old Ale, Porter or Stout), an equivalent to a Special/Best Bitter from local breweries or Youngs Special, and usually an APA style dry pale bitter, often from Kent Brewery or Oakham Ales. Live music has returned on Saturday evenings.


The First In Last Out (FILO), up the High Street and on the right, past the old Roebuck Surgery, which brews its own ales a short way from the pub up Old London Road, and continues to sell 4 or 5 of their own beers, and 1 or 2 guest ales. Their range includes pale to darker beers, including a Porter, and had their own dark seasonal Winter Warmer when I last visited.


The Jolly Fisherman, East Beach Street, a cosy beer drinking establishment, continues to sell a good range of real ales in addition to crafty keg beers. Last weekend they had a Dark Beer Festival, with 10 Stouts and Porters on offer; outside of festivals they do sell darker beers too, not to forget some very interesting Belgian beers.

Finally, the Lord Nelson, at the bottom of East Bourne Street, sells Courage Directors and Harvey’s Sussex Best. Live music is played here on Sundays, early evening.

Cheers!


Monday, 24 February 2020

Hastings Fat Tuesday Music Festival: Slim Monday


This evening brings the eleventh Slim Monday featuring King Size Slim, and located at the Lord Nelson, 1 East Bourne Street TN34 3DP. Here you may meet many of the Hastings Fat Tuesday musicians and singers in 'civvies' during this laid back event from 6.30 pm, music starting at 7.30 pm (website). The calm before the storm! 😉

Tuesday, 13 March 2018

Uke 'N' Party too!


Following the return last Tuesday of the Tune Raiders to the Dolphin Inn, Rock-a-Nore Road, and their own 'Oirish' sound, this evening sees the (also regular at the Nelson) regular monthly visit of ukuleles and Uke 'N' Party (facebook event page) at the Dolphin from 8.30pm!

So, now 3 regular monthly Tuesday night slots at the Dolphin, Uke 'N' Party, the Tune Raiders, and Mojo Calling (see last months blog). However, another excellent local act could be filling the vacant Tuesday in the month very soon, watch this space!

Of course, there is regular live music every Friday and Saturday evening at the Dolphin too, not to mention the odd Sunday or Public Holiday afternoon gig, and, of course, live music all over town most days of every week, Hastings the place to live!

Friday, 2 February 2018

Tune Raiders on hold...


Sadly, the regular Tuesday evening slot of the Tune Raiders at the Dolphin Inn, Rock-a-Nore Road, has ended after about 4 years due to various reasons, so Tuesdays have changed there. This Tuesday just gone, I missed a number of the Ukulele people who play every 2 weeks on Fridays round the corner at the Lord Nelson in The Bourne (next a week today on the 9th of February, I believe). They'll be returning to the Dolphin again on the evening of Tuesday 20th February as Uke 'n' Party, which I'm told was excellent this Tuesday, so well worth a visit there, and to the Lord Nelson of course!

Next Tuesday, the 6th February, at the Dolphin will be folk music by Mojo Calling, and, of course, on the 13th is Fat Tuesday (see previous blog or the Fat Tuesday website).

Expect to see varying gigs and events at the Dolphin Inn from now on Tuesday evenings, and don't be surprised to see fiddly diddly Oirish Tune Raiders return at some time, best wishes to them all and their families!