Thursday, 2 October 2025

London Circular Walk: Tower & London Bridges

You could start this circular pub walk at either of the bridges, but I've started this blog at Tower Bridge because my favourite drink of the day was imbibed here, twice. 😉 So, behind Tower Bridge Road in a small back street is The Dean Swift, 10 Gainsford Street SE1 2NE (website), open from 12.00 noon every day of the week, until 23.00, excepting Sundays, when it closes at 22.30. The pub was built in the 1850s, and was originally called The Bricklayer's Arms, but was renamed for the Irish satirical writer and cleric, Jonathan Swift, who became Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin in 1713, hence Dean Swift, although I can find no connection to Swift locally or to the pub. And I've still not been able to finish reading Gulliver's Travels, ever!

This former Truman's pub, now a freehouse, has 20 'craft' beers available, including 2 cask ales and a variety of crafty keg styles. The cask ales were from Sussex brewery Burning Sky and their Plateau (3.5%), an excellent pale ale with hops from New Zealand and the USA (website), and the ale I drank 2 pints of (2 visits, first and fourth), from East London brewery Five Points Brewing (website), their 4.0% XPA, an American Pale Ale style, brewed with Citra (hopslist), Galaxy (hopslist) and Sabro (Hop Breeding Co) hops. This produces a pale beer with plenty of citrus and forest fruits, particularly grapefruit, bitter with a refreshing dry finish, excellent!


This was actually our last pub before heading across London from London Bridge tube station, thus why I drank the cider, as I wasn't sure the 3 ales available would be able to compete with the XPA I'd just drunk, and I had had an extra pint than Paul, so just a half for me. 😏 So, The Raven (website), 218 Tower Bridge Road SE1 4PR (The Dean Swift is virtually around the back of it), which was built on the ramp leading up to Tower Bridge around 1900, and was previously an Adnams pub called The Bridge House, changing its name to The Raven in honour of the Ravens of the Tower of London in 2019, and there's a stuffed raven at one end of the bar! 


And indeed, I had a half pint of a cider from the award winning Sandford Orchards in Devon (website), from their 'Vintage' cider collection they've been developing since 2017, and launched in 2021, the 8.4% The General, named after Sandford's Ten Thousand Gallon Oak Vat built in the 19th century, and now used for ageing their ciders! A little sweet to start, juicy with nectarine and apple flavours, but slight tannin and sourness to the finish, pretty good!


Simon The Tanner, 231 Long Lane SE1 4PR (website), named after a biblical character, Simon of Joppa, and situated in an area where tanning leather used to be prolific (Southwark News), note nearby Tanner Street too; opens at 16.00 Monday to Thursday, and at 12.00 noon Friday to Sunday. The pub dates back to the 18th century, in 1780 being called Simon of Joppa the Tanner, and it has even been a Shepheard Neame pub since, but it is now now a freehouse.


The only cask ale they had was from Reading brewery Siren Craft Brew (website), their 3.8% Memento, brewed with English hops, not divulged, and dry-hopped with U.S. Cascade hops (hopslist), presumably what makes it a 'modern best bitter.' I have to admit that I didn't really notice the Cascade in the taste, I just thought that it was a pretty basic 'best bitter.'


First and last pub, maybe, and if you've read this all the way through you should get the gist. The Shipwrights Arms, 88 Tooley Street SE1 2TF (website), is a Victorian pub with a wonderful exterior and interior, inside there is a classic central island bar and a tiled mural of shipwrights at work among its features. There was an older pub on the site previously by 1792, the Ship Wright Arms, and it was re-built in 1884, slightly changing the name. They have the handpumps for up to 6 cask ales, but only had 4 different ales when we met up there. 


We both drank the Cornish brewers Sharp's (website) Solar Wave, a 4.6% 'Hazy IPA' brewed with hops from the USA, but the hops are not specified (the pumpclip was askew, by the way, the image is not because of me). Hazy, as they say, not too thick though, and with plenty of tropical fruit flavours, not bad. Sadly for me, what I was interested in drinking was the 4.0% Southwark London Pale Ale, but it was only put on just as we were leaving, life, eh?!? 😒

I admit that my record here looks weird as I arrived in London early, and checked on the pubs and took photographs as I had an hour to spare before meeting up, hence the extra pint too. 🍺 But the order here is a circular rout, wherever you start, and The Shipwrights Arms is just along from London Bridge Station entrance, so the best place to start and/or finish, I suggest.

Of course, we passed other pubs too, but time was short, and we wanted to stay sober!

My favourite of the pubs we visited was The Dean Swift, mostly because the 2 ales available were much more to my taste, and on my first visit I chatted with the manager, who is very knowledgeable about his beers, the locale and its pubs. I was a wee bit disappointed with Simon The Tanner, which was the only one of these pubs I'd visited before, and written about a couple of times, on my previous visits it was a little bit rougher around the edges with interesting stuff on the walls, see my older blog, it's a bit more polished now, and sadly there was only 1 ale available this time. The Raven was a bit noisy for me, but they were setting up for karaoke later in the evening, pleasant enough though, and all the pubs had friendly bar staff. As I pointed out, The Shipwright's Arms is closest to the station, very friendly bar staff, but take note that you are provided plastic 'glasses' to drink from if sitting outside, we stayed by the bar and were served in eccentric glass glasses. 😁 Anyway folks, cheers for now, and until the next time! 🍺


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