Black Horse, Whitby
Black Horse, Whitby
91 Church St, Whitby YO22 4BH
Best Bars Pubs & hangout places in Whitby, Canada
Welcome to Whitby, Canada Food and Drinks Guide. This is MUST WATCH video if you are looking for the best wine and dine spots in Whitby. We have sorted our top picks for Pubs / Bars and places to hang out in Whitby for you after reviews received by our users and our in house Travel Specialists.
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List of Best Bars and Pubs in Whitby
Middle Earth Tavern
25-26 Church St
The Endeavour
Pub
The Dolphin
Pub
Black Horse Inn
The Ironstone Miner - JD Wetherspoon
88 Westgate
Little Angel
18 Flowergate
Cod And Lobster
61 High St
Abbey Wharf
Market Place
The Pier Inn
The Duke Of York
124 Church St
Please note :
- The background images shown in the video is for beatification purpose only, these images are NOT the actual pics of the place mentioned in the video.
- We and our channel DO NOT support drinking Alcohol in any way, This video has been made on request of our users / subscribers.
- Drinking Alcohol is injurious to Health.
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Black Horse Inn, 91 Church St, Whitby YO22 4BH
Black Horse Inn, 91 Church St, Whitby YO22 4BH
black horse inn
The Black Horse Inn offers everything you could want from a village pub in the North Yorkshire countryside -- a warm welcome, a gorgeous building with bags of character, top quality food and drink, lovely rooms for an overnight stay, and a real community feel.
Rapper dancers Black horse Whitby Folk week
Rapper dancers perform in the black horse Whitby during folk week 2010
FYI - The Black Horse pub has bar prices that can rival London and Paris, so take out a second mortgage before you visit.
The White Horse and Griffin, Whitby
Visited Whitby in March 2015 for Mrs A's Birthday. We had a lovely meal in the White Horse and Griffin Pub, complete with log fire and stone flagged floor. Wonderful.
Out and About in Kilburn and Helmsley
Kilburn and Helmsley
Kilburn is a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England. It lies on the edge of the North York Moors National Park, and 6.2 miles (10.0 km) north of Easingwold.
HELMSLEY
Helmsley is a market town and civil parish in the Ryedale district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the North Riding of Yorkshire, the town is located at the point where the valleys of Bilsdale and Ryedale leave the moorland and join the flat Vale of Pickering.
Church-Street-Whitby
Whitby Holiday Cottages
This is Church Street in Whitby out side the Whitehorse and Griffin and The Blach Horse pubs
Best Hotels and Resorts in Yorkshire Dales National Park, United Kingdom UK
Hotel Guide of Yorkshire Dales National Park. MUST WATCH. Best Hotels in Yorkshire Dales National Park.
Our travel specialists have listed best hotels and resorts of Yorkshire Dales National Park.
It's not the Ranking of Best Hotels and resorts in Yorkshire Dales National Park, it is just the list of best hotels.
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Listed Hotels
The Traddock
The Wheatsheaf in Wensleydale
Yorebridge House
Stone House Hotel
The Craven Arms
Beck Hall Malham
Burgoyne Hotel
Black Horse Hotel
The Devonshire Fell Hotel
The Devonshire Arms Hotel & Spa
The Buck Inn Whitby
Smoking Shots Great Fun Great Taste Great Pub!
Pubs - The Black Horse Pub
Looking for a friendly, local pub with fine food, great ales and lovely welcoming staff? Look no further than The Black Horse Pub. From walkers, to hikers to families to locals – come and join us for a drink today.
The Britannia Coconut dancers who 'black-up' to perform
The Britannia Coconut Dancers' custom of blacking up has drawn heavy criticism, but members insist it is part of a harmless tradition.
These men are the pride of folk dancing, said Joe Healey as he led his clog-shod troupe out on to the greasy streets of suburban Bolton yesterday. Amid the heady swirl of accordion music and swaying garlands, it was hard to argue, but only last week the 157-year-old Britannia Coconut Dancers were being labelled a national embarrassment.
The Nutters, as the Lancashire dancers are known, are one of the relatively few Morris dancing sides to wear blackface. Prospective Labour parliamentary candidate, Will Straw, son of former Home Secretary, Jack, prompted controversy last week by being photographed with them and later defending the group from allegations of racial stereotyping.
At least, it might have been a controversy in the perilous world of political sensitivities that Mr Straw inhabits. The exotically-attired Nutters seemed entirely relaxed about the whole thing, and as they moved from pub to pub yesterday, became more relaxed still. They talked of heritage and tradition, the affection they enjoy from the public -- and suggested that their critics were confused.
Unfortunately, the Nutters' side of the story is somewhat confused, too. Much of their history is lost in the mists of time and the rest in the fog of restorative post-dance pub sessions. It's thirsty work this vital maintenance of English folk culture, and, so, after a quick limbering up session at the Brown Cow in Horwich, we are on the move to The Saddle, then the Victoria and Albert, the Bowling Green, the Bay Horse ...
What I can tell you, says Mr Healey, the 66-year-old secretary and dance leader, 'is that there's nowt racist about it, and that if anyone can show there is we'd stop.
The likelihood is that the origins of the side's signature Coconut dances lie in the 17th century when seafaring Moors from Spain settled in Cornwall, became tin miners and eventually moved to Lancashire for more lucrative quarrying jobs. The Nutters' costumes, featuring turbans, kilts and cockades, hint clearly at Moorish influence, but the blackface, in the view of most folk experts, has a different explanation.
Northern dance troupes were usually made up of working men, often miners, whose faces were typically ingrained with dust and soot, and in the days before £50-a-pot David Beckham skin enhancement treatments -- or even regular hot water -- most walked around with grubby faces. It was seen as a badge of pride to go into the pub with your face blackened, says Mr Healey. It was a sign that you'd done an honest day's work and earned your drink.
Thus, argue the Nutters, the blackface is essentially a nod of respect to the dance's regional and industrial heritage. Not that the usual Twitter mob haranguing young Straw wanted to see it like that. The candidate for neighbouring Rossendale and Darwen was bombarded with insults, and various anti-racism organisations found time in their busy schedules to demand that the Nutters be disbanded. By the end of the week, even the New York Times had weighed in with a sniffy piece likening the Morris Men's dance to the kind of redneck insults heaped upon President Obama.
Fortunately, folk dancing long ago mastered the art of crisis management. Defying regular predictions that it was on the brink on extinction, it is enjoying a popularity boom, and recently overcame a clog crisis caused by a shortage of the irons fitted to the dancers' shoes that make the familiar clacking noise.
The Nutters have 16 members, of whom eight dance at any one time. On routine engagements they are accompanied by accordionists, but on big occasions perform with a brass band -- one of the few sides in Britain to muster such musical firepower. In the bar of The Saddle, Dick Shuttlebottom, 80, who made his dancing debut with the troupe 57 years ago, was trying to remember the last time anyone complained about their appearance. He scratched his whiskers, slurped heavily at his ale, cast his bleary eyes around and said: I don't know that anyone ever has.
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Bagdale Hall Hotel, Whitby, North Yorkshire
This hotel is haunted
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Folk at the black horse
Folk music ( plumduff)
Board Inn Whitby 2011
Andy Seagroatt proving he can sing as well as play!
London's Biggest Kept Secret EXPOSED #cheapeats
London’s Biggest Kept Secret EXPOSED!
If you are asking yourself what to do in London or where to go in London then keep reading...
London, the capital of England and the United Kingdom, is a 21st-century city with history stretching back to Roman times. At its centre stand the imposing Houses of Parliament, the iconic ‘Big Ben’ clock tower and Westminster Abbey, site of British monarch coronations. Across the Thames River, the London Eye observation wheel provides panoramic views of the South Bank cultural complex, and the entire city.
London is known worldwide for having expensive restaurants, however there is a well kept secret for the cheapest place to eat, just ask a black London cab driver! It's called the Cabmen's Shelter...
“We’re a Victorian institution,” black-cab driver Henry announced proudly, tugging on his tartan cap. It was a grey mid-morning in London and I was squeezed in a small green shed behind a narrow, U-shaped table. Surrounding me were a cluster of taxi drivers who slurped on mugs of tea and shovelled in forkfuls of scrambled egg and sausage.
This diminutive shed in Russell Square is where the keepers of London’s secrets gather – the black-cab drivers whose minds are mapped with every inch of the city. It’s one of 13 cabmen’s shelters remaining in the capital, and only licensed drivers who have passed The Knowledge test – memorising every street, landmark and route in London – are allowed inside.
The idea for the shelters came in the late 19th Century when George Armstrong, a year before he became editor of The Globe newspaper, was unable to hail a taxi during a blizzard because the drivers, who then rode horse-drawn hansom cabs, were huddled in a nearby pub. He teamed up with philanthropists, including the Earl of Shaftesbury, to find a way to keep drivers on the straight and narrow – and off the drink.
The Cabmen’s Shelter Fund was born in 1875, building the first hut in St John’s Wood. It still operates today, though many of the further 60 huts built have since been knocked down.
Each hut was built no bigger than a horse and cart, in line with Metropolitan Police rules because they stood on public highways. They provided shelter and sustenance for hackney-carriage (black-cab) drivers, with strict rules against swearing, gaming, gambling and drinking alcohol.
Then came World War I. Drivers and their vehicles were drafted, plunging the cab trade – and the shelters – into decline. “We lost people, cars and horses,” said Gary, one of the cabbies I chatted to at Russell Square.
Unused, unloved and unprotected, the oak huts suffered rot and ruin. Some were destroyed by bombs during World War II, while many were later bulldozed in street-widening schemes.
So join me as I expose London's biggest kept secret for Cheap Eats.
Check out The Hackney Carriage Drivers Company Online…
Read More About The Cabmen’s Shelter in Time Out London…
Music...
Maximum Tension 2 (Sting Version) - Hakan Eriksoon
No Rules - Fox Morrow
Just Cool Down - Fox Morrow
Stays The Same (Instrumental Version) - Gloria Tells
Wear The Crown (Instrumental Version) - Pure Indigo
Lunatics - Donell Mase
#london #cheapeats
Day of Dance 2006 1
Blackhorse & Standard Northwest Clog Morris performing 'Take 5' outside Southwark Cathedral, London UK 8 October 2006.
INSIDE THE EERIE HIGHWAYMAN INN PUB, DEVON, UK
ABSOLUTELY UNUSUAL ANCIENT PUB IN BRITAIN.