Folks think I'm mixed up when I mention this pub, thinking I mean the Old English Gentleman. There's only 2 people I've spoken to who knew of it,one of them being joney a wiki member who sent me this message
I was born in the Old Irish Gentleman at 330 Price St where my father was the manager, and afterwards moved to the Lord Exmouth. The Old Irish Gentleman was bombed during the blitz and although not demolished it was closed. The brewery secretarys name was kept above the door as the licence holder and this licence was surrenderd together with the Priory licence in return for a licence for the Pelican.
The Old irish Gentleman pub as I remember was on the corner of Aberdeen St and Beckwith St by what was then called Trinity St school,its now grassed over with a few trees planted as well. I used to attend the school and think the pub was demolished in the late sixtys as well as a pub diagonaly opposite called The Bull,corner of Beckwith St and Vittoria St Opposite what is now a convenience store .
The Old irish Gentleman pub as I remember was on the corner of Aberdeen St and Beckwith St by what was then called Trinity St school,its now grassed over with a few trees planted as well. I used to attend the school and think the pub was demolished in the late sixtys as well as a pub diagonaly opposite called The Bull,corner of Beckwith St and Vittoria St Opposite what is now a convenience store .
The Gents was on the end of Livingstone street, the building is still there but I think it's a cafe now. Yes the space invaders table was an arcade type game set into a glass topped table so you could play whilst having a sit down and a drink
I think that "space invaders" table machine was in the "Shamrock" pub which was nearby...I used to walk over the bridges with my missus and we'd end up playing that machine for ages...The Shamrock was bought out by the factory either side of it, and it was demolished and the only way you would ever know that it had ever been there is that the brickwork is newer in the space where the wall was was extended ...it was one of the few pubs that sold draught Carlsberg (a Wilson's brewery pub).
Used to drink in the Shammy and the Gents when I was home on leave. Never went to the Bank of Ireland but remember it from when I used to go to Trinity Street School. The Bull I didn't bother with either. I thought the Old Irish Gentleman was on Price Street more up towards the Town Hall, around or just past the Cathcart Street area, my memory's a bit fuzzy on that one.
No BandyCoot it was on the end of Livingstone Street at the junction with Price Street Did you ever go in The Piggy, far end of Vittoria Street or The Sea Dog ?
Use the Piggy now and then, just in case any of the old neighbours show up. The four corners of Livvy/Price St I remember as being, Livvy Baths, the Bridewell, Marchbanks and top field. The Old English Gentleman's was on the Cleveland Street corner next to Birkenhead Brewery (now as cafe as someone said), had my wedding drinkies in there in 1966. The Shammy was good. Used to drink in the Cygnet many moons ago too, The Pacific, The Duke (occasionally). It mostly depended on where my oppos were drinking when I came home on leave. For any Cygnet hands out there, Jean Holmes passed away last week, she sang many a song in there and will be fondly remembered.
I've nailed it now, where the Old Irish was, just over the road from Saxon Street. I'm a bit slow at times and that's a fact. My bro got it mixed up with the Bank of Ireland too. All sorted now in my mind so I can sleep soundly tonight. Me and our kid even disagreed about where the prefabs were, alongside the bridewell. I had a school mate who used to live in them.
Is this The Old Irish Geltleman, the one with the yellow arrow? The red arrow pub I remember being open in the nineties but for the life of me I can't remember what it was called. https://britainfromabove.org.uk/en/image/EAW051424
It is the norm for street numbers to start nearest the Town hall and radiate outwards so the Old Irish Gentleman must have been at the top end of Price st.