Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Hebden Bridge Pub Explorations

Day two of the 2026 Road Trip to Halifax and we were heading westwards on a train for all of 8 miles and 10-minutes to Hebden Bridge.
The Calderdale town is now home to around 4,500 folks and went from being soot-stained and on the brink of economic collapse to being trendy and having words like 'bohemian' used in assocaition with it.
It also has an impressive list of pubs and bars - more than we could get around in one day.  But we made a valient effort and here's how far we got..,

The Old Gate (1-5 Old Gate, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8JP)
Our first port of call in the centre of town was maybe a little too smart for my liking.
'OG' logo on the glass front door; cake stands on the bar; remote-controlled awnings; £16 sandwiches.
But at least it's open early doors, primarily for the cappuccino and eggs benedict brigade, I suspect, rather than us uncouth real ale drinkers.
There was a hefty cask chice from Leeds Brewery, Amity, Marble, Thornbridge, Vocation, Kirkstall, and Timothy Taylor.  Phew.
I slipped up and opted for the Amity 'Pippali' without reading the 'Ginger and Peppercorn amber ale' description on the pump clip.  Interesting, but probably not the best beer to start with.
Drinks were taken outside to the front patio, where the sun was trying its best to shine and we were well out the way of breakfasting gentlefolk.
 
Beers finished, we took a leisurely stroll through town and climbed a gentle hill to reach pub number 2: the fantastic-looking Fox and Goose...
Fox and Goose (7 Heptonstall Road, Hebden Bridge, HX7 6AZ)
I knew this was going to be a corker from the first glimpse - looking a little battered around the edges in a hillside setting with a fox mural on an unused door.
Stepping through the front door took us to a room with a splendid fireplace, flagstone floor and unusually-shaped ceiling.
Six handpumps offered a range of beers from Pictish, Mobberley Brewhouse, Big Trip and Wishbone.  I could have quite happily worked through them all, but that would have foiled the pub crawl.  I selected better this time, veering to the dark side with a Pictish 'Black Diamond': a top-notch 3.5% mild in excellend condition.
Two small rooms lead off from the central bar, plus a vertiginous staircase which take you to a wonderful terraced garden on the slopes to the side of the pub.
We sat in the small right-side snug surrounded by some excellent breweriana and a handy guide to wine pronunciation.
 
Pub dog of the day too.  "In the way? Me? Surely not."
 
It was downhill on the way back towards the centre of town.
Progress was slowed by the Totally Screwed hardware store which members of our group inexplicably needed to make purchases in.  Personally I thought the shop name was upstaged by next door neighbours Ruby Shoesday.
In fact, vintage clothing, charity shops, and shiny things in craft store windows were our biggest threat to thwarting progress around the planned pubs on this day.
Leaving Gareth and Tanya in Spirals gift shop, myself and John bowled into the craft beer bar...we've got our priorities right!
Drink (15 Market Street, Hebden Bridge, HX7 6EU)
This is a bottle shop with enticing shelves and fridges of cans and bottles in the front room and a rather ramshackle bar counter in the back.
The  lovely lady in charge of the bar certainly had the best sunflower-orientated clothing that we saw all day and was enthusiastic about the beers, as well as providing a comprehensive answer to John's "when did Hebden Bridge become cool?" question.
There were three cask ales available: a very brown and twiggy Blackjack best bitter subtitled 'Pub Ale', a Weekend Project dry hopped pale ale, or a Brew York porter.
I settled on the Weekend Project 'Buttermere'.  It's liberally hopped with tropical and stone fruit aromas.and it sure is murky...
If "lacings never lie" is true, I was onto a winner.
With no space to sit downstairs, we took our drinks to the first floor room which includes a couple of repurposed bus seats.


Back across Hebden Beck, then up Bridge Gate, our fourth venue was tucked away between two restaurants.
Hidden Hebden (3 The Courtyard, Bridge Gate, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8EX)
This site opened as a micropub named Calan's in 2015 and has had several identities since. Post-pandemic it was The Pub (despite it being nothing like a proper pub), then The Hebden, before the current owners took over and altered the name to reflect it's discreet location.

We appeared to be the first to find it on this day.
Here's the quandary of a micro - too many people and you've nowhere to sit; too few people in with no music playing and it's uncomfortably quiet.  That's what drove us out to the bench in the courtyard where we didn't feel we were disturbing the staff member tinkering with her phone.

My beer was just a half of Bini Brew Co. 'Cat's Eyes' - a brewery from Ilkley that I'd not heard of before. 

A little further up the street was a picturesque triangle surrounded by eateries and shops with the Hebden Bridge Mill as a backdrop.
The pub facing this was the Shoulder of Mutton, a crowd of folk on the outdoor tables now that the sunshine had materialised.
Shoulder of Mutton (Bridge Gate, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8EX)
This was formerly a row of three cottages.  By the mid 17th century one of them was serving as a butchers shop, which would be inspiration for the pub name after it was granted a license in 1769.  For years it was known as the 'Bottom Shoulder' being as there was another pub of the same name up the hill at Blackshaw Head.
A few walls have been knocked down since then to open it up a bit and it has those modern touches of grey paint, patterned floor tiling, sofas, and a sign reading 'Gin Palace'.
Once you've been to a gin palace or two in Liverpool and London, you'll appreciate that this is definitely not one...
There was a sturdy Yorkshire quartet on the hand pumps: local Vocation 'Bread & Butter', Timothy Taylor 'Landlord', Acorn 'Yorkshire Pride' and a Theakston rugby special.
Vocation - we'll be in their bar later; 'Landlord' - is everywhere in 2025/26; 'Yorkshire Haka' -always avoid the rugby-themed beers.  Which left me with the Acorn, a straw coloured citrussy easy-going 3.7% beer.  Perfectly enjoyable and well kept.

A short stroll up the road took us to another traditional-looking inn.
White Lion (Bridge Gate, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8EX)
This is possibly the oldest building in Hebden Bridge with a 1657 date stone above the door.  It was originally the home of the King family, served as a gatehouse when a toll was put on the road, and has operated as a hotel and posting house.
It's pleasant enough within, open-plan, bright and airy, with a few glimpses of an historic past.
And it boasted another strong Yorkshire beer line-up, with a Lancastrian interloper, although it's a fair while since Wainwright was brewed in Lancaster.
I picked the local Vocation 'Heart and Soul'...a session IPA which I've maybe not actually had on cask before.  Another perfectly enjoyable, well-served beer on a day where cask quality was never called into question.
We moved on to a pub that found a bit of TV fame playing the 'Duke of Wellington' in BBC's Riot Women in 2025.
The Albert (Albert Street, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8AH)
The Albert dates back to the 19th century and was built as an hotel with coach house and stables.  It originally didn't have a license to sell spirits which ensured it gained a reputation as a 'respectable' house.  Prop Up the Bar always sticks to respectable houses.

They've got the merchandise to prove that they've been on the telly...
...and a pleasing selection of Timothy Taylor ales...
I ordered the lesser-seen 'Knowl Spring' - a very enjoyable pint on good form.
The Albert has undergone an unplanned refurb after being badly damaged in the Boxing Day 2015 floods which caused a great deal of devastation throughout the town.
I reckon they've done a good job, making a couple of comfortable, homely rooms with leather cushioned banquettes and stools, stone floor and rugs, piano and Victorian fire place.
Crikey, that's three proper pubs in a row.
Sadly, we were about to abandon trad and return to craft bars.
Nightjar (New Road, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8AD)
This small venue is tucked into the right-hand corner of the 1920's Picture House cinema and serves as the tap for the Mytholmroyd based Nightjar Brew Co.
It has been open since 2017, delivering a selection of cask, keg, bottles and cans from Nightjar and other small breweries.
I thought it had a fair bit of character, with moody lighting, bare bricks, the Beatles and Supertramp on the playlist, and a decent crowd of customers.  Everything which I thought Hidden Hebden was missing.
There were two options on cask from Nightjar or a Kent 'Iron Pier' had made the 236 mile trip from Northfleet.  I figured I should try one of their own brews, so ended up with the prophetically-named 'A.I. Will Kill Us All'.   

Our afternoon ended at Vocation & Co - the local brewery's Hebden tap room, having visited the Halifax version the previous day.
It looks like this...
Just as at Halifax: 24 beer lines, this time 4 of them cask, the rest draft, pouring familiar and more unusual Vocation brews.  Such as the decadent 'White Chocolate Easter Egg' which I ended up with.
I only seem to have taken one unuseable blurry picture inside Vocation which suggests my concentration was lapsing by this point.  Time to catch the train.

Hebden Bridge had been great.
I came here in 1994 and brought some clogs.  No idea why.  Probably New Model Army's fault.  I even wore them once.
I suspect it's changed a fair bit since then and the more I look at the Calderdale Valley the more I want to go back already.

Friday, 22 May 2026

Back in the 'Fax

In 2025 four beer aficionados from Oxford headed northbound to Wigan to explore the pubs, eat pies, and visit their beer festival.  As it was a rip-roaring success we decided to head out on our travels again in 2026 - Gareth, Tanya, and myself cruising up the M1 in Chairman John's shiny new motor, rock soundtrack in full swing, on our way to Halifax.

In 1858 Charles Dickens visited and declared it "as horrible a place as I ever saw".
I'm not sure for how many years the average visitor would have agreed with Mr Dickens, but more recently Halifax has morphed into a West Yorkshire gem.
Quality museums; a list of big musical acts playing at the Piece Hall; a craft beer bar never more than a few minutes away...  All they need is for some Hollywood folks to buy the football team.

We arrived just after 2pm, dropped our bags off at the hotel, then set out to explore the town.

Starting in the Victorian Arcade where the charity shop will fill all those gaps in your Genesis VHS collection...
It's also where you'll find a Good Beer Guide-listed craft bar under the skylights...

Dukes (16-18 Market Arcade, Halifax: Town Centre, HX1 1NX)
Set over 2-floors, Dukes is colourful, with pot plants in some places it'll be very tricky to reach for watering, skateboards on the wall, and a couple of shelves constituting a spicy sauce shop. 
Seating is of the non-traditional variety with more cushions than some would appreciate...

The cask choice was Weekend Project bitter or porter, alongside pales from Two By Two or Rivington.  Plus lots of keg including an imperial stout that stopped me looking any closer lest sensibility go out the window at the first hurdle.
I stuck with the Weekend Project '
Talisker Bay East India Porter', just breaching the five pund mark by 10p.
It was superb and served in great condition in Dukes branded glassware.  Extra points for bespoke beer mats too.
And what a soundtrack they had on - 
Richard Hell, X-Ray Spex, Babes in Toyland, Crass... it's enough to excuse that pink and green colour scheme.

Moving on from Dukes, we were heading to a second micro, but popped our heads into the Piece Hall first for the blue sky picture.

The Piece Hall opened on New Year's Day 1779 as a cloth hall where local weavers could sell their wares in one place.  It originally consisted 315 rooms over three floors surrounding the large open court yard.
Now Grade I listed and refurbished magnificently, it serves as a summer venue for an impressive line-up of outdoor gigs.  We were several weeks too early for Shed Seven opening the 2026 programme, so went to the pub instead.
Meandering Bear (21-23 Union Street, Halifax, HX1 1PR)
The pub that we picked was the Meadering Bear, open since September 2019 and named after a local legend, the story etched onto one of the walls within the pub.
Back in 1913 a couple of bears escaped their enclosure at Halifax Zoo - one of was quickly apprehended, whilst the second 'meandered' for an hour-and-a-half.
I wonder if it gave up having decided Halifax was as horrible a place as it ever saw?

The pub is set over two levels with the bar up a couple of steps to the rear.  Five hand
 pumps served a best bitter from Brass Castle, two options from Wishbone Brewery of Keighley, and two from Beartown Brewery, Congleton.
Plus plenty of tempting keg.  Here's the full list on the beer board:
A Beartown 'Kodiak' for me, the brewers' flagship pale ale, concocted with German hops and some nice biscuity malts, all making for a thoroughly pleasant pint served in top condition.
We grabbed seats on the high-backed cushioned bench at the far side of the smart set-up, whilst Shuggie Otis played from the speakers - an artist you don't hear in a pub very often and part of another agreeable playlist.

Glasses emptied and returned to the bar, we moved on to somewhere all of us were all looking forward to: the Halifax taproom of Hebden Bridge's Vocation Brewery.
Vocation Brewing Co. (13-17 Alexandra Street, Halifax, HX1 1BS)
Vocation are almost certainly the best known of the Calder Valley breweries, rapidly expanding from humble beginnings in an old chicken shed on the edge of the moors in 2015 to a current capacity of 55,000 barrels a year, their cans a regular sight on supermarket shelves.
Their Halifax tap opened in 2022, the site previously housing a music venue, The Lantern, killed-off by the pandemic, and a micropub called The Alex.  Prior to that the Art Deco building was part of a cinema.  Instinctively I'd rather be able to drink in a micro then pop next door to watch bands in a music venue, so Vocation better be good.
Yep...not bad.
Busy with a Thursday evening post-work crowd, it has a light, high-ceilinged main room with modern decoration and friendly staff, with an additional first floor room and roof garden that we didn't get to explore.
It boasts twenty-four beer lines, six of which are cask...all but one of those 24 pouring beer on our visit.  Tough to pick just the one, especially when I could see Jamaican stout, French farmhouse ale, and Belgian IPA alongside more familiar Vocation fare.
I was sticking with sub-5% cask - in this case the 'Victorian Porter'.

Those Victorians sure knew a thing or two about making porter.

I got around a reasonable number of pubs and bars during my last stay in Halifax in November 2021.  All the venues so far had been new for me, but one place demanded a revisit based on beer quality and choice.  In fact, we liked 
the Victorian Beer Cafe enough to rock up on their doorstep on each of our three nights in town.
Victorian Beer Café (18-22 Powell Street, Halifax HX1 1LN)
This stylish bar has been open since 2014 and has racked up a fair few awards over the years.
My dull exterior picture doesn't do the place justice.  Unassuming from outside, there are a warren of brown wood-panelled rooms within.  A wander around the corner from the bar reveals distinct areas on different levels with brickwork walls and bookshelves; corners with comfy armchairs in which to relax with your pick of the extensive range of beers on offer.
That vow to stick to beers under 5%?  Hmmm...the presence on cask of Thornbridge 'Imperial Stout' from the Union, weighing in at 7.7% scuppered that.
Technically, I reckon it's a couple of percent under what 'imperial' should really be.  Not to take anything away from a delicious smoky, chocolatey dark brew. 

I like curveballs on pub crawls, which is why I'm waiting in anticipation for Life After Football's next curated day out.
Meanwhile, Chairman John's curveball was a 'cask ale not available' city centre sports bar with an historic past...
The Old Cock (Old Cock Yard, Halifax, HX1 1DS)
It may not look it, but The Old Cock is one of the town's oldest pubs with bits of the building dating back to 1668.
It's notable for the fact that the Halifax Permanent Building & Investment Society were formed here in the meeting rooms.  They'd go on to become the Halifax Building Society, just about to disappear from our high streets if Lloyds get their way.

The Old Cock has had a modern makeover inside, detracting from the remaining historic features. Lots of TV screens, some garish wallpaper, too many light fittings, dreadful pop music.  None of which was putting off a decent evening crowd of folk.
With no cask on offer we settled on Caffrey's Irish Stout all round.

Right.  We needed a proper pub.
This looks like it will fit the bill...
Royal Oak (2 Clare Road, Halifax, HX1 2HX)
Hi-vis.
Cask hand pumps.
Busy pool room.  Darts on TV.
Cushioned bench seating.

The Royal Oak dates back to 1931 when it was built incorporating timbers from HMS Newcastle. It's a cracking pub and an antidote to anyone jaded with craft beer and micros.
I ordered a pint of the Wensleydale 'Dirty Deeds' (done dirt cheap?).
Photographic evidence also suggests I was impressed by the ceramic urinals in the gents.  Such photos are a side-effect of imperial stout. 
 

It had been a long time since a lunchtime pizza stop en-route in Ossett.  Peckishness led us to Wetherspoon's Barum Tap (17 Rawson Street, Halifax, HX1 1NX) where we ordered far too much food.
Did John really manage to get 18 onion rings, or am I imagining that.
My pint of Goose Eye 'Golden Goose' was okay (NBSS 2.5) - one more beer than I really needed on the first evening, but I needed something to wash the Curry Club fare down with.

I'll finish with daytime pictures of the Barum Tap, complete with the West Yorkshire constabulary at the door keeping their eye on Scunthorpe United fans arriving in the town.  
There were a few more venues in Halifax to tackle on subsequent evenings, whilst the plan for the days ahead was a trip to Hebden Bridge and a trip to Leeds.
You need a good Spoon's breakfast with extra beans to tackle big days out like that.