The Black
Lion The Black Lion occupies a prominent
position on the corner of Blackfriars Street and Chapel
Street in Salford. It sits across from Sacred
Trinity Church.
The images above were taken in
October of 2014. Below are images taken in August
of 2011 when the pub was closed and looking for a
tenant.
It apparently closed in 2010 but reopened later in 20111 An article in the Manchester Evening News on September 30th said this about the reopening, "The Black Lion pub in Salford, which closed down last year, has thrown open its doors after a £4,000 revamp. New landlords FutureArtists, a film-making company, want to create a venue to show their own and other people’s films – so they plan to transform the upstairs into a cinema. The bar downstairs will exhibit work from local artists, as well as serving pints." The pub's own website described it at the time as a, " ... fabulous traditional pub with a twist - a counterculture arts venue, on Chapel Street, Salford." It apparently began life in 1776 when
John Kinnaston kept an alehouse here. It appears
in Manchester and Salford Directory for 1841, by which
time the landlord was William Bird. Strangely, the
OS map published circa 1844 shows a number of public
houses around the corner of Blackfriars Street and
Chapel Street but the Black Lion isn't mentioned.
Its location is indicated by the red shading that I
added to the map segment below.
Despite the absence of any name on
that building, it is interesting that nearby is "Black
Lion Court". That original building was apparently
replaced circa 1876 by the one we see today.
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