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Beer of the Week (w/e 27th April 2025) with Thuck Phat
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Detail Pages
The Gladstone, Carrington, Nottingham
Carrington
Nottingham
NG5 2AW
Pub Type
Punch TavernsReviews (Current Rating Average: 8½ of 10) see review guidelines
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Alex Conway left this review about The Gladstone
What a gem!
Located in the dark backstreets of Carrington, a short stroll off the busy Mansfield road is The Gladstone.
The smallish pubs has two similar sized seating areas either side of the bar, one more cushioned for a more lounge type feel the other very much more gritty and "bar" orientated. The bar has six superbly well kept real ales. on my last visit they had London Pride (£3.40) Timothy aylor Landlord (£3.50) oakham Bishops Farewell (£3.50) Castle Rock Harvest Pale (£3.15) Nottingham Extra Pale Ale (£3.15) and Oakham Scarlett macaw (£3.40) al well as being supported by keg offerings from Carling, becks, Guinness, staropramen and Stowford press. My Bishops Farewell was in tip top shape, although a little on the steep side when the beer is this well kept you don't begrudge the extra costs quite as much.
A fantastic find with a warm atmosphere and award winning beer garden. The Gladstone is well worth the five minute stroll when around the Carringtion area and located just a ten minute walk from Sherwood.
*Update* called in here last week (10th November 2015) and had a pint of oakham ales Scarlet macaw (£3.50) which was in fantastic condition and was one of the best pints I have tried in a long time, well worth trying, especially in this fantastic boozer.
**January 2017
Still the best kept beer by a mile! Prices all rose by 10p so still the most expensive by a long shot but still a secret hidden gem.
On 26th January 2017
- rating: 9
[User has posted 459 recommendations about 459 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Soup Dragon left this review about The Gladstone
A late Victorian terraced pub, with beer garden, which is named after the former Prime Minister of the period. It is of three storeys, a generally in plain brick, but has a decorative string course, stone lintels, pedimented entrance and the most unusual feature - the heavy brick mullions. You enter a small vestibule, where the former outdoor may have been. It has two rooms, served by a central island serving bar. Off to the left there is the lounge.It is in green, with blue bench seats and carpet. Lots of brass is dotted about, as well as small objects in cabinets. Off to the right is the bar. This room is in red and white, with a black and red tile floor and brown bench seats. The TV wasn't on, but the radio was. The room has a sport them, with tennis racquets, fishing rods and a bar billiard table on the wall! Lots of sport pictures are mounted too. There is a dart board and trophy cabinet. The service was friendly and the place clearly populated by locals - also with a friendly feel. Beer; usual tap stuff, with Oakham's Inferno and Scarlet Macaw, London Pride, Timothy Taylor Landlord, Brewster's Decadence and a decent Castle Rock Harvest Pale Ale on handpull. A great, a pretty much unaltered back-street pub - and definitely worth finding out if in the area. I am sure I will be back.
On 24th September 2013
- no rating submitted
[User has posted 3067 recommendations about 3062 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Real Ale Ray left this review about The Gladstone
This is a good traditional pub and is well worth a visit. Once through the main door you have a choice of either the lounge or bar side, either rooms were equally as good as the other. We took the bar side and were impressed with the red and black floor tiles and the original cornice work. There were six ales on handpump, I went for the Notts Brewery Rock Bitter, which was spot on.
On 15th April 2013
- rating: 8
[User has posted 3645 recommendations about 3645 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Alan Winfield left this review about The Gladstone
The Gladstone is a three storey pub that is set in a terrace,the pub is hidden away in the back streets of carrington.
Once inside this pub seemed pretty much unaltered with a few different rooms,there was a fairly basic bar and a more comfortable lounge.
This pub used to be a Whitbread tied house and there were real ales on here.
The pub now has a good choice of real ales on the bar with a few locale beers.
This is not the easiest pub to find but it is worth it when you get there.
Pub first visited 21/7/1984
Photo taken December 1992
On 1st April 2012
- rating: 8
[User has posted 6113 recommendations about 6113 pubs]