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Detail Pages
Derby Hotel, Barrow Town Centre, Barrow-In-Furness
Barrow-In-Furness
LA14 1PN
Reviews (Current Rating Average: 4½ of 10) see review guidelines
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Blue Scrumpy left this review about Derby Hotel
The Derby was my final stop of the night in Barrow. I'd walked past it earlier in the evening and had seen a couple of bouncers on the door. Arriving back just after midnight, the bouncers had moved indoors.
Inside, the music was loud with a baseline that shook the whole building. This was a pub that had morphed into more of a nightclub. However, the music was fairly good and staff and customers seemed to be on the more sensible side, compared with those in other Barrow hostelries.
An unexpected bonus was the availability of 4 real ales from Cross Bay - Zenith, Halo, Deception & Stay Frosty. The latter was a very enjoyable white stout.
Not normally my sort of place, but I quite enjoyed my visit here and with 4 real ales on, I would happily return.
On 2nd March 2023
- rating: 6
[User has posted 3040 recommendations about 3038 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
custodian 42 left this review about Derby Hotel
Noisy pub with bar to left as you enter. One reversed hand pump = rest keg. Not a place to revisit.
On 25th August 2017
- rating: 3
[User has posted 1693 recommendations about 1691 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Roger Button left this review about Derby Hotel
Not the most enticing pub you will find but my attention was grabbed by a cheapo yellow sticker in the window with an Ulverston ale advertised so I figured it may be worth closer inspection.
The date on the impressive gable informs us that the building was built in 1900 although there was a previous Derby Hotel nearby and the Dalton Road end of the pub is apparently a 1970 rebuild. The interior lacks any of the Victorian splendour that it may have once had and has been pretty much stripped to the bone being quite sparse and devoid of furnishings, much of which has been sacrificed for open floorspace to compliment the live music/entertainment programme which seems to be the pubs main selling point. The slightly raised far end is divided by a set of wooden railings and contains a pool table, piano and DJ mixing desk and there was also a jukebox, TV and Big Screen predominantly for sport.
There was the one ale available, not the one advertised but a different Ulverston Ale (Laughing Gravy) which was very good quality and reasonably priced at £2.50. The welcoming barman advised me that they do always have an Ulverston ale on although the window sticker obviously doesn’t get changed as regularly as the ale but it did serve some purpose as I doubt I would have popped in unless it was there.
It is probably a decent enough place to catch a local band but outside of peak hours it is a bit of a souless place. As far as a pub goes it is probably worth popping in for the solitary ale and for completists to tick off but it’s not exactly a cosy chat sort of place.
On 4th January 2013
- rating: 4
[User has posted 1239 recommendations about 1233 pubs]