No89, The Nellie Dean of Soho pub - beer, wines, pies - 89 Dean St, London, England, UK, W1D 3SU - since 1967 ( the Highlander )

No89, The Nellie Dean of Soho pub - beer, wines, pies - 89 Dean St, London, England, UK, W1D 3SU - since 1967 ( the Highlander ) Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Tony Smith / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

2JJGFND

File size:

57.1 MB (2.6 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?

Dimensions:

5472 x 3648 px | 46.3 x 30.9 cm | 18.2 x 12.2 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

24 July 2022

Location:

89 Dean St, London, England, UK, W1D 3SU

More information:

Nellie Dean of Soho The Nellie Dean is a public house at 89 Dean Street, on the corner of Carlisle Street. There has been a pub on this corner since at least 1748, when it was called the Highlander. (Some say there was a pub here before that, called the Dolphin, but this author has yet to see reliable evidence to support that claim.) The pub was rebuilt in its present form in 1900, retaining the Highlander name. In the 1950s and 60s it was a favoured haunt of the bohemian crowd who also patronised the French House, as well as those working in the movie industry that used to be focused on Wardour Street. In 1967 the pub became the Nellie Dean, a name inspired by the street on which it stands and honouring Gertrude Astbury, an early 20th-century music hall singer whose signature song was ‘Nellie Dean’, later the title of a musical in which she starred. “There’s an old mill by the stream, Nellie Dean Where we used to sit and dream, Nellie Dean And the waters as they flow, Seem to murmur sweet and low You are my heart’s desire; I love you, Nellie Dean.” Billy Clarke & Harry Armstrong (1916) Astbury came from Longport, now part of Stoke-on-Trent, and was nicknamed the Staffordshire Cinderella. She took the stage name Gertie Gitana on account of her supposed Gypsy origins and ‘Gitana’ was adopted to mean ‘banana’ in cockney rhyming slang. When Gertie’s fame faded, the 60s pop singer Wayne Fontana briefly took her place in the cockney fruiterer’s lexicon.