The Telegraph

The Telegraph

Welcome to the Telegraph, the country pub in London

The Telegraph, Country Pub in London, Putney Heath, SW15 3TU

http://www.thetelegraphputney.co.uk

Reviews and related sites

Eating Out . Locality. Lynden Gate

Review analysis
menu   food   staff   value   drinks   location  

The menu is only a couple of pages long, complemented by the “specials” on the blackboard, and although they don’t seem to change very often, the selection is good The staff, and the owner, are very good with kids, and are happy to prepare something a bit off the menu if your kids are a bit particular about what they eat.

Blades carries a good selection of wines, and is reasonably priced for London, but I would call it good value for money, instead of inexpensive.

A bit more up market at £30-40 a head including wine - but very good value for what you get.

The Barnes faithful have kept Sonny’s thriving for almost a quarter of a century.

The interior is beautifully decorated muted colours, warm and cosy, with candles burning and gilt-edged mirrors handing on the walls.

Telegraph Road - Martin Hickes

Review analysis
ambience   reservations   value   food   drinks   location   staff  

Its real birth probably lies in the scandalous nature of the first proto-humans, perhaps being rooted in the happenings and consequences of 'the world's oldest profession' and the And just like the best pantomime villain, the news has taken many forms.

Prior to newspapers proper, in the early 17th century, official government bulletins were circulated at times in some centralized empires.

The news was originally known as the 'courant' and newspapers took their first names from such.

The first English daily, The first newspaper in the world is thought to be a German newspaper published in the Holy Roman Empire in 1605, while the became one of the first newspapers of the New World.

In mid-town America, some have slashed home delivery to three days–a–week, while prodding readers to visit the newspapers' internet sites on other days.

The Telegraph - Telegraph Online, Daily Telegraph, Sunday ...

Detroit rises back to glory, should retail FX firms offer Motown stock?

Review analysis
food   staff   value   ambience  

From the era of great hope during the 1950s as America mobilized itself during the period in which fresh-faced baby boomers took to the roads in jet-age inspired Bel Airs and Fairlanes, through to the muscle car era of the 1960s when a 25 year old postgraduate could put an eight-cylinder Mustang on the road for just a few thousand dollars, and select imagination-capturing options such as pony hide trim from the (at the time very rare) extensive options list.

Detroit’s music scene revolved around the automotive industry, spurning an entirely new genre, named after the world’s most iconic motor city under the Motown moniker.

Unemployment took hold, and the Auto Workers Union’s blank-check policy of protecting factory workers took its toll as motor manufacturers had to pay gold plated pensions to people who had retired over 20 years previously to luxurious AWU villages, and meanwhile South Korea and Japan were not only importing very cheaply made products en masse, but were building factories from Ohio to Georgia in which to assemble them.

Long consigned to distant memory are the industrial difficulties highlighted in Mark Knopfler’s “Telegraph Road”, where he outlines the daily reality of a car industry factory floor worker whose difficult life was peppered by industrial disputes, lack of resources and inability to retain a workforce as Mark Knopfler’s lyrics focused on one man’s personal struggle with unemployment after the city built around the Telegraph Road had become uninhabited and barren just as it began.

Not just cars made and designed in America such as the ever popular Toyota Camry, but American products from the big three famous Detroit names.

Telegraph - Telegraph Road, London, South London, SW15 3TU ...

The Telegraph Putney | London Pub Reviews | DesignMyNight

Review analysis
food  

Upon the heath of Putney stands The Telegraph, a cosy country pub with the convenience of a local tube stop.

Offering a small respite from the hustle and bustle of the city streets, this London pub is just the place to disappear from the harsh realities of the outside world.

A summer spent in its pub garden is a summer well spent, welcoming children and pets and regularly attracting locals as well as visitors from further afield.

Monday nights at the Telegraph plays host to a film night whilst Thursday is curry night with regular live music performances throughout the month.

As the perfect place to escape the clamour of the city streets, The Telegraph offers a contemporary and stylish take on the traditional country pub.

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