Bangkok Post

A 129-year-old pub in central London is under threat because of the outbreak.

- DAVID HARDING

LONDON: The French House survived two world wars and global recessions. Charles de Gaulle is said to have frequented it and Dylan Thomas once left his manuscript for Under Milk Wood at the bar.

But the 129-year-old pub in Soho, central London, is under threat because of the coronaviru­s outbreak, and has launched an online appeal for £80,000 ($92,000) to keep it going.

“It’s horribly awful,” landlady Lesley Lewis told AFP. “We had to do that. We didn’t have enough reserves to fall back on.”

“I don’t know if the pub has ever closed before, though it is rumoured to have shut for a day after being bombed in World War II,’’ Lewis, who has run the pub for 31 years, said.

The pub is trying raise the money from “friends, its fans, and its family” as it tries to meet its continuing costs with no takings.

The seven-week national shutdown has had a devastatin­g economic impact in Britain, not least on pubs — one of the country’s most recognisab­le institutio­ns.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson ordered all of them to close in late March. They are unlikely to reopen before July at the earliest.

“We’re taking away the ancient, inalienabl­e right of free-born people of the United Kingdom to go the pub,” he said gravely.

Historians believe it could be the first time since the Great Plague of 1665 — or possibly ever — that all British pubs have shut.

“In modern times, the only precedent was during the Second World War. Pubs sometimes closed because of shortages of beer,” said social historian Paul Jennings.

But even during bitter conflict they stayed open as it was seen as “good for morale”, he added.

The question now is whether all of them will reopen once the lockdown is lifted.

Britain is home to some 50,000 pubs, which employ almost 500,000 people — and the industry was facing tough times even before the devastatin­g impact of Covid-19.

The British Beer and Pub Associatio­n trade body said many landlords were already struggling to survive in the face of an economic onslaught in the last few years.

Owners of “the local” have had to deal with increased beer duty, a smoking ban, the 2008 global recession and an increase in business rates.

Many landlords are now faced with the immediate problem of having to pay rent to the breweries that typically own their premises and taxes to the local council.

On top of that, they are losing stock and have had to furlough staff — or at least manage these problems by seeking payment holidays and apply for help from the government’s support scheme for small businesses.

“It’s clearly having a devastatin­g affect on the industry,” said Tom Stainer, chief executive officer of the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA), which promotes traditiona­l British pubs. “I think it will be naive to expect every pub to get through this.”

The Hearsall Inn in Coventry, central England, prides itself on having “the best pint of Guinness around”.

But co-owner Daniel Scott served his last drop of the black stuff on March 20. “The current crisis is incomparab­le to anything I’ve known in the 22 years my family has run the pub.’’

The traditiona­l pub near the city centre is normally packed and a focus for the local community. Because of that, Scott is confident they will weather the storm.

“I am positive,” he said. “We are well establishe­d and we have great regulars and if you ask any of them, they are itching to get back to the pub.”

 ?? AFP ?? A pedestrian walks past The French House pub in London on May 5.
AFP A pedestrian walks past The French House pub in London on May 5.

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