Pub Walk: Ye Old Mitre
Fancy find a piece of Cambridgeshire whithin London? Come with me – it’s the Mitre pub you need.

You see the sign from a distance, lonly on the pavement, amost suspended in the trees.. Turn right in a narrow corridor – 25 m long! – to find it. You can picture it in a Harry Potter book, hidden away, full of mysteries and wizards.

Very near still stand a spendid palace where the bishops of Ely used to stay when coming to London for business. Stories of the time decribe gorgeous gardens, fountains, orchards and even vines. They were so proud of it they built a wall to separate it from ugly London. It was even decided it would come under Cambridgeshire’s jurisdiction.
In 1546, the original Mitre is built as a drinking place for the servants working at Ely’s Place. In 1772, it is briefly detroyed only to be rebuilt as an exact copy.

In 1576, Elisabeth I’s favourite, Christopher Halton, succeeds to get possession of half the building. A cherry tree is decided for the limit separating the grounds. The Queen is said to have danced the Maypole around it. Truth or romance? Anyway, a part of it is still preciously preserved.
The pub is usually closed when I walk by… The palace has long been sold to the crown of course. Cambridgeshire has given the rights back to the borough of Camden of course. But this public house prefers to keep with the old rules and still closes at 10.00pm…
Ye Old Mitre
1, Ely Court
Ely Place
London, EC1N 6SJ
Tube: Chancery lane
English