Duke's Head
53 Crayford High StreetCrayford
DA1 4EJ
The Duke's Head is not a listed building, but is on CAMRA's National Inventory as a One Star pub with an interior of special national historic interest, and the description is as follows: "This pleasant, small pub is a 1926 rebuild in the loose Tudor style that was so popular for pubs at the time: thin red bricks below and half-timbering above. The Tudor theme continues inside with three brick fireplaces, exposed ceiling joists, and walls ‘panelled’ to two-thirds height: look carefully and you will realise the infill between the timber members is artificial, resin-based sheeting made to look like wood (very popular in the Twenties to create a sense of antiquity on the cheap). Now opened up the pub was a three-roomer: a smallish space on the right, entered through the front door is clearly distinguishable but the main bar on the left, rather less obviously, had two spaces, one entered, as now, through the side door and its internal porch, and another from a (now blocked) entrance on the corner. Otherwise modest original fittings including a plain panelled counter to the three-sided servery and parts of the bar back: the etched window glass with geometrical patterning is probably also original to 1926."
The WhatPub link is here: WhatPub/Duke's Head
The Pub Heritage Group link is here: PHG/Dukes Head
The Duke's Head has yet to feature on a LPG pub tour.