Dj Trev’s Cook Report – investigative Journalism into the latest pub set to open in town

7 November 2014

Dj Trev pays a visit to 10 Devonshire Place in the High Harrogate area of the town and writes about what he found.

  • New faces at Number 10 hoping to bring back that “feel good factor”

Two brothers who brought us Harrogate’s biggest nightclub are returning to the town to rejuvenate one of the areas oldest pubs. I know them so I thought I’d write about it.

Remember the 1990s? House music was making the charts, we’d just come out of an economic slump but pubs were still closing at an alarming rate, a former teenage celebrity girl was making headlines dancing in her underwear, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles were on at the cinema and the government was annoying. Yep, it was a TOTALLY different age altogether…

Then something changed; a new type of bar started to appear in towns and cities across the country. Half way between a trendy wine bar fit for executives wanting to unwind after a tough days trading and scheming and a daft pub, purpose built for lads and lasses to meet up and get the drinks in, responsibly of course.

bar-&-wood-work

In Harrogate, that place was called Jimmy’s, and its opening changed the bar scene in town almost unrecognisably.

Jimmy’s was one of the first places of its kind in the UK and its arrival ushered in a golden age of independent clubs and bars that dared to do things a little bit differently. For ten sweet, blurry, occasionally regrettably but always fun years, people partied like it was 1999. Indeed one of the years it was.

Sadly, like a really good tin of rola-cola, it couldn’t last forever. Like dog poo going white in the sun, inexorably the bar scene moved on. With only one or two of those brave independents remaining, the rest of the pubs and clubs got bought up by faceless corporate giants and changed their names to things like “Ocean”, “Spectre”, “Mansion”, “Time”, “FFS Fridays” and “Flats for Sale”.

But it DID happen… Jimmy’s, a bar, then expanding to a nightclub, in Harrogate that people ACTUALLY used to travel from miles around to! And it was the brainchild of two brothers: Steve and Andi Aikman.

Hailing from Bradford they arrived in town armed with little more than a good attitude, lots of elbow grease and some odd ideas. And a large black bin liner full of money.

back-bar-during-refurb

Well, THOSE guys are back – with a slightly smaller bin liner full of money – and have just bought one of the oldest pubs in Harrogate. Let’s not say the name of the place, as it would send a shiver down your spine like the idea of Simon Cowell in a Jacuzzi, save to say it is in Devonshire Place and people were hardly up in Arms when it finally closed. Now however this truly authentic old building with a GENUINELY great layout is set to get a new lease of life as the areas freshest “Craft Beer” pub, combining a traditional Ale House with a place for everyone from middle aged hipster, to young hopeful, to old bean.

After starting the party at Jimmy’s in 1993 after some crazy years the brothers rather rudely sold up to an aforementioned faceless corporate giant who duly changed the name to something thing like Mansize or Tome… I’ve asked around and no one remembers really. It was probably rubbish. Then equally as regrettably the boys invested their money in building an off shore theme park called West World II manned entirely by robots. When, to the surprise of everyone, that failed, they both moved into different fields: Andi setting up a successful outside catering firm (http://www.tastybirds.net ; despite what you might think from the name, it is a website you CAN open safely at work) and Steve acting as body double for Gérard Butler in such films as “300 Spartans” and “that animated film Gérard Butler was in”.

Now, however, they feel that the time is right to make a return to the licensed trade, and indeed will be getting not one but two licenses for the new location.

fire-place-pre-clean

Ten Devonshire Place will have an ON license for their Traditional Pub, as well as an OFF license in the true sense of the word, selling Boutique Beers, Craft ales and take away hand pulls, thus catering for both Quiet Nights in and Louder Nights Out.

Hosting acoustic evenings, Vinyl only Dj sets, food events, Quiz challenges and simple board games for the simply board, Ten Devonshire Place hopes to compliment some of the already excellent independent hostelries that have begun to return to the area, whilst adding something unique of their own.
With their official opening night on Saturday November 22nd they hope you will take a risk, venture a little out of the town centre and try their guest ales, micro brewed beers, Crafts, Draughts, Ciders and stronger, plus their exclusive range of fine wines selected by their very own in house wine snob Hayley Mitchell who will hosting a series of taster evenings for the experienced enthusiast and the keen beginner alike.

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Ten Devonshire Place will be open 7 evenings a week, offering you a place to meet with friends or make new ones. You can discover a brave new world of beverages, with good, real music, real people a real fire… and, they hope, a real good time.
https://www.facebook.com/10DevonshirePl
back-bar-nearing-completion
Full disclosure: Dj Trev was NOT paid to write this article, but in fairness he DID owe them a favor given that The Aikmans gave him his career. Well, he found it down the back of a radiator whilst on their premises at any rate.

2 Comments

  1. I read with interest. This will be manner local. There used to by that economic benchmark about the chimneypots countable from the front door of a prospective pub gives you an indication of how busy it might be. Without doing a site visit (which I fully intend to, especially if I receive a one of those Vip pre opening opening night invites that seem to be all the rage these days, he said hintingley) I can’t be sure, but I would guess a fair few chimney pots are in range. Given that a chimney pot typically has at least one ‘stoker’ and/or an old boiler, footfall could be quite high.

    Will the area stand for an extra ale pub? I suspect it will. The mucky duck – just a few doors up the road seems to have good trade 7 nights a week and from what I understand, it’s not all locals like me who patronise said pub; people come from far and wide (ish) to enjoy the offerings – why not make a micro brew micro crawl of your area visit and take in two quality boozers, might be the appeal.

    Finally – for the sake of brevity, I believe Jimmys manifest as The Old Bourbon prior, and IMHO, did a fair portion of the ground breaking and inflection point stuff you cited in your fine article Mr. Trev.

    Anyhoo – keep up the good work.

    Matt

  2. Thanks for the review. I have visited three times so far. I like most of the furniture. It was very cold on the first two visits. No real fire like before but I am assured there will be (when?). The staff were non smiling and uninterested in the bakground of the place. When I asked about the bar top counter having been replaced (with some horrible wood) I was told ‘i wouldn’t know anything about that’. There was nothing wrong with the previous pub and your remark that ‘nobody was up in arms’ (poor pun) was inaccurate as many locals were sorry when it closed. It was known as a ‘rough pub’ but this wasn’t true. It was a community pub where people from the local area could go and feel supported socially even if the were single. I took my elderly mother there on several occasions, knowing she would be looked after by the customers and staff. I think what you wanted to say was that it was full of working-class folk. Yes it was but I am middle-class and middle-aged and not snobby so it was fine for me.

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