Havering is home to an array of great historic pubs so here are some that readers may remember and some that are still open today.
From The Orange Tree in Hornchurch, still serving pints today but seen below in a photo taken in 1955, to The Bell & Gate Inn in Collier Row in the 1920s, we have picked pubs from distinct periods in time.
Take a look at our selection of historic Havering pubs below.
The Crown pub in Hornchurch Road, Roneo Corner, 1955
This photo shows The Crown on Roneo Corner in around 1955.
A pub on this site is said to go back to 1433, according to Havering Libraries.
It remains open today, typically open from midday until 11pm.
The Orange Tree, Havering-atte-Bower, 1955
This 1955 photograph of The Orange Tree was taken for the Ind Coope & Allsopp Brewery, according to Havering Libraries.
The pub, in Orange Tree Hill, Havering-Atte-Bower, was said to date from the 1750s, having formerly been called The Olive Tree.
It remains open today.
The Kings Head, Hornchurch, 1982
The Kings Head pub in High Street, Hornchurch, dated to the 17th century but is now permanently closed.
At one point it was painted in a coral pink, as shown in this 1980s photo.
The pub shut in 2007 and is currently a Prezzo pizza restaurant, according to Havering Libraries.
The Royal Oak, Victoria Road, Romford, 1985
The Royal Oak opened as a "beer shop & premises" in the late 1800s.
It was licensed in 1872 to sell "beer, bottled beer, porter, cider, ale and perry", according to Havering Libraries.
The pub shut in October 1985 to make way for the final stage of the Romford town centre ring road.
The Bell & Gate Inn, Collier Row, 1925
This postcard shows the Bell & Gate Inn in Collier Row just after it was rebuilt in 1925.
It appeared in the list of alehouse licences issued by the Liberty of Havering Magistrates in 1772, according to Havering Libraries. It was leased to the Ind Coope Brewery in Romford by 1858.
The historic pub remains open today.
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