94 UK Pubs Called White Swan














Arundel
Aylesbury (Whitchurch)
Beaconsfield
Bewdley
Birmingham (Edgbaston)
Birmingham (Wythall)
Bradford
Bradford (Idle)
Brecon
Bristol
Broadstairs
Bungay
Burntwood (Burntwood Green)
Cambridge
Cambridge (Conington)
Cambridge (Stow-Cum-Quy)
Chesterfield
Chichester (Bosham)
Corby (Harringworth)
Crediton
Derby
Derby (Ockbrook)
Derby (Melbourne)
Digbeth
Dunstable
Ellesmere Port
Gainsborough (Scotter)
Garforth (Kippax)
Great Yarmouth
Halesworth
Hebden Bridge
Hoddesdon
Huntingdon (Bluntisham)
Leeds
Leeds (Yeadon)
Leicester (Newbold Verdon)
Leominster (Eardisland)
Lincoln (Torksey Lock)
London E
London EC
London N (Islington)
London SE
London SW (Westminster)
London WC
Lutterworth
Manchester (Swinton)
Market Rasen
Middlesbrough (Stokesley)
Newark
Newark (Dunham-On-Trent)
Newmarket (Exning)
North Walsham
Northallerton (Danby Wiske)
Nuneaton (Stoke Golding)
Oldbury
Peterborough (Woodnewton)
Pickering (Newton-on-Rawcliffe)
Prudhoe (Ovingham)
Richmond
Ryton (Greenside)
Sandhurst
Selby (Bubwith)
Sevenoaks (Ash)
Sheffield
Solihull
Southampton (West End)
Stockton on Tees
Stoke on Trent
Sutton in Ashfield
Swanage
Swansea
Tamworth (Kingsbury)
Trowbridge
Twickenham
Wigan
Worksop (Blyth)
York (Thornton le Clay)
York

What's a Canonical Name?
To simplify searches, each pub on our database has a Canonical Name - usually a shortened version of its full name missing out any common prefixes and suffixes like "The Old", "Inn", "Tavern" and so on.
This means that "The Old Crown", "The Crown Inn" and "Ye Olde Crown Taverne" are known canonically as, simply, "Crown".
We've also dropped the "The", standarised with "and" instead of "&" and in some cases simplified pluralisation.
Did we miss one?
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