The pubs showcased all boast amazing history and heritage with many retaining original features from low wooden beams to stained glass windows as well as fireplaces and heritage tilework.
Some have been granted listed status while others have a place in Sheffield’s long and interesting history.
With thanks to Dave Pickersgill, editor of Sheffield's Real Heritage Pubs a Camra publication.

5. The Commercial
The Commercial, Station Road, Chapeltown, was built in 1890 by Strouts Brewery of Burton Road, Neepsend. Today, What Pub? describes it as a ‘friendly well-established free house’. | Google

6. The Crown and Glove
The Crown and Glove on Uppergate Road, Stannington, has two rooms little altered since a 1962 refurbishment by Wards Brewery. It also offers a traditional welcome. | Google

7. The Fat Cat
The Fat Cat on Alma Street, Kelham Island, was Grade II listed in 1999. Opened in 1850, it remains a detailed example of a mid-C19th pub, according to Camra. Opened by Dave Wickett and Bruce Bentley in 1981 it became one of the first real ale freehouses in the UK. Today, it brews on site and remains ‘ferociously independent’. | Google

8. Gardeners Rest
Gardeners Rest, on Neepsend Lane, dates back to the nineteenth century. It was given a new lease of life in 2016 when regulars established The Gardeners Rest Community Society and bought it. It is now a ‘community asset’ with 430 investors. | Google