Look for a long, refaced frontage with a slightly overhanging first floor, a low roofline, and a dark central doorway tucked into the old pub face.
Here’s your first clue to St Albans... ordinary-looking buildings rarely stay ordinary for long. The White Lion likely began life at the end of the sixteenth century as a timber-framed house, and that upper floor still juts out a touch - a jettied floor, meaning it projects over the level below - even though the old timber skeleton has been smoothed over from the street.
By seventeen thirty-five, deeds already called this place the White Lion, but they also whispered its earlier name: the Three Cupps. The same paperwork says part of the building had served as a meeting house, then a brewhouse. So right from the start, this address kept changing its hat.
Take a moment and study the frontage... what looks polished, and what feels older underneath? If you check the image in the app, Sopwell Lane gives you the same little tease.
Power here did not only sit in grand church walls or official rooms. It turned up in pubs, on lanes, and in the question of who could gather, sell drink, or dodge a watchful eye. Local police reportedly disliked this place because it had three exits... handy for customers, even handier for troublemakers.
Later owners and mortgage holders - Samuel Long, William Wiltshire, Henry Potter, Moses Machorro - kept passing it around, while landlord David Worcester earned praise for the quality of the beer. If one inn can hide this much, the city ahead will keep opening secret compartments. When you’re ready, continue to the Hare and Hounds, about a one-minute walk away; if you circle back later, this moderate-priced pub generally opens from noon until eleven.


