Pubs in Dartmouth

Public house, made by joining together two small houses, one onto Church Close and another onto Smith Street. Late C16/early C17 house onto Smith Street, probably C17 house onto Church Close, both with substantial later alterations. Claims to be the oldest Ale House in Dartmouth, now Grade II listed.
Previously known as the Old Country House Inn and the Royal Union Inn the Dolphin is Grade II listed.
Ground floor has a very good late C19 glazed tile front: the irregular 4 windows (now C20) are separated by single or paired panelled pilasters of pale and darker green tile; right of centre a decorative tile panel advertises Star Ales from the Plymouth Brewery; at the right end the doorway is recessed and canted across the corner (part-glazed double doors) and the corner of the upper floor is supported on a fluted ceramic column with Corinthian capital.
Dartmouth and District Conservative Club
Grade II listed large building, probably made by joining 2 or 3 houses, now Conservative Club and offices. c1830, some C20 alterations.
Mid 19th Century, Grade II listed
A pair of merchant's houses, dated 1639, united and converted to an inn in the C18. Built for William Barnes and Joseph Cubbitt. By 1736 Barnes' house (the right one) was known as the New Inn owned by John Summers, and by 1782 John Browne had acquired Cubbitt's house and the 2 were already known as The Castle. The late C18 improvements are probably associated with him. Extensive alterations in 1840.
Purchased by St Austell Brewery in 2020, extensive interior refurbishment in 2025. Grade II* listed.
From 1820 a public house, with house above, Grade II listed. Currently closed with extensive interior works underway.
Stoke Fleming
The Green Dragon
A Grade II listed public house, possibly originally the church house. Circa early to end C17, extended in circa late C18 or early C19 and remodelled and extended again in circa mid C19. Rendered local stone rubble. Bitumen-coated slate roof over right hand end, reclad in asbestos slates over left hand end. There is rumoured to be a tunnel from the pub to a nearby beach.