Joe Hillman knew a thing or two about promoting his business. From the one column, full page length advert attached below we can see he was going from strength to strength by May 1865.
He has just renovated his premises and now offers good commercial accommodation, a dining room, a luncheon bar on the London Plan (with a gridiron facility for cooking steak and chops), a smoking room and an Assembly Room. He makes available a range of national newspapers for patrons and a good cellar.
And of course he’s well placed for the Town Hall, New Street and all Birmingham has to offer. By all accounts Joe’s business survived into the 1880s when the General Post Office was built on this site.
Not sure about the ‘cabinet pudding’. Never heard of it. Viv.
Image below from the Pinfold Street thread posted by Phil https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/index.php?threads/pinfold-street.45498/

He has just renovated his premises and now offers good commercial accommodation, a dining room, a luncheon bar on the London Plan (with a gridiron facility for cooking steak and chops), a smoking room and an Assembly Room. He makes available a range of national newspapers for patrons and a good cellar.
And of course he’s well placed for the Town Hall, New Street and all Birmingham has to offer. By all accounts Joe’s business survived into the 1880s when the General Post Office was built on this site.
Not sure about the ‘cabinet pudding’. Never heard of it. Viv.
Image below from the Pinfold Street thread posted by Phil https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/index.php?threads/pinfold-street.45498/

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