Janet's Bar

Janet's Bar Iconic bar in South Kensington 1996-2021. Permanently closed. Join us for our launch party on WEDNESDAY 11TH MAY @ 10pm! We can’t wait to see you there xx

WE’RE BACK IN A NEW FORM — JANET’S BAR X RAFFLES — WEDNESDAY 11TH MAY @ 10PM

Two iconic Royal Borough venues - Janet’s Bar and Raffles Chelsea - are joining forces for a monthly VIP party at Raffles night club on King’s Road. Expect the Janet’s Bar vibe at Raffles… from music, to popcorn, and of course The Janet and Cordelia themselves. SIGN UP for Wednesday 11th May: Send Janet’s Bar a DM on In

stagram or Facebook to get on our guest list for HALF-PRICE entry to Raffles. (Sign up by 3pm on Wednesday to be on the guest list).

01/06/2026
We are keeping Kensington and Chelsea Conservative. 70% of the vote share to our team. So proud!!
08/05/2026

We are keeping Kensington and Chelsea Conservative. 70% of the vote share to our team. So proud!!

This looks like fun!
05/03/2026

This looks like fun!

25/01/2026
19/06/2023
01/04/2023
31/01/2023
A Chelsea hero and pensioner
05/11/2022

A Chelsea hero and pensioner

William "Bill" Speakman-Pitt, VC (1927-2018), a 24-year-old private in the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment), received the Victoria Cross during the Korean War. The VC is the highest award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Speakman was the first VC invested by Queen Elizabeth II.

On 4 November 1951, Pte. Speakman was attached to the 1st Battalion, King's Own Scottish Borderers. When the section holding the left shoulder of the company's position had been seriously depleted by casualties and was being overrun by the enemy, Speakman, on his own initiative, filled his pockets with grenades going forward and pelting the Chinese with the grenades.

Having thrown all of the grenades he had taken, he returned for more. Inspired by his actions, six men joined him in collecting a pile of grenades and followed him in a series of charges. He broke up several enemy attacks, causing heavy casualties, and in spite of being wounded in the leg and the shoulder continued to lead charge after charge.

Such was the ferocity of the fighting, that they ran low on ammunition, resorting to throwing stones and ration tins. The enemy was kept at bay long enough to enable his company to withdraw safely.

The Press of the time nicknamed him the 'beer bottle VC', something he disliked for fear that it suggested he and his colleagues drank beer while on duty; the beer was in fact used to cool gun barrels.

Speakman later achieved the rank of sergeant and served in Malaya (with the Special Air Service), Borneo and Radfan.

In a ceremony held in Seoul on 21 April 2015 for visiting veterans of the Korean War, Speakman gave a replica of his Victoria Cross and other medals to the people and government of South Korea.

Speakman became an in-pensioner of the Royal Hospital Chelsea and died on 20 June 2018. His ashes were buried in the United Nations Memorial Cemetery, South Korea on 19 February 2019.

A woman for us to remember! 👒🎩 chapeaux!
02/11/2022

A woman for us to remember! 👒🎩 chapeaux!

They seemed to creep out of the woodwork that last Sunday of April in 1945 - living skeletons, covered with lice, waving tiny Allied flags pieced together from scraps. They became hysterical when the realization struck that those coming through the gates were liberators, and they hugged and kissed their saviors wildly. This was the scene at Dachau concentration camp in southern Germany as the U.S. Army liberated 33,000 remaining prisoners. One of the former prisoners, a Polish priest, grabbed the first uniform he saw and kissed the goggled and helmeted figure over and over. Imagine his surprise when he found that he was kissing not a soldier, but a young woman!

Marguerite Higgins was a reporter for the New York Herald Tribune and at age 23 was the first correspondent to report on the liberation of Dachau. Her report, which shocked the American public, was filed even as the 45th Infantry Division continued to fight the SS in the northern part of the camp. She was not a soldier, but her role on the front lines was a critical one…She was a witness, a truth-teller, one who would capture the horror and the suffering in the written word, so that it would never be forgotten.

Marguerite Higgins would go to cover wars in Korea and Vietnam and would be the first female recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting. And so why have so few of us heard of her, this daring girl with her smiling face? Marguerite Higgins contracted a tropical disease while reporting in Vietnam and died on January 3, 1966. She was 45 years old.
Here’s to all the truth-tellers, to those who bear witness. May we never forget…

Thank you to everyone who joined us for the Janet’s Bar x Raffles launch - it was so good to see you all again! Please s...
13/05/2022

Thank you to everyone who joined us for the Janet’s Bar x Raffles launch - it was so good to see you all again! Please send us any photos you have photos from the evening as we’d love to see them 😘

If you were unable to make it to this one, fear not! The next date will be announced shortly 👀 xoxo



Over 100 people signed up so far! Send us a message to get on the Janet’s Bar guest list for half-price entry to Raffles...
09/05/2022

Over 100 people signed up so far! Send us a message to get on the Janet’s Bar guest list for half-price entry to Raffles this Wednesday @ 10pm. We can’t wait to see you there! 🥳



Address

30 Old Brompton Road
London
SW73DL

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Janet's Bar posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Establishment

Send a message to Janet's Bar:

Share

Category