Complete Hotels List

Name Description
English French and American Hotel

Description of the English French and American Hotel to be entered here...

Freemasons Arms

Description of the hotel Freemasons Arms to be entered here...

Golden Cross

Description of the Golden Cross hotel to be entered here.

Horse Shoe Inn

Description of the Horse Shoe Inn to be entered here...

Irish Arms

"... the Irish Arms public house, situated on the hill where the old toll-bar formerly stood near Parramatta ..." 1

Jolly Hatter

With a name like this, it comes as no surprise that the building was originally constructed in 1824 as a hat factory. Located 30 metres from Elizabeth Street, on the northern side, it was converted to a hotel in 1833... Source: Dennison, C. J.: Here's Cheers: A Pictorial History of Hotels, Taverns and Inns in Hobart; HCC, 2008; p. 215

Junction Hotel

Description of the hotel Junction hotel to be entered here...

Kensington Inn

There have been two hotels in Tasmania with this name, one in Hobart and one in Glenorchy. The Hobart based hotel opened in 1837 on the corner of Argyle and Bathurst street. The name was changed to the Duke of York in the early 1900s. It has also been called The Men's Gallery in more recent times but it is now the site of a high rise car park. Source: Dennison, C. J.: Here's Cheers: A Pictorial History of Hotels, Taverns and Inns in Hobart; HCC, 2008, p. 135. The Glenorchy based hotel opened in the early 1830s at 387-391 Main Road, Glenorchy. It was licensed by Joseph Walton in 1833 (but was formerly Mr. Johnsons) and known as both the Kensington Inn and the Kensington Arms. The hotel has subsequently been renamed The Racecourse Hotel. Source: Donald Howatson: The Pubs of Glenorchy; Privately Published, 2011.

Kentishbury Hotel

Description of the Kentishbury Hotel to be entered here.

Lamb Inn

The Lamb Inn has been used as the name of a couple of hotels.

John Willis was registered as a licensed victualler in Sorell with the Lamb Inn on 13 December 1833. Source: HTG 13 Dec 1833

There was also a Lamb Inn in Brisbane Street, a couple of doors east of Murray Street, which opened in 1825 and closed as a hotel in 1862. Source: Dennison, C. J.: Here's Cheers: A Pictorial History of Hotels, Taverns and Inns in Hobart; HCC, 2008; p. 243