Hello dutchman
I am certain I didn't mix the two pubs - I don't remember ever seeing the George IV. However, I didn't say the William IV was in Fleet St. When there was a traffic island at St John's church, just at the end of Fleet St was Allwoods' triple-fronted store (Allwoods, Atkins and Turton) - I well remember it, set back with a wide pavement in front and a glorious smell of roasting coffee (I can smell it now in my mind...) then two or three other buildings, then the William IV, also with a wide pavement in front, which was, I guess, in Spon St, effectively between the traffic islands at St John's and Holyhead Road. I always thought it a forbidding building; painted a sort of dirty cream, with the name in 18 inch high letters mounted on the front wall, under the upper windows. Two doors, each up a couple of steps, and rather small windows. The Co-op was the other side of Fleet St. If you started by the bus stops in front of the derelict frame of the 'new' Co-op, there was a tobacconist and a newsagent; the entrance to Iliffe's (which was upstairs); the Co-op Chemist, then another shop on the corner, and around the corner (which I tend to think of as Smithford St, but was probably Fleet St still) the large Co-op furniture shop (well, there was always furniture n the display windows). Then two or three other shops, among which was a travel agent - we never went in any of those shops - the the large pub on the corner of West Orchard, the 'Admiral Codrington'. There were only foundations on the other side of West Orchard until the White Lion, which was on its own, and just beyond it, the wire fence stopping people falling in the opened cellars between there and Broadgate.
Going up the other side from Allwoods (which my mother shopped at every week) were some more shops, including, as I remember, a funeral parlour (we DEFINITELY didn't shop there!!
) then a piece of market on a largish bomb site, behind which were canvas screens hiding the Sherbourne (the market traders chucked loads of rubbish over the screens) then a bit further up Woolworths, with the large archway entrance to the arcade on its left hand side.
Mother with me in tow went to town on the No 11 bus more than once a week, getting off in Corporation St and making a beeline for the market in Smithford St, after which we would go through the arcade, some more shopping in the Barracks Market, and every so often to the Food Office, near the Geisha cafe, as I remember. I can remember its interior clearly, but not its outside or exactly where the entrance was, just that it was close to the Three Tuns one side and the Geisha the other.
Occasionally we went along Corporation St to the bit of market on the site of the old Rex cinema - I loved to go there, there was a brilliant toy stall, right at the back - and to the Gas showroom to pay the bill, or buy a new burner for the gas cooker. I clearly remember Newsome's rather drab grey frontage along Corporation St, and there was a large shoe shop in the stub of a turning towards West Orchard not far after the Co-op store's derelict site,blocked off to permit building work.
I can't recall a George IV pub at all...although I sort of have a vague recollection of another pub on the same side as Allwoods, but further up towards Woolie's.
Does that make sense to you?