The Black Friar is a Grade II* listed[1] public house on Queen Victoria Street in Blackfriars, London.
[2] It was built in about 1875 on the site of a former medieval Dominican friary,[3] and then remodelled in about 1905 by the architect Herbert Fuller-Clark.
[2] The building was nearly demolished during a phase of redevelopment in the 1960s, until it was saved by a campaign spearheaded by poet Sir John Betjeman.
[4] It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about a listed building in the United Kingdom is a stub.