Skip to Content

The Irish Pub That Also Sold Nails, Groceries, and Coffins — and Why the Country Loved It

Sharing is caring!

Walk into the right rural pub in Ireland and something will catch you off guard. Behind the bar, between the whiskey bottles, sit boxes of nails, lengths of rope, or tins of boot polish. On a shelf above the optics, a stack of prayer cards. And in the back, rumour has it, a measuring tape kept for the occasional suit fitting.

The warm, welcoming interior of a traditional Irish pub, with a polished bar and bottles lined up behind it
Photo: Shutterstock

This is the Irish counter pub — and for generations, it was the most important room in the parish.

When One Room Had to Do Everything

In rural Ireland before the twentieth century, a village might have only one or two commercial premises serving dozens of townlands. There was no hardware shop down the road, no supermarket in the next town.

There was the pub, and the pub sold everything.

The counter pub — sometimes called a shop pub or a grocery pub — combined a licensed premises with a general store. You could walk in, order a pint of stout, and while waiting, buy a pound of butter, a box of candles, or enough twine to mend a fence. In some parts of Connacht, the same man who pulled your pint could measure you for a pair of trousers.

This was not a novelty. It was simply how commerce worked when communities were small and resources were scarce.

A Pint and a Pound of Nails, Please

The range of goods sold varied wildly from one establishment to the next. Some counter pubs stocked flour, sugar, and tea alongside the spirits. Others held hardware — bolts, hinges, buckets, shovels. A few kept fabrics and drapery behind the counter. In fishing communities along the west coast, you might purchase nets from the same counter where you ordered your stout.

These were not convenience shops that happened to hold a licence. They were the social and commercial heart of the townland.

The person behind the counter knew every family for miles around, kept informal credit, offered news and gossip alongside the goods, and often served as the closest thing to a local banker for those who had nowhere else to turn.

The Undertaker Who Poured the Best Pint in the Parish

The darkest and most extraordinary variation of the counter pub was the establishment that also served as an undertaker’s. In certain parts of Ireland — particularly in the west and south — it was entirely normal for the local publican to be the one who prepared the dead for burial.

The reasoning was practical. In a small community, one trusted family had to take on duties that urban areas spread across specialist businesses. The publican had space, presence, and the community’s confidence. So the room where wakes were held through the long night was often the same room where drinks were poured the morning after.

Morrissey’s in Abbeyleix, County Laois, is perhaps the most famous surviving example — a bar and provisions shop that has barely changed since the 1770s. John Benny’s in Dingle still carries the spirit of the old tradition. These are not museums. History is lived here, every single day.

A Kind of Democracy

Part of what made the counter pub so beloved was what it quietly represented. In a society where class divisions ran deep, the shop pub flattened hierarchy.

The farmer, the labourer, the schoolmaster, and the draper’s assistant all bought their tobacco from the same counter, drank from the same bar, and stood in the same sawdust. There was no separation between commerce and community. Life happened here — births were announced, matches were made, emigrations mourned.

The counter was both the heart of trade and the heart of belonging. If you want to understand why Irish pub culture feels so different from anywhere else in the world, the counter pub is where that difference was forged.

Why They Are Fading

The twentieth century was not kind to the counter pub. Supermarkets arrived. Regulations began separating licensed premises from retail trade. Succession crises emptied villages of the families who had run these places for generations.

Many were renovated beyond recognition — the nail bins replaced with chrome fittings, the prayer-card shelf given over to craft beer taps. Others simply closed, the building sold, the goods dispersed, the measuring tape lost forever.

What remains is precious. A handful of working counter pubs still operate across Ireland, many in the west and midlands. They are not preserved for tourists. They are working businesses, pulling pints and selling the occasional bag of coal or tin of soup, because that is what they have always done.

If you find one on your travels — and you will, if you look — take a moment before you order. Read the shelves. Understand that what you are standing in once held the whole world of a parish.

For more on what makes Ireland’s pub culture unlike anywhere else on earth, the strange laws that once shaped every Irish pub tell a story every visitor should know. And if you’re ready to explore this remarkable island for yourself, start your Ireland trip planning here.

The counter pub was never just about commerce or drink. It was a building that trusted its community with everything it needed — and asked only that people come back. That kind of place doesn’t disappear from memory, even when the nail bins are long gone.

Love Ireland? So do 65,000 of us.

Join the Love Ireland newsletter — free stories of Irish heritage, hidden gems, and the magic of the Emerald Isle delivered to your inbox.

Subscribe Free →

☘️ Want More Hidden Ireland?

Join 64,000+ subscribers who discover Ireland’s best-kept secrets every week.

Subscribe Free — Join the Community →

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime · No spam

📥 Free Download: Ireland Travel Planning Guide

Our most popular resource — itineraries, insider tips, and the 50 places you must not miss.

Download Free PDF →

Other newsletters you might like

Springbokfans

The best Springbok updates, straight to your inbox. Only when something worth reading actually happens.

Subscribe

My Local Dublin

Dublin Ireland - Explore the city and find things to do, places to see and food to eat.

Subscribe

Love Netherlands

Canal towns, hidden villages, Dutch stories — a slow, loving look at the Netherlands, written by the people who love it most.

Subscribe

Love London

A newsletter for Londoners who want to rediscover their own city. Travellers planning their first or fifth visit. Anglophiles who fell in love with London through literature, film, or a rainy afternoon on the South Bank.

Subscribe

Newsletters via the One Two Three Send network.  ·  Want your newsletter featured here? Click here

Secure Your Dream Irish Experience Before It’s Gone!

Planning a trip to Ireland? Don’t let sold-out tours or packed attractions spoil your journey. Iconic experiences like visiting the Cliffs of Moher, exploring the Rock of Cashel, or enjoying a guided walk through Ireland’s ancient past often sell out quickly—especially during peak travel seasons.

Booking in advance guarantees your place and ensures you can fully immerse yourself in the rich culture and breathtaking scenery without stress or disappointment. You’ll also free up time to explore Ireland’s hidden gems and savour those authentic moments that make your trip truly special.

Make the most of your journey—start planning today and secure those must-do experiences before they’re gone!

Sharing is caring!

DISCLAIMER

Last updated May 29, 2023


WEBSITE DISCLAIMER

The information provided by Love to Visit LLC ('we', 'us', or 'our') on https://lovetovisitireland.com (the 'Site') is for general informational purposes only. All information on the Site is provided in good faith, however we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness of any information on the Site. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCE SHALL WE HAVE ANY LIABILITY TO YOU FOR ANY LOSS OR DAMAGE OF ANY KIND INCURRED AS A RESULT OF THE USE OF THE SITE OR RELIANCE ON ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED ON THE SITE. YOUR USE OF THE SITE AND YOUR RELIANCE ON ANY INFORMATION ON THE SITE IS SOLELY AT YOUR OWN RISK.

EXTERNAL LINKS DISCLAIMER

The Site may contain (or you may be sent through the Site) links to other websites or content belonging to or originating from third parties or links to websites and features in banners or other advertising. Such external links are not investigated, monitored, or checked for accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness by us. WE DO NOT WARRANT, ENDORSE, GUARANTEE, OR ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OR RELIABILITY OF ANY INFORMATION OFFERED BY THIRD-PARTY WEBSITES LINKED THROUGH THE SITE OR ANY WEBSITE OR FEATURE LINKED IN ANY BANNER OR OTHER ADVERTISING. WE WILL NOT BE A PARTY TO OR IN ANY WAY BE RESPONSIBLE FOR MONITORING ANY TRANSACTION BETWEEN YOU AND THIRD-PARTY PROVIDERS OF PRODUCTS OR SERVICES.

AFFILIATES DISCLAIMER

The Site may contain links to affiliate websites, and we receive an affiliate commission for any purchases made by you on the affiliate website using such links. Our affiliates include the following:
  • Viator

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn advertising fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated websites.

This disclaimer was created using Termly's Disclaimer Generator.