The name of the Bermondsey pub was The Royal Fort, 131 Grange Road, Bermondsey. I've visited the site over the years on Google Earth and recently noticed that it is no longer a pub but has undergone some serious rebuilding to become a commercial property of some kind. Incidentally, Tommy Steele made a mistake when he indicated that the "Lilliput Arms" was one of his notable pubs. It's called the "Lilliput Hall" and was the finest pub for live jazz in SE London. I know this first hand because the owner, Bert Annabel (a pianist of some considerable note, who included among his friends, Bud Powell an American virtuoso pianist based in Paris, France, and Victor Feldman, an ex-Londoner, who made it big on the west coast as pianist with Cannonball Adderley's Quintet and in the recording studios) provided live music 7 nights a week. I know this because I was the bass player at the "Lilliput" for a few months before I left London for the island of Jersey and the bass chair with Ronnie Rand and his Blue Rockets in 1964. However, in 1963, I took my first trip to the US on the Queen Mary. The Lilliput had various jazz singers and instrumentalists backed by the house trio led by Bert Annabel. This was not, I might add, a gig for the Fender Bass, but achieved with a double bass made by John Osborne of Leamington Spa back in the 1800s. The pub shut at 11:00 pm, so frequently I'd be called upon to sub at some West End nightclub.