While The Railway Tavern would be built in the 1840s, the pub becomes popularized when Charlie Brown becomes the owner. While the name of the tavern would remain, The Railway Tavern, many coined the nickname Charlie Brown’s Pub. The name would eventually be changed by 1972 to Charlie Brown’s, but at the time of the photo, Bill Brandt names the location Charlie Brown’s Pub. Brandt was a person who investigated the local histories and people of each area that he encountered in London, so it’s very likely that he knew the history of the tavern before his arrival. News about the tavern spread everywhere since Charlie Brown’s lovable attitude and the environment of the pub welcomed many to travel and see it. There were quite a few trinkets that had made their way into the bar that Brown would boldly post all over and gave it a unique feel (Mystery of the Charlie Brown Roundabout). In the end, the real Charlie Brown’s pub would be demolished in 1989 due to an encroaching project by the railway in London. Many of the possessions in the pub are unable to be traced, so Brandt’s photograph is one of the few images that remain of the historic pub.