The Jamaica Wine House has historic links to the sugar trade of the West Indies and the Ottoman Empire. There is a plaque on the wall which reads "Here stood the first London Coffee house at the sign of the Pasqua Rosee's Head 1652." Pasqua Rosée, the proprietor, was the servant of a Levant Company merchant named Daniel Edwards, a trader in Ottoman goods, who imported the coffee and assisted Rosée in setting up the establishment. The coffee house, which opened in 1652, is known in some accounts as The Turk's Head.[3][4][5]
The building that currently stands on the site, a Victorian public house, dates from 1885.[6] This pub's licence was acquired by Shepherd Neame[7] and the premises were reopened after a restoration that finished in April 2009. There is a wood-panelled bar with three sections on the ground floor and downstairs restaurant.
^Freeman, Janet Ing (2013). The Epicure's Almanack - Eating and Drinking in Regency London (2nd ed.). London, England: The British Library. p. 19. ISBN978 0 7123 5704 3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)