At that time, the port of Baltimore was still young and the surrounding neighborhoods quickly became home to many prominent merchants who wanted to live near their businesses. By the mid nineteenth century, W. Pratt Street grew along with the port. In the late 1940s, the building was acquired by the Pratt Furniture Company and remained as such until 1980 when it housed it’s first bar and grill, P.J. Cricketts. Then in 1992, the Olivers turned P.J. Crickkets into the Wharf Rat.
Reserve a table at Pratt Street Ale House, Baltimore on TripAdvisor: See 820 unbiased reviews of Pratt Street Ale House, rated 4 of 5 on TripAdvisor and ranked #20 of 2,052 restaurants in Baltimore.
At that time, the port of Baltimore was still young and the surrounding neighborhoods quickly became home to many prominent merchants who wanted to live near their businesses. By the mid nineteenth century, W. Pratt Street grew along with the port. In the late 1940s, the building was acquired by the Pratt Furniture Company and remained as such until 1980 when it housed it’s first bar and grill, P.J. Cricketts. Then in 1992, the Olivers turned P.J. Crickkets into the Wharf Rat.
Reserve a table at Pratt Street Ale House, Baltimore on TripAdvisor: See 820 unbiased reviews of Pratt Street Ale House, rated 4 of 5 on TripAdvisor and ranked #20 of 2,052 restaurants in Baltimore.