Wetherspoons has announced the reopening off more pubs across the country next week – including one of its Herefordshire pubs.

A further 44 pubs in England will be open for business from April 26, adding to the 394 which opened last week.

JD Wetherspoon will also go ahead with opening 60 of its pubs in Scotland and 32 in Wales next week and three pubs in Northern Ireland on April 30.

It will result in 533 of the company's 871 pubs being open.

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One of those pubs to reopen next week will be The Mail Rooms in Gloucester Road, Ross-on-Wye.

Hereford Times: The Mail Rooms in Ross-on-Wye will reopen next week The Mail Rooms in Ross-on-Wye will reopen next week

The Kings Fee in Hereford and The Dukes Head in Leominster, the other two Wetherspoon pubs in Herefordshire, have already reopened after the third national lockdown.

From April 26 all Wetherspoon pubs, including those that opened on April 12, will be extending their opening times for an extra hour each day.

Customers will be able to enter the pubs to gain access to the outside area and also to use toilets.

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The second step of Boris Johnson's roadmap out of lockdown went ahead as planned last week as pubs and restaurants welcomed back customers for outdoor drinking and dining.

Wetherspoon chief executive John Hutson said: “We are looking forward to opening the extra pubs in England as well as those in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

“We look forward to welcoming our customers and staff back to our pubs.”

Hereford Times: Wetherspoon founder Tim Martin in The Glass House, St Helens in 2016 during the EU referendum campaign Wetherspoon founder Tim Martin in The Glass House, St Helens in 2016 during the EU referendum campaign

The Wetherspoons pubs reopening next week include:

  • Moon Under Water, Leicester Square, London
  • Last Post, Southend
  • Wetherspoons, Milton Keynes
  • Richard John Blackler, Liverpool
  • Reginald Mitchell, Hanley
  • Grey Friar, Preston
  • Three Magnets, Letchworth
  • Thomas Sheraton, Stockton
  • Skylark, Croydon
  • William Jameson, Sunderland
  • Red Lion, Skegness
  • Rising Sun, Redditch
  • Rodboro Buildings, Guildford
  • Friar Penketh, Warrington
  • Holland Tringham, Streatham, London
  • Swan Inn, Weymouth
  • Hope Tap, Reading
  • Gate Clock, Greenwich, London
  • Lord John, Stroud
  • Paramount, Manchester
  • Observatory, Ilkeston
  • Mockbeggar Hall, Moreton
  • Rockingham Arms, Elephant & Castle, London
  • Mail Rooms, Ross on Wye
  • Rupert Brooke, Rugby
  • Columbia Press, Watford
  • Goodmans Field, London
  • Plough, Hammersmith, London
  • Ivy Wall, Spalding
  • Fall Well, Liverpool
  • Square Sail, Lincoln
  • Amber Rooms, Loughborough
  • Eric Bartholomew, Morecambe
  • Clairville, Wallasey
  • Old Market Hall, Mexborough
  • John Francis Basset, Camborne
  • Benjamin Fawcett, Driffield
  • Man in the Wall, Wimborne
  • Butter Cross, Bingham
  • Trent Bridge Inn, West Bridgford
  • High Main, Byker
  • Six Gold Marlets, Burgess Hill
  • Lady Chatterley, Eastwood
  • Hope & Champion, Beaconsfield