Corfe Castle Town Hall | |
---|---|
Location | West Street, Corfe Castle |
Coordinates | 50°38′17″N2°03′27″W / 50.6381°N 2.0575°W |
Built | 1774 |
Architectural style(s) | Vernacular style |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name | The Old Town Hall |
Designated | 20 November 1959 |
Reference no. | 1121006 |
Corfe Castle Town Hall is a municipal building in West Street, Corfe Castle, Dorset, England. The town hall, which is currently used as a museum, is a Grade II* listed building. [1]
The ground floor of the building incorporates the remains of a thatched cottage, built with stone taken from Corfe Castle, and burnt down in 1680. [2] The town hall was commissioned by the lord of the manor, Henry Bankes the Younger, whose seat was at Kingston Lacy, as a meeting place for the borough council of Corfe Castle although ownership of the building was subsequently retained by the Bankes family. [3]
The building was designed in the Vernacular style, built in rubble masonry (on the ground floor) and red brick with stone dressings (on the first floor), and was completed in around 1774. [1] It was built into the earth bank behind. The design involved a broadly symmetrical main frontage of two bays facing onto West Street. There were two square headed doorways on the ground floor, with a bi-partite mullioned window between them and a small square window to the right. The first floor was fenestrated by two round headed windows with stone architraves and keystones. Internally the principal room was the council chamber on the first floor. [1] A lock-up for petty criminals was established on the ground floor of the building. [4]
The building also became the venue for the meetings, held on Shrove Tuesday each year, of the local quarrymen, properly referred to as "the Company of Marblers within the Town of Corfe Castle". Under the terms of an ancient charter, they were required to meet annually to maintain their ownership over the local marble quarries. This involved appointing new freemen (who needed to be legitimate descendants of exiting freemen) and electing officers. [5] [6]
Corfe Castle had a very small electorate and a dominant patron (Henry Bankes), which meant it was recognised by the UK Parliament as a rotten borough. [7] Its right to elect members of parliament was removed by the Reform Act 1832, [8] and its borough council, which had met in the town hall, was abolished under the Municipal Corporations Act 1883. [9] The building was transferred to a specially formed entity, the Corfe Castle Town Trust, in 1889. [10] The trust subsequently converted the building into a museum to exhibit aspects of local history, including dinosaur footprints and the borough mace. [11]
A major programme of repair works, financed by a fund-raising campaign led by the journalist, Jon Snow, and costing £100,000, involved the restoration of the walls at the back of the building, and was completed in 2006. [12]
Corfe Castle is a village and civil parish in the English county of Dorset. It is the site of a ruined castle of the same name. The village and castle stand over a gap in the Purbeck Hills on the route between Wareham and Swanage. The village lies in the gap below the castle and is around four miles (6.4 km) south-east of Wareham, and four miles (6.4 km) north-northwest of Swanage. Both the main A351 road from Lytchett Minster to Swanage and the Swanage Railway thread their way through the gap and the village.
Kingston Lacy is a country house and estate near Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England. It was for many years the family seat of the Bankes family who lived nearby at Corfe Castle until its destruction in the English Civil War after its incumbent owners, Sir John Bankes and Dame Mary, had remained loyal to Charles I.
Purbeck was a local government district in Dorset, England. The district was named after the Isle of Purbeck, a peninsula that forms a large proportion of the district's area. However, it extended significantly further north and west than the traditional boundary of the Isle of Purbeck which is the River Frome. The district council was based in the town of Wareham, which is itself north of the Frome.
Conwy, previously known in English as Conway, is a walled market town, community and the administrative centre of Conwy County Borough in North Wales. The walled town and castle stand on the west bank of the River Conwy, facing Deganwy on the east bank. The town formerly lay in Gwynedd and prior to that in Caernarfonshire. The community, which also includes Deganwy and Llandudno Junction, had a population of 14,753 at the 2011 census.
The Shrove Tuesday Football Ceremony of the Purbeck Marblers is a series of events dating back many years which take place in Corfe Castle, Dorset. The events occur on the date that new apprentices are introduced to the Company of Marblers and Stonecutters of Purbeck. The freemen gather in the Fox Inn West Street where they wait till Corfe Church chimes at twelve noon, where they make their way into the Town Hall, which is reputedly the smallest town hall in the country. Any apprentices wishing to be admitted into the order wait in the Fox Inn.
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