Old Town Hall | |
---|---|
Location | St James's Street, Dunwich |
Coordinates | 52°16′39″N1°37′52″E / 52.2774°N 1.6311°E |
Built | c.1705 |
Architectural style(s) | Tudor style |
Listed Building – Grade II | |
Official name | Old Town Hall |
Designated | 16 January 1984 |
Reference no. | 1198313 |
The Old Town Hall is a former municipal building in St James's Street in Dunwich, a village in Suffolk, England. The building, which is currently operates as holiday accommodation, is a Grade II listed building. [1]
The first town hall in the town was a medieval structure which may have dated back to the time that King John visited the town and presented a charter in 1216. [2] It may well have also served as the headquarters of the local merchant's guild. [3] Following some coastal erosion, it was rebuilt on a new site in 1663. [4] However, the town was devastated by coastal flooding in 1702: St Peters Church was so badly damaged that it had to be dismantled, and the town hall was destroyed. [5] [6] [7]
Civic leaders decided to re-erect the whole town, including the town hall, some 0.25 miles (0.40 km) inland to protect it from the continuing coastal erosion. [8] The new town hall was designed in the Tudor style, built using timber frame construction techniques and completed a few years later, probably about 1705. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage of two bays facing onto St James's Street. [1] The town archives were locked in an ancient iron chest, made in The Netherlands and kept in one of the rooms in the building. [9]
Dunwich had a very small electorate and, as most of the town had disappeared under the sea, it was recognised by the UK Parliament as a rotten borough. [10] Its right to elect members of parliament was removed by the Reform Act 1832, [11] and its borough council, which met in the town hall, was reformed under the Municipal Corporations Act 1883. [12] The assets of the corporation, including the town hall, [13] were transferred to a specially formed entity, the Dunwich Town Trust, with the lord of the manor, Colonel St John Barne of Sotterley Manor, becoming the first chairman of the trust in 1889. [14] The town hall was subsequently converted for residential use and currently operates as holiday accommodation. [15]
The building has a timber-framed core, with red brick external walls, with the facade being plastered, and a pantiled roof. It has two storeys and an attic, with two windows on each floor, and a single dormer window in the attic with wide bargeboards. The windows are in the Gothic style, with diamond lattice lights. There is a two-storey extension to the right, linking it to the next house, with a 20th-century door. [1] [16] It was grade II listed in 1984. [1]
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