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CHELTENHAM TOWN HALL   
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From: 29 February 2008
To: 31 December 2008
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Cheltenham Town Hall was built in 1902-03, in order to provide a venue for the many balls and concerts which made up the town`s social calendar at the turn of the twentieth century. Until the year 1900, that role had been filled by the old Assembly Rooms in the High Street, and it was their demolition to make way for a bank that prompted the Council to build a new, and much larger, Hall on a new site.

The site chosen was a former bowling green, a part of Imperial Square, which at that time contained not only gardens but the large glass and steel Winter Gardens building, which has since been demolished. The designs for the building, which was built of freestone in a heavy classical or Baroque style, were provided by a Gloucester architect, Frederick William Waller, and the actual building work was undertaken by a Cheltenham firm, Messrs. Collins and Godfrey. The total cost of the building, including internal decoration, fixtures and fittings, was around £45,000.

The builders took possession of the site in December 1901, and on October 1st 1902, the foundation stone of the building, which can still be seen on its exterior, was laid by the Mayor, George Norman. As was the custom, a bottle containing coins, and copies of local newspapers of the day were placed behind the stone. The new Town Hall was rapidly built, and a little over a year later, on December 5th 1903, it was formally opened by Sir Michael Hicks-Beach MP, a former Chancellor of the Exchequer, and a man whose family had long-standing connections with Cheltenham.

The centrepiece of the Town Hall is its main Hall, distinguished by its Corinthian style columns and coved ceiling. It measures 92 feet x 52 feet, and is 53 feet high. In all, including balcony seating, it holds up to 1000 people, twice the number possible in the old Assembly Rooms. Its sprung floor is particularly suitable for dances.

In 1916, two plaster-cast statues of King Edward VII and King George V, in coronation robes, made by Messrs R. L. Boulton & Sons of Cheltenham were placed in alcoves on either side of the main stage. One was a gift from Mr. T.E. Whittaker and the other a gift from Messrs. Boulton themselves. The Town Hall organ was also a gift, from Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Burrow, and was installed in 1928.

The Town Hall also included dining and drawing rooms, and other offices, and to the left of the entrance hall, the Central Spa, opened in June 1906 in order to make the Cheltenham Spa waters available to residents and visitors, in a central location. The octagonal counter, and urns, which are of Doulton ware, are still in use for dispensing the spa waters.

The Town Hall is now used for concerts, banquets, meetings, dances, balls, exhibitions, conferences and as one of the major homes of Cheltenham Festivals.


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