Hastings Town Hall Explained

Hastings Town Hall
Coordinates:50.8563°N 0.5806°W
Location:Queen's Road, Hastings
Built:1881
Architect:Henry Ward
Architecture:English Gothic style
Designation1:Grade II Listed Building
Designation1 Offname:Town Hall
Designation1 Date:13 January 1999
Designation1 Number:1245060

Hastings Town Hall is a municipal building in Queen's Road, Hastings, East Sussex, England. The town hall, which was the meeting place of Hastings Borough Council, is a Grade II listed building.

History

The first town hall in the town was built at the expense of local members of parliament, John Pulteney and Peter Gott, in the High Street in 1700.[1] [2] [3] It was replaced by a stuccoed structure which was built on the same site and completed in 1823. It was arcaded on the ground floor to allow markets to be held, with an assembly room on the first floor.

In the 1870s, following significant population growth largely associated with the seaside tourism industry, civic leaders decided to procure a more substantial town hall: the site they selected was a triangular plot in Queen's Road which had been occupied by a row of terraced houses.[4]

The new building was the subject of a design competition[5] which was won by the local architect, Henry Ward.[6] It was designed in the English Gothic style and officially opened by the mayor, Councillor W. F. Revill, on 7 September 1881.[6] [7] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with three bays facing onto Queen's Road; the central bay featured an arched doorway, a stone balcony and a pair of tall stained glass lancet windows with bar tracery with cusped circles (with bars radiating from a central rose window) on the first floor with a gable above. The doorway and the windows on the first floor, including those in the outer bays which also employed paired lancet windows, were all flanked by colonettes. Four carved panels were erected on the eastern side of the building illustrating "Hastings Fishermen boarding French Pirates", "The Landing of the French and their Defeat", "Queen Elizabeth Granting the Charter to the Corporation" and "Cinque Port Ships Going to meet the Armada". Internally, the principal rooms were the council chamber and the mayor's parlour.

The area became a county borough, with the town hall as its headquarters in 1888.[8] The mayor, Councillor E. Armitage Hocking, received the colours of the 5th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment at the town hall on 5 August 1914 before the unit was deployed to France at the start of the First World War,[9] and the then mayor, Councillor William Perrins, set out from the town hall to meet King George V on his visit to the town near the end of the war on 30 August 1918.[10]

The town hall continued to serve as the headquarters of the county borough council for much of the 20th century and remained the local seat of government after the formation of the enlarged Hastings Borough Council in 1974.[11] The borough council subsequently established modern municipal offices at Aquila House in Breeds Place (renamed Muriel Matters House in 2016);[12] [13] however, following an extensive refurbishment, the town hall was re-opened as the local register office in March 2016.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hastings of Bygone Days and the Present. Henry. Cousins. F. J. Partsons. 1920. 337.
  2. Web site: Hastings Old Town History. Hastings and St Leonards Online Guide. 2 February 2021.
  3. Web site: The Gentlemen's Magazine. 136. 126. 1824.
  4. Web site: Ordnance Survey Map. 1873. 2 February 2021.
  5. Web site: Hastings Town Hall. Archiseek. 2 February 2021.
  6. Web site: 1850-1899. Hastings Chronicle. 2 February 2021. 13 August 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170813143919/http://hastingschronicle.net/key-events/1850-1899/. dead.
  7. Cousins 1920, p. 207
  8. Web site: Hastings CB/MB. Vision of Britain. 2 February 2021.
  9. Web site: 1900-1949. Hastings Chronicle. 2 February 2021.
  10. Cousins 1920, p. 290
  11. Book: Local Government Act 1972. 1972 c.70. The Stationery Office Ltd. 0-10-547072-4. 1997.
  12. Web site: 1900-1949. Hastings Chronicle. 2 February 2021.
  13. Web site: Full Council. 24 April 2019. Hastings Borough Council . 2 February 2021.
  14. News: New Hastings Register office opens at town hall. 11 March 2016. Hastings Observer. 2 February 2021.