Old Town Hall, Stranraer | |
Coordinates: | 54.9044°N -5.0283°W |
Location: | George Street, Stranraer |
Built: | 1776 |
Architect: | Edward Wallace and Thomas Hall |
Architecture: | Neoclassical style |
Designation1: | Category A Listed Building |
Designation1 Offname: | Old Town Hall, George Street, Stranraer |
Designation1 Date: | 20 July 1972 |
Designation1 Number: | LB41745 |
The Old Town Hall is a municipal structure in George Street, Stranraer, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. The structure, which is used as a local history museum, is a Category A listed building.
The first municipal structure in Stanraer was a tolbooth which was built on part of the local parish churchyard and dated back to the late 17th century: the tolbooth was the host to an Irish pirate known as "Mccairty" who was captured off the coast of Kirkcudbrightshire and imprisoned there in 1699.[1] By the 1770s, the tolbooth was very dilapidated and the burgh leaders decided to demolish it and replace it with a new town hall on the same site.[2]
The new building was designed and built by Edward Wallace and Thomas Hall in the neoclassical style, built in rubble masonry with a stucco finish and was completed in June 1776. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with three bays facing onto George Street; the central bay, which slightly projected forward, featured a doorway with a fanlight and a pediment above; on the first floor there was a panel showing the burgh coat of arms which depicted a ship with three sails and the motto "Tutissima Statio" (English: "The safest station"). The outer bays were fenestrated with sash windows on the first floor, while the central bay was surmounted by a tower, with a parapet and a balustrade in the first stage, an octagonal belfry in the second stage and a spire with a weather vane above. Internally, the principal rooms were the guardhouse and the lock-up on the ground floor and the debtors' prison, which was later converted for use as a council chamber, on the first floor. The building was extended to the rear to accommodate a corn exchange and a courtroom in 1855.[2]
After the council relocated to new premises in Lewis Street in 1874, the old town hall was briefly used as a drill hall and armoury for the 2nd Wigtownshire Rifle Volunteer Corps,[3] and was then used as the home of the Athenaeum Club, before being taken over by the fire service in 1879.[4] A clock, which was presented to the town by a former town clerk, William Black, was installed in the tower in 1936.[2] The fire service eventually relocated from the town hall to a new purpose-built fire station in Lewis Street in 1960.[5] The Stranraer Museum, which by the middle of the 20th century had built up a substantial collection of axes and other archaeological exhibits, then established itself in the building.[6] Other significant items which were added to the collection included an 18th century plough,[7] as well as a variety of items relating to the polar explorers, Sir John Ross, and his nephew, James Clark Ross.[8]
Works of art in the building include a painting by Henry John Dobson depicting an old lady spinning,[9] and a painting by George Pirie depicting a boy with a terrier and pups,[10] as well as landscape paintings by Alexander Brownlie Docharty,[11] George Houston[12] and Archibald David Reid.[13]