Town Halls:
During the 16th and 17th centuries merchants not only needed corporate space to carry on business, but also sought to express civic pride in building impressive new market halls/town/guild halls. Wealthy merchants and tradesmen were starting to vie for power with the local gentry. A great percentage of town councillors and aldermen came from this class. They took pride in their new found powers, which were reflected in the civic buildings they commissioned. These market halls were usually built or rebuilt in the already existing medieval market places. [The HSMR lists 13 medieval market places.]
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According to Pevsner, the Old Town Hall was "a sight
to thrill any visitor from England or abroad. It was the most fantastic black
and white building imaginable, three-storeyed, with gables and the richest,
most curious decoration."
The Market Hall was supported by 27 timber columns arranged in three rows of nine.
It was 84 feet long and 34 feet wide and crowned by a lantern which was over
100 feet high. It has been said that it was the largest building of its kind
in Britain.
The first floor was used for magistrate's chambers and the assize court and the second floor provided chambers for 14 craft guilds: bakers, barbers, barber surgeons, braziers, butchers, clothiers, coopers, cordwainers, glovers, joiners, mercers, tanners, tylers, and weavers. The open space between the pillars was used for the market place.
Built at the end of the 16th century in the centre of High Town,
the upper storey was removed in 1792 to ease the pressure on the timber pillars.
At this time it was also covered in plasterwork considered fashionable in its
day.
The Market Hall was part of a row of buildings call the Butcher's
Row. The entire building was taken down in 1862, as were all
the other buildings in Butcher's Row, with the exception of the Old
House, to allow traffic to flow more easily and because they
were considered a public nuisance in that cattle was still slaughtered there.
You can see an information board in the centre of the now pedestrian area across
from the Butter Market. The paving stones are designed to show where the Market
Hall would have originally stood. Now the Old House is the only remaining building
of Butcher's Row.
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How to find market halls on the HSMR database:
Search under site type for market house, market hall and town hall. You will find at least twelve for Herefordshire. Only three will be mentioned here.
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Ross-on
Wye Market Hall (SMR 582) |
This market hall, unusual for town halls in Herefordshire, was built of sandstone in the early 1650s. To make way for this building and to widen the market area, the high cross, the old boothall and several tenements were demolished. The upper storey is supported by stone arches and was accessed by an external staircase, which was replaced with an internal oak one in 1690. The upper room was used as a courtroom by manor officials. The ground floor is open and to this day is used for weekly market activity. At the east gable there is a medallion of Charles II who is thought to have once visited Ross during the civil war. The cupola with the four clock faces is an early 18th century structure.
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Grange
Court, (Old Town Hall) Leominster
(SMR 4014) |
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This pretty timber framed market hall was built by John Abel in 1633 at the junction of High Street and Broad Street. [John Abel was given the honorary title, "King's Carpenter" by King Charles I for his efforts in helping the citizens of Hereford when they were besieged by the Scottish army during the Civil War. John Abel had supposedly devised hand mills for gun powder and corn after the powder mill was destroyed in a bombardment. John Abel was responsible for much building work in the county, such as Ledbury Market Hall and Weobley School House.]
The second storey, which was richly decorated, is supported by 12 oak columns. The building was financed by the local gentry, who decorated parts of the building with shields bearing their respective arms. These however, do not survive. Busts of men and bare bosomed women and inscriptions added to the ornamentation.
In 1750/51 the market hall was refurbished for the use as a town hall and court. In 1790-92 the weight of the roof was lessened by the removal of the dormer windows and by replacing the stone tiles with slates. The pillars were reinforced with stone as it was felt that the building was unsafe.
You can still see the market hall today, albeit in a different location. The Leominster Market and Fairs Act of 1853 gave permission for the building to be taken down. In 1858 it was re-erected by Mr.Arkwright of Hampton Court at Grange Court in Leominster as a dwelling house after languishing in a builder's yard. The open ground floor was closed in and a wing built at the back.
Covered Market, Pembridge (SMR 360)
with farmers' market
This timber framed building which has been dendro dated to circa 1520 (Ian Tyers of the University of Sheffield indicated a felling date for the timbers of AD 1502-1538: Project Report 574w, Sept. 2002) is not actually a market hall, but merely a covered market, albeit a very picturesque one. Eight oak pillars support a roof tiled with stone slates. These pillars are supported on unworked stone bases except for one, which stands on the remains of the medieval cross base. The interior, which is open, has exposed roof beams and joists.
Once a month a farmer's market is still held here.
Ledbury
Market House (SMR 3219) |
Ledbury Market House, built around 1633, has been credited to John Abel. It is a two storey timber framed building. The lower storey is open for market activity, the upper storey, with its attractive herringbone panelling, is supported on tapered timber posts on stone plinths. The gables are divided into square panels.
TFM