Barnsley Town Hall

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Barnsley Town Hall

Yorkshire
West Riding

BarnsleyTownHallVertical.jpg
Barnsley Town Hall
Location
Location: 53°33’15"N, 1°28’58"W
History
Address: Church Street, Barnsley S70 2AE
Built 1932-3
By: Arnold Thornely
Material: Portland stone
Information

Barnsley Town Hall is the seat of local government in Barnsley, Yorkshire.

The foundation stone of Barnsley Town Hall was laid on 21 April 1932 and was opened by His Royal Highness Edward, Prince of Wales on 14 December 1933. The cost of construction of the town hall and of furnishing the new seat of local government was £188,037 12/10d. George Orwell in his book The Road to Wigan Pier was highly critical of this expenditure, and claimed that the council should have spent the money on improving the housing and living conditions of the local miners.[1] " Orwell spent a number of days in the town living in the houses of the working-class miners while researching for the book.

Barnsley Town Hall bears more than a passing resemblance to the Parliament Buildings of Northern Ireland at Stormont, and, like Stormont, its façade is sculpted in Portland stone. This is doubtless because both buildings share the same architect, Arnold Thornely|Sir Arnold Thornely.

In front of the Town Hall, the soldier of the war memorial looks down Regent Street, the financial heart of Barnsley. The cenotaph was built before the Town Hall.

Only a small number of council departments are based in the Town Hall, most of the offices having been distributed around the town centre. In 2006 the Council are building new offices on Westgate to the west of the Town Hall to accommodate 700 staff.

The structure can be seen from the M1, to the west of Barnsley.

Experience Barnsley

In June 2013, part of the Town Hall became 'Experience Barnsley', a museum dedicated to the history of the town and its people. The museum's collection is built up from objects and stories donated and loaned by residents.

Exhibits include area social history, archaeology and Roman history, coal mining and other industries, and the history of the Town Hall and local civic government. The archives document the history of the borough from the 12th to 21st centuries.

References

  1. A Kind of Compulsion, p558, Notes for The Road to Wigan Pier : " total cost of new Town hall was £148,697 and was incurred at a time when the town admittedly needed over 2000 houses, not to mention public baths."

Outside links

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