Portrush Town Hall

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Portrush Town Hall

County Antrim


Old Town Hall
Type: Town hall
Location
Grid reference: C85794054
Location: 55°12’17"N, 6°39’11"W
Town: Portrush
History
Address: Mark Street
Built 1872
By: Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon
Town hall
Scottish baronial
Information

Portrush Town Hall stands in Mark Street, Portrush, on the north coast of County Antrim. It was built as the town hall, and is now used as an events venue. It is a Grade B+ listed building.[1]

History

The Town Hall was commissioned by a group of local businessmen who decided to form a company known as the "Portrush Town Hall and Assembly Rooms Company" to finance and erect a town hall for the town: the principal landowner in the area, William Randal McDonnell, 6th Earl of Antrim, whose seat was at Glenarm Castle, leased their selected site to them at an annual rental of £15.[2]

The new building was designed by Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon in the Scottish baronial style. It was built by Thomas Stewart Dickson of Larne in red brick at a cost of £2,300 and was officially opened on 12 August 1872.[1]

The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage facing southeast towards the corner of Kerr Street and Mark Street; the left-hand section featured a curved wall with five segmentally headed windows with voussoirs on the ground floor, five round headed windows with voussoirs on the first floor and a conical roof above. The centre section took the form of a three-story turret with lancet windows on each floor and a series of trefoils under the eaves. The right-hand section was narrow and blind, while the side elevations of the building were fenestrated in a similar style but featured stepped gables and finials.[1] Internally, the principal rooms were the assembly room, which had a capacity of 500 people, and a distinctive curved reading room.[2]

The building was used as an events venue from an early stage and, as well as being the local venue for petty session hearings, it saw many concerts and the songwriter, Percy French, was among many performers held there in the late 19th century.[1] Following significant population growth, largely associated with the seaside tourism industry, Portrush elected town commissioners in December 1892. The commissioners met in the town hall and, after the area became an urban district in 1899, the new council also met there. The council acquired the freehold of the town hall from the earl in 1916.[3]

In August 2021, following the truce of July 1921 between the Irish Republican Army and the Government, the town hall held the swearing in of the first Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, Denis Henry, who was sworn in by the last Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Sir John Ross.[4][5]

A war memorial, which was designed by Frank Ransom in the form of a bronze statue of victory mounted on a pedestal and which was intended to commemorate the lives of local service personnel who had died in the First World War, was unveiled in front of the town hall in the presence of Lady Macnaghten of Dundarave House on 11 November 1922.[6][7][8]

In 1930, the building was extended, in a similar style, to the north and to the northeast by a contractor from Ballymoney, Hugh Taggart, at a cost of £4,000. The works were carried out to a design by the town surveyor, Albert Clarke: the northeast extension incorporated a new segmentally headed doorway with voussoirs, facing southeast, which was flanked by colonettes and augmented with the words "Portrush Town Hall" painted in the tympanum.[1] In the 1960s, further works were carried to convert the reading room into a council chamber.[2] The building ceased to be the local seat of government after the borough council was abolished in 1973. It continued to be used as an events venue until 1997, when the council decided it was surplus to requirements and its proposals for the demolition of the building were considered but rejected by the Planning Appeals Commission.[9]

An extensive programme of restoration works costing £1.6 million, managed by Hearth Historic Buildings Trust, a charity,[10] financed by the Heritage Lottery Fund and carried out by McCloskey & O'Kane of Limavady to a design by Consarc, was completed in 2005.[11][12] Following the re-opening of the building, the reading room was named the Girvan room to commemorate one of the proponents of the restoration, Paul Girvan.[2] The project was recognised by the Royal Institute of British Architects with a Conservation Award in 2006.[13]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Portrush Town Hall)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Town Hall, Kerr Street, Portrush, Co. Antrim (HB03/10/001)". Department for Communities. https://apps.communities-ni.gov.uk/Buildings/buildview.aspx?id=1113&js=false. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Portrush Town Hall". Hearth Historic Buildings Trust. http://hearthni.org.uk/projects/portrush-town-hall/. 
  3. Wilson, Frances (2 April 2022). "Portrush Urban District Council: When Portrush had 'Home Rule' 1892–1973". Portrush Heritage Group. https://discoverportrush.com/media/2022/04/Heritage-Newsletter-77-When-Portrush-had-Home-Rule.pdf. 
  4. Dickson, Brice; McCormic, Conor (2021). The Judicial Mind A Festschrift for Lord Kerr of Tonaghmore 2021. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1509944798. https://books.google.com/books?id=IGpREAAAQBAJ&pg=PT221. 
  5. Moore, Cormac (2019). Birth of the Border: The Impact of Partition in Ireland. Irish Academic Press. ISBN 978-1785372957. https://books.google.com/books?id=i5a0DwAAQBAJ&pg=PT136. 
  6. "Men of Portrush". Imperial War Museum. https://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/21. 
  7. "Portrush War Memorial". Memorials Online. https://www.warmemorialsonline.org.uk/memorial/161244. 
  8. "Portrush, County Antrim". Ulster War Memorials. https://ulsterwarmemorials.net/portrush-co-antrim. 
  9. "Historic Town Hall is saved by planners". Belfast Telegraph. 5 July 2008. https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/imported/historic-town-hall-is-saved-by-planners-28328151.html. 
  10. Hearth Historic Buildings Trust - Registered Charity no. 107793 at the Charity Commission for Northern Ireland
  11. "Portrush Town Hall". Ulster Architectural Heritage. https://www.ulsterarchitecturalheritage.org.uk/case-studies/portrush-town-hall/. 
  12. Morrison, Ian; Waterson, Merlin (2019). Rescue and Reuse Communities, Heritage and Architecture. RIBA Publishing. ISBN 978-1000726671. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZPSfDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT270. 
  13. "Portrush Town Hall". Caldwell Consulting. https://www.caldwellconsulting.co.uk/projects/20/portrush-town-hall.