Guildhall, South Molton

The Guildhall on Broad Street in South Molton in Devon was built between 1739 and 1743[1] and has been a Grade I listed building on the Register of Historic England since 1951.[2] Today the building is the town hall for South Molton.[3] Beside it, beneath the Old Assembly Room, is the entrance to the Pannier Market for the town.[4]

South Molton Guildhall
The Guildhall in South Molton in Devon
LocationBroad Street, South Molton
Coordinates51°01′03″N 3°50′04″W / 51.01750°N 3.83436°W / 51.01750; -3.83436
Built1743
Architectural style(s)Neoclassical style
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameGuild Hall (including borough museum)
Designated20 August 1951
Reference no.1106866
Guildhall, South Molton is located in Devon
Guildhall, South Molton
Shown in Devon

History

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The Mayor's Parlour in the Guildhall. The room was originally in Stowe House and was acquired for incorporation into the South Molton Guildhall designed 1739–43[1]

Completed in two phases - 1743 and 1773 - much of the materials used in the building of the 1743 phase were bought following the demolition of Stowe House in 1739, the former 17th-century mansion in Cornwall. The façade is built of Portland stone with the Court Room supported by three arches extending out over the pavement.[5] The building's two-storeys are stuccoed while the ground floor is rusticated. The upper storey stands over the pavement on three round-headed arches with keystones. The first floor has four pilasters with Corinthian capitals and a pediment displaying the Royal Arms. Atop the building is a wooden cupola with a clock and weather vane erected in 1753.[5] A central niche holds a bust of Hugh Squier (1625-1710) of Petty France, Westminster, a wealthy merchant best remembered as a generous benefactor to the town of South Molton, the place of his birth, where in 1684 he founded a "free school".[6] The bust was placed here in 1910 on the bi-centenary of his death with a floral wreath below it.[2]

 
Stone bust of Hugh Squier (1625-1710), within an aedicule on the façade of the Guildhall in South Molton. Inscribed on plinths: "Hugh Squier AD 1625-1710. Our great benefactor. Erected AD 1910, James Sanders, Mayor"

The building of 1743 contains the Court Room with its fine 17th-century panelling and gilded moulding brought here following the demolition of Stowe House in 1739; the Constable's Room, the Mayor's Parlour and a fine early 18th-century staircase with twisted balusters and dado panelling.[7]

The Mayor’s Parlour includes 17th-century materials bought from Stowe House including plasterwork decorative picture frames, a decorated plaster ceiling, four doorcases with gilded pediments, a large overmantel painting in the style of Rubens of "Atalanta presented with the head of the Calydonian Boar by Meleager" and four classical capriccio scenes in small rectangular panels above the doors.[1] The wooden dock in the Court Room was a portable type which could easily be jumped by prisoners.[8]

In 1773 a two-storey wing of stone rubble was constructed at the building's rear to hold a large dining room to provide meals and other services for visiting notables, with the kitchen and other offices below. This wing is now known as the Old Assembly Room and retains its plain 18th-century marble fireplace and paneling. The original early 18th-century jury benches survive while the Kings Arms were made by William Puckridge of London in 1743.[2] Beneath this is the entrance to the town's Pannier Market.[4] The clock was first illuminated in 1903.[9]

South Molton Museum

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South Molton Museum is located on the Guildhall's first floor and is managed by South Molton Town Council and volunteers. The Museum displays the social history of South Molton and its development across the centuries. The Museums's collections reflect the life and times of the historic market town and the surrounding district including two Town Charters, granted by Elizabeth I and Charles II, local archaeological finds, agricultural implements, items of domestic interest, textiles, documents, maps, toys, etc. Apart from the permanent exhibition there is also a regularly changing programme of displays.[10] Displayed are the Newsham Fire Engine used in the town from 1736 to 1886 until it was replaced by the Merryweather Fire Engine which was still in use until the early 1930s and which is also displayed.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Pevsner, N. & Cherry, B., The Buildings of England: Devon, 2004, p.749
  2. ^ a b c Historic England. "Guild Hall (including Borough Museum) (Grade I) (1106866)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 October 2019.
  3. ^ "Annual Town Meeting Agenda" (PDF). South Molton Town Council. 28 May 2019. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  4. ^ a b "South Molton Pannier Market". Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  5. ^ a b South Molton Guildhall - Heritage Gateway database
  6. ^ "Part of will of Hugh Squier quoted in report of 1854 lawsuit before the House of Lords: Mayor of South Molton v. The Attorney-General". English Reports in Law and Equity: Containing Reports of Cases in the House of Lords. And whereas I have, about twenty-eight years ago, erected and built a free school in the town of South Molton, in Devon
  7. ^ Gabriel-Powell, Andy (2016). Richard Grenville and the Lost Colony of Roanoke. McFarland. p. 144. ISBN 978-1476665719.
  8. ^ Mulcahy, Linda (2010). Legal Architecture: Justice, Due Process and the Place of Law. Routledge. p. 68. ISBN 978-0415575393.
  9. ^ "The Heritage Album: 175 years in North Devon (1824-1999)". The North Devon Journal. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  10. ^ "Home Page". South Molton Museum. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  11. ^ "South Molton and District Museum". Devon Museums. Retrieved 4 October 2021.