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The Town Hall

(The full story is available on
DVD from our Shop)
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Morley Town Hall is a Grade 1 listed building, which celebrated its
centenary in 1995. This window in the Town Hall says much about the town
and its inhabitants. Their belief in social and industrial progress is
very evident, as was the way that they went about their business, the
aims which they had, and their very real achievements.
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Following the granting of Borough status in 1885, the
new Borough Council had very ambitious plans and they certainly wanted
an impressive building for the Town Hall where the business of running a
borough could be conducted, and where visitors could be entertained in
surroundings of which the town could be proud.
The first Mayor of Morley,
Joseph Schofield, and his fellow councillors decided that a design
would be obtained by a competition and 73 entries were submitted. This
was the winning design offered by Holtom & Fox, a firm of Dewsbury
architects. They received £100 and, of course, they supervised some of
the building.
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By 1891, work had commenced and the granite
foundation stone was laid on the 8th October 1892. The borough made it a
big event and the Mayor, Alderman Thomas Clough, carried out the
ceremony using a silver trowel. Many dignitaries from surrounding towns
were also present. Flattened under the stone are various local
newspapers of the day and histories of Morley written by Norrisson
Scatcherd and William Smith.
The opening on 16 October 1895 was a grand event. At
that time, Morley's most famous son was the lawyer turned politician Herbert Henry Asquith who had been born
in the town in 1852, so it seemed very appropriate that he be asked to
do the opening.
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At last, Morley had a building of some stature,
literally and figuratively. It had cost over £41,000 to build and the
dome is 160 feet high. It had a magnificent hall, the Great Hall, which
later became the Alexandra Hall, in which meetings could be held and
folks could enjoy various forms of entertainment. Originally there was
seating for 1200 people but this has now been reduced to around 800.
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The great staircase to the Mayor's parlour and the
council chamber must have impressed many visiting dignitaries. In
addition the Town Hall had a magistrate's court and the local police
force were housed inside the building so that issues of law and order
could be dealt with more effectively than was previously the case.
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In the following years improvements were made to the
building. This stained glass window was contributed by Charles
Scarth, who was Mayor of the borough a record six times and certainly
one of the most successful textile manufacturers in the area.
Appropriately the window is dedicated, in Latin, to Industry.
Another 12 windows were donated by other
local personalities in 1902, all dedicated to different human activities
and feelings. It is difficult to believe now that at the time they only
cost £25 each.
The council chamber was redesigned in 1937 to
accommodate the extra Councillors from East and West Ardsley, Gildersome
and Drighlington when these districts were incorporated into the
borough.
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The building became a focal point of the Borough and
was the centre of any celebration, local or national. During the
Second World War, the Town Hall was used for raising funds for the War
effort, and between 1942 and 1945 such efforts raised over £1.5
million.
The Town Hall got recognition of a less welcome kind
on the 16th August 1961, when a fire broke out in the nearby Albert
Mills and sparks reached the Town Hall. Despite the best efforts of the Fire Brigade it was not possible to save
the dome which was completely destroyed. Happily, the rest of the
building was undamaged, and the dome was restored, but the event was
described in some detail on national television.
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These photographs by David Atkinson show that the
Town Hall is still an important meeting place for Morleians and that it
has been maintained in style. Meetings and discussions can be held in
the Mayor's Parlour in impressive and dignified surroundings, the
Alexandra Hall remains an important centre for meetings and popular
entertainment, such as brass band concerts, and the council chamber is
again in use by the present Town Council for discussion of matters of
public policy which affect the lives of local people.
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