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313:. However, it ceased to operate when the new Theatre Royal, designed by William Wilkins, opened in Westgate Street in 1819. At that time the assembly room on the first floor of the Market Cross was re-purposed as a concert hall. The building became the meeting place of Bury St Edmunds Borough Council in 1840 and served as "Bury St Edmunds Town Hall" until the new borough offices on Angel Hill, designed by Basil Oliver and William Henry Mitchell, opened in April 1937.
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and completed in 1584. It accommodated an open corn market on the ground floor, and a clothiers' hall on the first floor. It was destroyed in a great fire which broke out in
Eastman Street in 1608 but was rebuilt in 1620. It was described as a "very fayer large house for corn sellers wherein they may
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In 1734, the building was converted for use as a theatre which became known as "The Grand
Theatre". In The Grubstreet Journal of 19 September 1734, it was written "Our workmen are very near drawing to a conclusion the finishing The Grand Theatre, which has been so long fitting up here, for his Grace
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In 1972, the building became an art gallery hosting a programme of changing contemporary art and craft exhibitions and events by
British and international artists. However, after getting into financial difficulty, the gallery, which was latterly known as "Smiths Row", closed in November 2015. After
241:'s Company of Comedians, and when the paintings and everything are completed, it is believed it will equal (if not exceed) any in England, and none can be supposed to come near it for situation; the company are to come from the
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In the early 1770s, civic officials decided that the Market Cross should be rebuilt. The new structure was designed by
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stand in their great ease very comodiouslye in the heat of somer and also in the tyme of reyne and cold wet winter".
573:"Finishing touches falling into place as Market Cross Community of Creatives, in Bury St Edmunds, prepares to open"
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The site of the current building was originally occupied by a simple market cross in the form of a
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stone and was completed in 1780. It was laid out to a cruciform plan. The ground floor was
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with round headed openings on all four elevations, and, on the first floor there were
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225:. It was dismantled and replaced by a timber structure which was commissioned by the
209:, England. The building, which is currently used as a community space, is a Grade I
455:"The Oakes Diaries: Business, Politics and The Family in Bury St Edmunds 1778–1827"
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six years of standing vacant, it re-opened as a community space in May 2021.
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296:. Internally, the principal room was the assembly hall on the first floor.
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Bury St
Edmunds, Suffolk Art Gallery: 25 Years at The Market Cross
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ornaments and, above the niches, there were panels containing
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A Hand Book of Bury St. Edmunds, in the County of
Suffolk
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The theatre continued to prosper, especially during the
521:"Borough Offices, Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk"
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Municipal building in Bury St
Edmunds, Suffolk, England
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543:"Smiths Row arts organisation announces its closure"
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on all four elevations. The windows were flanked by
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245:, to open at the beginning of our next fair."
460:. Suffolk Records Society. 1791. p. 274.
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427:Pevsner, Nikolaus; Radcliffe, Enid (1974).
327:Grade I listed buildings in St Edmundsbury
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201:, is a municipal building in Cornhill in
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523:. Royal Institute of British Architects
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605:Government buildings completed in 1780
433:. Yale University Press. p. 146.
430:Suffolk (Buildings of England Series)
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553:from the original on 11 January 2022
615:Grade I listed buildings in Suffolk
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359:National Heritage List for England
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499:. Barracuda Books. p. 104.
416:. Vol. 3. 1968. p. 11.
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35:Market Cross, Bury St Edmunds
24:Market Cross, Bury St Edmunds
496:The Book of Bury St Edmunds
493:Stratham, Margaret (1988).
386:. F. Lancaster. p. 55.
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227:Bury St Edmunds Guildhall
199:Bury St Edmunds Town Hall
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413:The Pennsylvania Gazette
354:"Market Cross (1076930)"
243:University of Cambridge
380:Tymms, Samuel (1859).
107:Architectural style(s)
305:William Shakespeare
272:columns supporting
69: /
254:neoclassical style
147:Reference no.
111:Neoclassical style
73:52.2458°N 0.7121°E
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195:Market Cross
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134:Market Cross
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307:'s tragedy
284:containing
270:Ionic order
268:flanked by
256:, built in
250:Robert Adam
101:Robert Adam
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52:Coordinates
599:Categories
557:10 January
333:References
262:rusticated
223:high cross
139:Designated
61:52°14′45″N
44:Cornhill,
321:See also
310:King Lear
278:pediments
125:– Grade I
97:Architect
64:0°42′44″E
583:29 April
551:Archived
527:29 April
478:29 April
365:29 April
230:feoffees
41:Location
400:. 1997.
294:paterae
274:friezes
252:in the
217:History
207:Suffolk
150:1076930
503:
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282:niches
258:ashlar
458:(PDF)
290:swags
89:Built
585:2023
559:2022
529:2023
501:ISBN
480:2023
435:ISBN
367:2023
292:and
276:and
237:the
193:The
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