Date:1933
Description:The Guildhall on Market Square was designed by Charles Trubshaw and built in 1853. It housed the Borough Council, the courts and on the ground floor was a police station. The entrance to the market hall can be seen underneath the balcony. By the 1930s a new police station was needed and one was constructed on the corner of Bath Street and Albion Place. This building was used up to the 1970s when the police moved to their present location in Pitcher Bank. The Guildhall was demolished in 1934 when it was rebuilt further back from the square and the market was replaced by a shopping arcade.
The timeline shows resources around this location over a number of years.
There has been a shire building in Stafford since the 1280s, used as a meeting place ...
Stafford possessed a market as early as 1206, when Edward the Elder passed a law ...
Miniature studio portrait of Susy Macnaghten. She is wearing a ruched velvet ...
Royal Mail van believed to be the first motor driven mail van in Stafford. The ...
The original Guildhall was built in 1853. It housed the Borough Council, the courts ...
Memorial Parade on Market Square for King George VI, who died in February 1952. Taking ...
Production of George Bernard Shaw's 'The Dark Lady of the Sonnets', produced by ...
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Donor ref:P98.003.0029 (18/709)
Source: Staffordshire Museum Service
Copyright information: Copyrights to all resources are retained by the individual rights holders. They have kindly made their collections available for non-commercial private study & educational use. Re-distribution of resources in any form is only permitted subject to strict adherence to the usage guidelines.