- Cutlers' Hall
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Cutlers' Hall is a Grade II* listed building in Sheffield, England that is the headquarters of the Company of Cutlers in Hallamshire. It is located on Church Street opposite Sheffield Cathedral.
Contents
History
The Cutlers Hall was built in 1832 by Samuel Worth and Benjamin Broomhead Taylor at a cost of £6,500. It was extended in 1865–7 by Flockton & Abbott, and again in 1888 by J. B. Mitchel-Withers.[1] It is Sheffield's third Cutlers' Hall, the previous buildings, which were built in the same location, were constructed in 1638 and 1725. Prior to 1638 the Cutlers met in rented accommodation with tradition saying that this was a public house on Fargate, although there is no documentary evidence to back this up. The first Cutlers Hall, a stone building with a slated roof was built in 1638 at a cost of £155 15s 10d, of which £57 18s 4d was raised by subscription. The building was quickly found to be inadequate, having to be repaired on many occasions and in 1725, a new Cutlers Hall was erected on the same site at a cost of £442. It was an attractive, narrow Georgian three storied building with a string course cornice. Towards the end of the 18th century the Cutlers Hall was used as an overspill court room as the Town Hall across Church Street could not cope with the increasing number of crimes.[2]
The Hall's front is of the Corinthian order. Behind the classical facade is an intricate series of rooms which reach back almost as far as Fargate. There are a selection of old Hallamshire knives on show inside the hall some of which go back to the Elizabethan era. Many of the knives were discovered by the Thames Mudlarks in the tidal mud of the River Thames in London.[3] Also on display is the Norfolk Knife, a very large pocket knife with 75 blades which was made by Joseph Rodgers and Sons at their Norfolk Street Works in Sheffield for the Crystal Palace Great Exhibition of 1851.[4][5]
Today, the building is used for many of the grandest events in the city's civic and commercial events, for instance the annual Cutlers' Feast which became an annual event in 1648. As of 2008 there have been 372 Cutlers Feasts with breaks only for the World Wars and a cancellation in 1921.[6]
The banks neighbouring the Cutlers' Hall are in a similar style. One was designed by Samuel Worth in 1838, the other was completed in 1867.
See also
References
- ^ "Pevsner Architectural Guides - Sheffield", Ruth Harman & John Minnis, ISBN 0-300-10585-1, Gives details of architecture.
- ^ "Sheffield its Story and its Achievements", Mary Walton, ISBN 0-904293-19-X, Info on 1638 and 1725 buildings.
- ^ National Geographic. Gives details of Thames Mudlarks.
- ^ www.tilthammer.com. Gives details of Norfolk Knife.
- ^ "A Popular History of Sheffield", J. Edward Vickers, ISBN 0-906787-04-1 Gives history of Cutlers Hall.
- ^ "Mesters to Masters", Clyde Binfield, David Hey, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-198289-97-9 Gives details of Cutlers Feast.
External links
Listed buildings in Sheffield Grade I Grade II* Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet Housing • Arts Tower and Library • Beauchief Abbey • Beauchief Hall • Beehive Works • Bishops' House • Butchers Wheel • City Hall • Cornish Place • Cutlers' Hall • Ecclesfield Priory • Endcliffe Hall • Fair House Farmhouse • General Cemetery • Globe Works • Green Lane Works Gateway • Heritage House • King Edward VII Upper School • Leah's Yard • Little Matlock Rolling Mill • Lyceum Theatre • Manor Lodge Turret House • Mappin Art Gallery • The Mount • Mount Pleasant • Norton Hall Hospital • Oakes Park • Old Queen's Head • Onesacre Hall • Paradise Square • Park Hill Flats • St James, Midhopestones • St James, Norton • St Mary, Bramall Lane • St Mary the Virgin, Beighton • St Paul, Wordsworth Avenue • Sanderson Kayer's Darnall Works • Sharrow Mills • Victoria Quays Terminal Warehouse • Well Meadow Street Crucible Furnace • Whitley Hall Hotel • Wicker ArchesLists City Centre • S2 • S3 • S4 • S5 • S6 • S7 • S8 • S9 • S10 • S11 • S12 • S13 • S14 • S17 • S20Coordinates: 53°22′57″N 1°28′10″W / 53.382396°N 1.469555°W
Categories:- Buildings and structures in Sheffield
- Grade II* listed buildings in Sheffield
- Buildings and structures completed in 1832
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