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Tuam Town Hall

Coordinates:53°30′53″N8°51′05″W/ 53.5147°N 8.8514°W/53.5147; -8.8514
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Tuam Town Hall
Halla an Bhaile Tuaim
Tuam Town Hall
Tuam Town Hall is located in County Galway
Tuam Town Hall
Tuam Town Hall
Location within County Galway
General information
Architectural styleNeoclassical style
AddressMarket Square,Tuam
CountryIreland
Coordinates53°30′53″N8°51′05″W/ 53.5147°N 8.8514°W/53.5147; -8.8514
Completed1857
Design and construction
Architect(s)James Joseph Boylan

Tuam Town Hall(Irish:Halla an Bhaile Tuaim) is a municipal building in the Market Square atTuam,County Galway,Ireland. It is currently used as a community events venue.

History

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The first municipal building in the town was a small market house which was built on the southwest side of the Market Square in 1700. It was arcaded on the ground floor, so that markets could be held, with an assembly room for the use of Tuam Corporation on the first floor.[1]The corporation was abolished under theMunicipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840and the building lay empty untiltown commissionerswere appointed in 1843. The town commissioners decided to demolish the old market house and to replace it with a more substantial structure. The site was made available by the local landowner, John Stratford Handcock of Carrowntryla House, on a leasehold basis at a nominal rent.[2][3]

The foundation stone for the new building was laid by the landowners' wife, Elizabeth Penelope Handcock, on 24 September 1857. It was designed by James Joseph Boylan in theneoclassical style,built byAndrew Eganincoursedlimestoneand was completed in 1857.[4]The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage of six bays facing onto the Market Square. The main block of five bays was fenestrated bymullionedwindows witharchitraveson the ground floor and by mullioned andtransomedwindows with architraves on the first floor. The right-hand bay, which was faced inashlarstone, featured a four-stage tower, which was flanked by full-heightpilasters.There was a doorway with a rectangularfanlightin the first stage, recessed round headedlancet windowsin the second and third stages, and clock faces in the fourth stage, which was enhanced bycantedcorners andfinials.The tower was surmounted by anoctagonallantern.At roof level, there was aparapetwithterracottapanels. Internally, the principal room was the assembly hall on the first floor.[5][6]

The building was extended by three bays to the south to a design by Edward Townsend in 1886.[7][8]Following an ambush in which two police officers were killed on 19 July 1920, theBlack and Tansset fire to the town hall in retribution. The building was gutted internally by the fire, but the shell remained intact and the building was completely restored in 1926.[9][10][11]

A plaque was installed on the front of the building, intended to commemorate the life of the local historian, John Waldron, following his death in 1987. Additional plaques were installed, in 1998, to commemorate the life of theChristian socialistand philanthropistRobert Malachy Burke,following his death that year, as well as the life of the locally born soldier, MajorRichard W. Dowling,who led theConfederatetroops to victory at theSecond Battle of Sabine Passduring theAmerican Civil War.A fourth plaque, intended to commemorate the lives of local service personnel who had died all wars, foreign and domestic, was installed in 2013.[12]

In September 2017, anindependentcouncillor proposed removing the plaque relating to Dowling, in the light of the2017 Charlottesville disturbances.Nobody seconded the motion; aFianna Fáilcouncillor said the plaque commemorated Dowling's business career and Tuam had "more important things going on".[13][14][15]

The building was the starting point for a march, on 26 August 2018, to the site of theBon Secours Mother and Baby Home,where the bodies of up to 800 babies and children may have been interred in an unmarked grave. The march was timed to coincide with a mass being celebrated byPope FrancisinPhoenix Park,Dublin,duringhis visit to Ireland.[16]

In 2020,Galway County Councilannounced that it was considering proposals to convert the building, which continues to be used for community events, into an arts centre.[17]

References

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  1. ^"Tuam Town Hall recalls four centuries of civic life and major Tuam figures".Patrick Comerford. 31 May 2019.Retrieved20 January2024.
  2. ^"Handcock".Landed Estates.Retrieved20 January2024.
  3. ^Claffey, J. A. (2009)."Irish Historic Towns Atlas: Tuam"(PDF).Royal Irish Academy, Dublin.Retrieved20 January2024.
  4. ^"Boylan, James J."Dictionary of Irish Architects.Retrieved20 January2024.
  5. ^"Tuam Town Hall, Market Square, High Street, Townparks, Tuam, County Galway".National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.Retrieved20 January2024.
  6. ^"Architectural Heritage Impact Assessment Report for Proposed works to Tuam Town Hall"(PDF).Galway County Council. 7 December 2021. p. 15.Retrieved20 January2024.
  7. ^Architectural Heritage Impact Assessment Report (2021), p. 17
  8. ^"An Introduction to the heritage of County Galway"(PDF).Department of Environment, Heritage and Local Government. p. 64.Retrieved20 January2024.
  9. ^"The Town Hall, Tuam, County Galway".Ireland XO.Retrieved20 January2024.
  10. ^"The night Tuam was burned"(PDF).The Tuam Herald.1987. p. 42.Retrieved20 January2024.
  11. ^"Tuam 'sacked' by RIC as reprisal for murdered constables".RTÉ.Retrieved20 January2024.
  12. ^"Plaques on the town hall".Galway Heritage Trail. 3 May 2018.Retrieved20 January2024.
  13. ^"Proposal to remove Tuam plaque to Confederate soldier rejected".The Irish Times.Retrieved20 January2024.
  14. ^"Call for Tuam Town Hall to remove memorial to Irish Confederate major".The Journal.19 August 2017.Retrieved20 January2024.
  15. ^"Confederate monument controversy makes way to Ireland".CNN.25 August 2017.Retrieved20 January2024.
  16. ^Magnier, Eileen (26 August 2018)."Thousands attend Tuam vigil and Dublin rally to coincide with Papal mass".RTÉ.Archivedfrom the original on 26 August 2018.Retrieved27 August2018.
  17. ^"Arts Plan 2020 –2024"(PDF).Galway County Council. 2020. p. 10.Retrieved20 January2024.