Plaque

Shoreditch town hall extension

Erection date: 9/9/1901

Inscription

This foundation stone was laid by the first Mayoress of Shoreditch (Mrs H. E. Kershaw), 9th September 1901.
Committee:
A. C. Hodder - Chairman
W. Smither - Vice Chairman

Aldermen:
S. G. Porter
J. J. Trowbridge

Councillors:
J. Bye
W. Meadmore
W. F. Norton
G. W. Howlett
J. J. Clark
T. B. Chant
R. Darby
H. W. Wheatley
J. Cox
J. Hepburn
A. E. Penney 

H. Mansfield Robinson, LLD - Town Clerk
William G. Hunt - Architect
Killby & Gayford - Builders

A report in the London North Middlesex Standard And Tottenham And Wood Green Echo of 13 September 1901 describes the unveiling as being "completely obscured from public view by a hoarding constructed to meet the necessities of building operations, but being so close to the continuous roar of the traffic in Old Street, as to render the voices of speakers at the ceremony at times almost inaudible".

2024: Steve Parlanti sent us details of the ceremonial trowel used at this event.  It was presented to Mrs Kershaw by the architect, W. G. Hunt.  Steve bought it at auction and is keen for it to return to Shoreditch.

Site: Shoreditch town hall (1 memorial)

EC1, Old Street, Shoreditch town hall

Foundation stones do not always qualify for London Remembers (too dull) but "first Mayoress of Shoreditch" caught our attention.

This town hall was built in 1866 by Shoreditch district surveyor, Caesar Augustus Long, with a 1898-1902 extension by W. G. Hunt. Measure gives the history of the building with a picture before the extension.

Some spaces in this building are now available for hire and the website has some photos of the interiors.

2021: This week in FM.com reported "In Pictures – Shoreditch Town Hall Gets First Exterior Clean in 155 Years". It was very dirty. There we learn: "Adorned with its iconic statue of Progress, the building exemplifies the purposeful optimism of the era, its “More light, more power” motto - carved beneath the Shoreditch crest - encapsulating this forward-looking ethos. From its opening in 1866, the Town Hall was the hub of local democracy and civic life for over a century. Its status as a political focal point was underlined by the arrest there of suffragette Sylvia Pankhurst in 1913. The Town Hall was also a hugely popular Music Hall venue from the late 19th century to the early 20th century, in spite of a catastrophic fire in 1904. Hosting the first-ever televised boxing match in 1955, it then became best known as a major boxing venue until 1975. Its subsequent decline into neglect during the 1980s was a sad fate for such a proud building with such a colourful history."

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Shoreditch town hall extension

Created by i

Killby & Gayford

This company, reportedly 150 years old, had remodelled No 10 Downing Street a...

Read More

J. Bye

Councillor on the Committee for the 1901 Shoreditch Town Hall Extension.

Read More

T. B. Chant

Councillor on the Committee for the 1901 Shoreditch Town Hall Extension.

Read More

J. J. Clark

Councillor on the Committee for the 1901 Shoreditch Town Hall Extension.

Read More

J. Cox

Councillor on the Committee for the 1901 Shoreditch Town Hall Extension.

Read More

Show all 19

Nearby Memorials

Europe's first disc recording studio

Europe's first disc recording studio

WC2, Maiden Lane, Fire and Stone, 31

Queen's drummer Roger Taylor unveiled the plaque.

3 subjects commemorated, 3 creators
Waterloo Station - 175 years

Waterloo Station - 175 years

SE1, Waterloo Station

By 'mezzanine' we mean the half-floor around the main concourse, though Network Rail called it a 'balcony' in their press release announc...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Tower of London execution site - 1972

Tower of London execution site - 1972

EC3, Tower Green, Tower of London

In the first 2 minutes of the 1972 CCF film "The Boy Who Turned Yellow" some boys are taken on a school trip to the Tower of London and w...

John Kidd and Co.

John Kidd and Co.

E3, Wick Lane, 419, Wick Lane Wharf

The inclusion of the caretaker and his wife on this memorial is intriguing. Andrew Behan has researched these names and confirms that al...

War dead, Civilian war dead | WW2
12 subjects commemorated
Independent Order of Mechanics

Independent Order of Mechanics

E9, Wick Road, 331

When placed in a triangle an eye represents the masonic Eye of Providence, but there is no triangle here and anyway, this is not a freema...

1 subject commemorated

Previously viewed

H. Skinner
War dead, WW1
1 memorial
F. J. Adams

F. J. Adams

Resident of Hendon who served and died in WW2.

Person, Armed Forces

War dead, WW2
1 memorial
T. W. Armstrong
War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Newman Hall

Newman Hall

NW3, Hampstead Square, 8

Opposite is Newman Hall's former home.

2 subjects commemorated
Alice Ayres

Alice Ayres

For more information about this hero click on the picture of her plaque.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial