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Wolverhampton's
Architectural Heritage
Bilston Town Hall

Bilston
Town Hall 1900 (F1/BIL/E/1b)
Bilston Town Hall, situated
at the junction of Church Street and Lichfield Street, was built
in 1872, designed by architects Bidlake and Lovatt.
Soon after the new town
hall was completed a free library and reading room were opened at
a cost of £1,700 and further extensions took place in 1882.
Night classes were held at the town hall teaching such subjects
as science and languages prior to their move to the new Technical
School and School of Art in Mount Pleasant, Bilston. The library
moved to a new location in 1937.

Town
Hall Bilston 1906 (F1/BIL/E/2)
In 1906 there were problems
with the building due to the fact that it was sited upon old coal
pit workings. The building had to be shored up with timber as the
it was considered to be about to collapse.

Removing
coal from underneath Bilston Town Hall 1906-1907 (F1/BIL/I/1)
Coal had to be removed
from under the town hall and new foundations for the building put
into place. This work on the building was a success, though 60 years
later when Bilston became part of the Borough of Wolverhampton,
the building became to be the headquarters of local government in
the town.
©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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