Coordinates | Coordinates: 51°29′22.56″N 0°3′52.76″E / 51.4896000°N 0.0646556°E |
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Location |
Woolwich London, SE18 United Kingdom |
Designer | Alfred Brumwell Thomas |
Type | Grade II* listed building |
Material | Portland stone |
Beginning date | 11 February 1903 |
Opening date | 13 January 1906 |
Woolwich Town Hall is an early 20th-century town hall located in the historic Bathway Quarter in the centre of Woolwich, South East London. Until 1965 it was the seat of local government of the Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich, after which it became the main seat of the London Borough of Greenwich (now the Royal Borough of Greenwich). The building is a Grade II*-listed building and a rare example of an Edwardian Baroque town hall in London.
Woolwich Town Hall is the third seat of local government in Woolwich. It was built in 1903–05 when the second town hall, dating from 1842, had become too small. The first town hall was built only a few years earlier, around 1839, but was almost immediately sold to the Metropolitan Police. Earlier, the local government of Woolwich, then a civil parish in the County of Kent, met in a room next to the poorhouse and in the parish church of St Mary Magdalene. The old town hall was initially shared with Woolwich County Court. In 1855 the Metropolis Management Act provided every parish in the metropolitan area with its own local administration. In 1889 the parish of Woolwich became part of the newly formed County of London. In 1900 the Metropolitan Borough of Woolwich was formed from the parishes of Woolwich, Plumstead and Eltham. This prompted the construction of a larger and more representative town hall.