Battersea Town Hall
The impressive entrance on Lavender Hill actually led into the Council Offices, where I started work when I left school in 1966. At that time they had changed very little since their Victorian origins; there was a grand staircase opposite the main door, with a half-landing then curving wings sweeping up on each side to the first floor. A larger than lifesize statue of a reclining woman, who I seem to recall was rather scantily clad, was in place of honour on a marble plinth on the half-landing. The rooms were high ceilinged with huge high windows and marble floors. The senior managers were allowed a small piece of carpet under their desks; the rest of us had to put up with cold feet.
I was the 'Office Junior' and my main job was to go round the offices once an hour and collect the papers from the 'Out' trays on people's desks, sort them according to who they were to go to, then go round again to deliver then into the appropriate 'In' trays. Between rounds I was sometimes allowed under very strict supervision to make very careful hand-written entries in huge ledgers; everything had to be entered in pencil first and only after it had been checked was I allowed to go over it in ink.
The entrance to the actual Town Hall was in Town Hall Road, to the right of the building. Our annual school prize-giving evenings were held there. It was a very grand ballroom, with a large high stage some five to six feet above the hall floor which had a steep rake making it slightly disconcerting to stand on, and an organ with the console in the centre below the stage behind doors which were kept locked shut when it wasn't in use, and the huge pipes rising up on both sides of the stage. This organ was played with gusto by our Parish Priest at the prize-givings - I think he must have looked forward to it all year. The hall itself was richly decorated with lots of gilding and an ornamented plaster ceiling. At the back there was a gallery which was the 'Circle' for stage performances and from where you could look down at the dancers at the regular dance nights. There was a foyer, with a cloakroom where you could leave your coat and change into your dance shoes and a purpose-built bar which had a second counter which was opened into the ballroom during dances so you didn't have to leave the party to get another drink. Broad high corridors down either side of the ballroom led to the backstage area, and were a place to talk to dance partners and giggle with female friends away from the bustle of the hall. There were smaller rooms for meetings and private parties upstairs near the gallery; my wedding reception was held in one of these in 1970.
There was also a Lower Town Hall with the entrance at the back of the building, where Town Hall Road turns ninety degrees and runs across to join Theatre Street. This was a much less grand affair and was used for smaller dances and parties than the main hall. When I was working in the Council offices in the late 1960s it was used as the staff canteen at lunchtimes, with three-course meals cooked freshly in the kitchen every day.
Former Battersea School Girl
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RE: RE: Battersea Town Hall
I lived in Dickens st S.W.8 untill I was 20 years old from 1945 to 1965. I used to work for the coalman Normanton and Betts Coals on the corner of St Rule Street. I remember all the hardships and all the street games we used to play. The cinemas in Clapham Junction and the Wandsworth Road. Battersea Park and Clapham Common were our playgrounds. I moved away in 1968 to Basingstoke to start a new life and family, after that I moved to Portsmouth where I live now. I am now 66 and semi retired and after 4 marrages I am vey happy with my life. I have traveled all over the world. I still come up to London to do some work, and this brings fond memories back to me when I pass through Battersea. Charlie Keeble
Comment from Charlie Keeble on Sunday, 5th June 2011.
RE: RE: Battersea Town Hall
I loved the old Battersea, the Battersea of my childhood. We lived in a big old house on Winders Road, we lived on the middle floor. There was me, my 2 younger brothers and my younger sister, we had 3 rooms. My lovely auntie Edie, my uncle Joe who used to buy comics for my cousins and let us read them when they had finished with them. They had 3 rooms the same as us,with their 4 children. I went to St Mary's C of E school and at Christmas, Easter, etc, we would go and sing hymns at St Mary's church. On the other side of the road to the school were blocks of flats, one block was called White House. My nan and grandad lived there. There are so many things I can remember from those times. Going Saturday morning pictures at the Granada, then to Browns Pie and Mash shop for our lunch (we used to have to take our own fork and spoon, our mums said you don't know who's been using theirs). We used to go shopping down Battersea High Street or Falcon Road and Clapham Junction, shops like Harding and Hobbs, Walters, David Thomas's . There was a shop on the corner of High Street and Winders Road called Jonjax. My Nan and Grandad had 17 children between them (both married twice). My grandad's name was Fishpool and my nan's maiden name was Stannard. I have been doing my family tree and have so far traced some of my family back to the early 1800s living in Battersea. I now live in East London and have done for many, many years, but my heart is south London always.
Comment from Jill White on Sunday, 4th September 2011.