Cowbridge Town Hall


Cowbridge Town Hall is a public building in the South Wales market town of Cowbridge. It is the meeting place for Cowbridge with Llanblethian Town Council, and also houses the town clerk's office, administrative office, Cowbridge Museum and meeting rooms where public events are held. It is a Grade II* listed building.

History

The town hall was commissioned to replace the aging Guild Hall, located in High Street, which had previously been their meeting place. The Guild Hall had also been a regular venue for the Quarter Sessions which traveled around South Wales.
The site selected for the new town hall was a building dating to 1806 which had hitherto served as a prison or "House of Correction". In 1824 it was reported that "Plans and estimate of the expense attending the erection of a new Town Hall... have been procured by the Revd. John Montgomery Traherne at his own expense". On 15 October 1829 and 22 July 1830 The Court of Common Council - Cowbridge ordered that thanks be given to Isaiah Verity Esq of Ash Hall for "offering ground for the erection of the Town Hall". Verity, in gratitude for planning and directing the new town hall, was awarded freedom of the borough, after the building was completed in 1830.
Eight of the original prison cells are still intact, six of which house the exhibits of Cowbridge Museum.