Oxford Town Hall is located at St Aldate’s, Oxford OX1 1BX, UK, we aim to offer all our customers a great experience with Oxford Town Hall and we would be happy to assist you with any questions you may have.

Book an appointment or need answers to a question, please feel free to contact us by phone 01865 252195 or visit our website

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Need to know more about this business, please call us during business hours or visit our website and can get more information – of Oxford Town Hall by http://www.oxfordtownhall.co.uk/ .

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Google Review

Note: these reviews will not count in overall rating.

Tim Doe

1 Google Rating

Christmas Party Overpowering security acting like police. Making up false accusations mixing us up

1/ 5

Christmas Party Overpowering security acting like police. Making up false accusations mixing us up with another table. Intimidating and hands of with someone from our table who had done nothing wrong! Overall very bad experience. This is our second time as first time was very good but this had made us decide not to return again

Dom

5 Google Rating

Nice building also hosting the museum with interesting displays. The hall itself has some fine emb

5/ 5

Nice building also hosting the museum with interesting displays. The hall itself has some fine embellishments.

GNF Browning

5 Google Rating

Great venue for Oxford Real Farming Conference

5/ 5

Great venue for Oxford Real Farming Conference

Marvin Wan

4 Google Rating

Nice building!

4/ 5

Nice building!

Aaron Jones

5 Google Rating

Incredible looking building, the event space is very large. Reception staff are always welcoming, e

5/ 5

Incredible looking building, the event space is very large. Reception staff are always welcoming, event staff always have the room laid out the way we like it when we turn up the night before. It's clean, bright and looks great. Location is brilliant. super central which is key for our events. Parking is the only issue, the ice rink or shopping centre is the nearest car parks so a 10 minutes walk but nothing you can do about it. We look forward to running our events once again at the Town Hall.

Barry Cutler

5 Google Rating

Great place, visited the Museum, really good displaying the history of Oxford

5/ 5

Great place, visited the Museum, really good displaying the history of Oxford

Rachael Bradley

1 Google Rating

Ended up paying £2 for a vegan fair that was really disappointing. Stuff didn't smell good and one

1/ 5

Ended up paying £2 for a vegan fair that was really disappointing. Stuff didn't smell good and one of the food stalls really smelled like baby sick which was was offputting for the whole thing.

Halima Brewer

5 Google Rating

Green Fair was fun and very Green.

5/ 5

Green Fair was fun and very Green.

Anca Onciul

5 Google Rating

Brilliant venue for a wedding. Very good facilities and helpful staff

5/ 5

Brilliant venue for a wedding. Very good facilities and helpful staff

MD Sourav Islam (রাব্বি)

5 Google Rating

Oxford's guildhall was created by substantially repairing or rebuilding a house on the current site

5/ 5

Oxford's guildhall was created by substantially repairing or rebuilding a house on the current site in about 1292. It was replaced by a new building, designed by Isaac Ware in the Italianate style in 1752. In 1891, an architectural design competition was held for a new building on the same site. The local architect Henry Hare won with a Jacobethan design. The 1752 building was demolished in 1893. Hare's new building included new premises for Oxford's Crown and County Courts, central public library and police station as well as the city council. The Prince of Wales opened the new building in May 1897, about a month before the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. University of Oxford undergraduates were expected to mount a large demonstration for the opening, so a detachment of the Metropolitan Police Mounted Branch was deployed to reinforce the small Oxford City Police force. The Metropolitan officers were unused to Oxford undergraduates, and considered the boisterous crowd a danger. The officers attacked the crowd with batons, causing several serious injuries. The crowd reciprocated, unhorsing one officer and trampling him. A young law don, FE Smith, who had taken no part in the violence, saw police mishandling his college servant. Smith went to rescue his servant but was arrested. He became the first prisoner in one of the cells of the new police station in the new Town Hall. Smith was charged with obstructing police officers in the execution of their duty, but at his trial the young lawyer was found not guilty. The police station was at the rear in Blue Boar Street. It was completed later than the rest of the building, but the Oxford City Police force was able to move there from its former station in Kemp Hall by the turn of the century. The City Council was accused of greatly exceeding the budget it set for the building project. In 1905 Henry Taunt published a leaflet in which he stated that the building was meant to cost £47,000 but ended up costing £100,000. In the First World War the building was converted into the Town Hall section of the 3rd Southern General Hospital. From 1916 it specialised in treating soldiers suffering from malaria. Oxford City Police moved to a new police station further down St Aldate's in 1936 and the central public library moved to new facilities at Westgate Centre in Queen Street which were completed in 1972. The town hall was the headquarters of the county borough for much of the 20th century and remained the seat of government after Oxford City Council was formed in 1974.

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  • Sunday08:00 AM - 07:00 PM
  • Monday08:00 AM - 07:00 PM
  • Tuesday08:00 AM - 07:00 PM
  • Wednesday08:00 AM - 07:00 PM
  • Thursday08:00 AM - 07:00 PM
  • Friday10:00 AM - 05:00 PM
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