Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Manchester Assize Courts

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Status
  
Demolished

Completed
  
1864

Height
  
80 m

Opened
  
1864

Architect
  
Alfred Waterhouse

Type
  
Venetian Gothic

Antenna spire
  
85 m (279 ft)

Construction started
  
1859

Destruction date
  
1945

Manchester Assize Courts httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Strangeways, Manchester, Lancashire

Demolished
  
1957 (ruins from the Manchester Blitz)

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
HM Prison Manchester, National Liberal Club, Rochdale Town Hall, Manchester Town Hall, Eaton Hall - Cheshire

The Manchester Assize Courts were law courts on Great Ducie Street in the Strangeways district of Manchester, England. It was 279 ft (85 m) tall and from 1864 to 1877 the tallest building in Manchester. Widely admired, it has been referred to as one of Britain's 'lost buildings'.

History

The Assize Courts was the first civic building to be constructed in Manchester after the town hall on King Street by Francis Goodwin in 1819. The Builder described it as the most important building outside Whitehall. Its design was the result of a competition in 1858 that attracted more than 100 entries. The competition was won by Alfred Waterhouse whose design beat schemes from other renowned architects such as Thomas Worthington and Edward Walters.

Waterhouse designed the building in the Venetian Gothic style, construction began in 1859 and was completed in 1864. As part of the scheme, the nearby 1862 Strangeways Prison was included in his design and is currently a Grade II listed structure.

The building contained exterior sculptures by Thomas Woolner and the firm of O'Shea and Whelan. They depicted lawgivers from history, along with a "drunk woman", a "good woman", a scene of the Judgment of Solomon and carvings depicting different punishments throughout history.

As part of the court system changes, the assize court system in Manchester was abolished in 1956 and changed to the Crown Court system. The courts building was severely damaged in the Manchester Blitz in 1940 and 1941. It was said that everything was destroyed except the Ducie Street facade and judges' lodgings. Some buildings in the city damaged in the war were repaired but Manchester Assize was demolished soon after the assize court abolition in 1957. Some of the sculptures were preserved and incorporated into the new magistrates' court building.

References

Manchester Assize Courts Wikipedia