Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire


Uncommon markets (3)

In contrast to the grand town hall of the previous post, here is a market hall, plain and simple, in the middle of the beautiful Cotswold town of Chipping Campden. The market hall was put up in 1627 by Sir Baptist Hicks, a London mercer who built a mansion for himself at one end of Camden and made various gifts to his adopted town. The building was intended for use for the sale of poultry, butter, and cheese. It consists of little more than three rows of arches, a stone floor, and a roof, but they are done with such simplicity in golden Cotswold stone, that the building provides the perfect centrepiece to the main street.

Chipping Campden, which came to prominence as a centre of the wool trade in the late Middle Ages, is one of the most perfect of all the Cotswold towns. That it is still so perfect is due in part to the numerous craftsmen and artists who lived there in the early-20th century, many of whom came to Gloucestershire under the auspices of C R Ashbee’s Guild of Handicraft. It was Ashbee who repaired the market hall in 1903 and the artist F L Griggs, another Campden resident, who designed the war memorial, partly visible to the right of the picture. This is a place that has inspired artists and artisans, and they have repaid it with the work of hand, heart, and head.

6 comments:

  1. The market hall in Chipping Campden is what I call a real market hall :) Functional, spacious enough for all the stalls and buyers, and made of gorgeous materials. What more could a fairly small town require?

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  2. Looks very attractive. I don't know of any other part of the world as lovely as the Cotswolds (of course I haven't seen all the world. Yet)).
    How lovely to be a market trader in that environment!

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  3. Thank you all for your comments. I have, in my time, worked on market stalls, but never anywhere as beautiful, functional, and well built as this.

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  4. I like its simplicity and the solidity of the stone blockwork, but what really catches my eye are the obelisks on the gable ends; a lovely detail.

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  5. VK: Yes, well spotted! There's also at least one house in Campden with an obelisk-type finial on a gable end. A local motif, I suppose.

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