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Latitude: 53.7504 / 53°45'1"N
Longitude: -2.4842 / 2°29'3"W
OS Eastings: 368167
OS Northings: 428336
OS Grid: SD681283
Mapcode National: GBR CT22.Z9
Mapcode Global: WH96V.TZ7R
Plus Code: 9C5VQG28+58
Entry Name: Blackburn Museum
Listing Date: 1 August 1995
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1223411
English Heritage Legacy ID: 418833
ID on this website: 101223411
Location: Blackburn, Blackburn with Darwen, Lancashire, BB1
County: Blackburn with Darwen
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Blackburn
Traditional County: Lancashire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Lancashire
Church of England Parish: Cathedral Church of St Mary the Virgin and St Paul Blackburn
Church of England Diocese: Blackburn
Tagged with: Architectural structure
SD 6828 SW
796- /4/10020
BLACKBURN
MUSEUM STREET (East side)
Blackburn Museum
GV
II
Library, museum and art gallery, now museum and art gallery. 1872-4, by Thomas Edward Collcutt of Woodzell & Collcutt, with sculpture by C.W Seale of London; enlarged in C19, altered in C20. Coursed sandstone rubble with freestone dressings, steeply-pitched slate roof (now hipped but formerly with gables over the outer bays of both facades), red ridge tiles. Broad L-shaped plan on corner site facing west, with extension at east end. Free Gothic style with some Arts-and-Crafts detailing. Two storeys, 1:3:1 bays in a symmetrical design formerly with gables over the outer bays; with a plinth, carved foliated impost bands to both floors (differing), a similarly carved cornice and a plain parapet, all these carried round. The ground floor has a wide and deeply splayed 2-centred entrance archway chamfered in 4 orders, furnished with wrought-iron gates with lettered metal banners in Arts-and-Crafts style and leading to an internal porch with steps up and tiled side walls including pictorial panels depicting Painting and Poetry (left) and Science and Labour (right); and above the arch a stone pentice with a richly foliated carved panel. Flanking the entrance the inner bays have tall 2-centred arched one-light windows and the outer bays have windows of 2 similar lights, all these windows in sunk panels. At 1st floor the centre and outer bays have large 2-centred arches with double-chamfered surrounds, carved impost bands, and quatrefoil windows in the heads, below which those in the outer bays have 3-light mullioned windows and that in the centre has a carved panel (see below); the inner bays have square windows of 3 transomed arched lights above the impost band and carved panels below. The set of 3 panels contain bas relief sculpture of figures in ancient and medieval costume representing Art (left), Literature (centre) and Science (right). In the left return to Richmond Terrace (likewise lacking gables to the outer bays), the fenestration of the original range of 1:4:1 bays follows the pattern of inner and outer bays at the front (except that at ground floor the outer bays have 1-light windows and the inner have 2-light windows), and beneath the 1st-floor windows are four similar but more interestingly detailed relief panels representing contemporary Commerce, Textiles, Iron Founding and Agriculture. Continued to the east is a short 3-window symmetrical extension in similar style, with a large arched window containing a relief panel flanked by enriched blank arches containing carved shields.
INTERIOR: entrance hall containing staircase with wrought-iron balustrading; former library hall to rear of this with 2-centred arcade formerly separating reference library from lending library, with carved foliated capitals to the piers but now blocked; former gallery to reference library now partitioned. Three exhibition halls at 1st floor. Despite
mutilation caused by removal of all gables, retains much detailing typical of 1870s Gothic Revival. Forms group with Richmond Terrace to north (q.v.) and old Town Hall to south (q.v.). Included for group value.
Listing NGR: SD6816728336
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