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Temperance Hall (Former), St Mary's Road, St Mary's

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Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved. © Copyright and database right 2025. Public Sector Viewing Terms

General Details and Location

Category
AT RISK
Name of Building
Temperance Hall (Former)
Other Name(s)
Address
St Mary's Road, St Mary's
Locality
Postcode
Planning Authority
Divisional Area
Reference No
4151
Listing Category
C
OS Grid Ref
HY 47470 01394
Location Type
Rural Settlement
HS Reference No
46388

Description

5-bay symmetrical rectangular-plan former Temperance Hall with 2-bay entrance projection to rear (NE angle). Harl-pointed roughly coursed rubble. Timber framed windows to side elevations; 4-pane timber sash and case window to entrance; blocked windows remaining. Purple Welsh slate; stone ridge; corniced rubble gablehead stack to N (entrance block) gable; cement skews; cavetto moulded skewputts (missing to SE angle); predominantly cast-iron rainwater goods.

The Temperance movement developed as a result of rising consumption of alcohol in the early 19th century (taxation on spirits was lowered in 1822) and a recognition that drunkenness was doing no good for the physical or moral health of the population. John Dunlop (1789-1868), a Greenock lawyer and philanthropist, was recognised in his own lifetime as 'the father of Temperance in Great Britain' and recognised the value of a communal effort to promote abstinence from alcohol. He organised an initial meeting in Glasgow in 1829, attended by William Collins, a printer and publisher who fervently advocated Dunlop's views, and together they spread their ideas throughout Britain. A number of different temperance groups grew up from this initial idea, each tackling the problem in a different way; the idea in Glasgow was to provide an alternative to the Public House, the famous Miss Cranston's Tea Rooms developing as a result. Similar concerns about the harmful effects of over indulgence were apparent in the United States at this time, with movements towards prohibition beginning to take off. An exiled Scot living in the US brought Good Templary (an alternative form of Dunlop's original temperance movement) to Scotland in 1869 and the first lodge was established in Glasgow in this year. By 1876, 1 131 lodges had been established in Scotland between Orkney and the Borders, and total membership of the Good Templars had reached 83 717. Members of the Holm branch of the Orkney Good Templars initially met in the Volunteers Drill Hall in St Mary's Village, until disputes between the Templars and the Volunteers caused the Templars to build a new hall into which they subsequently moved their meetings. (Historic Scotland)
Building Dates
Late 19th century
Architects
Unknown

Category of Risk and Development History

Condition
Poor
Category of Risk
Moderate
Exemptions to State of Risk
Field Visits
14/08/2009, 12/9/2013
Development History
August 2009: External inspection finds the the building is vacant, with most of its winodws boarded over. The unboarded windows on the gables are broken. There has been a fire within the single storey wing to the rear and this part of the building has been reduced to a shell.
12 September 2013: External inspection finds the slates to the roof are in good condition, however temporary repairs to the rear have perished. Gutters and downpipes are broken or missing.
5 March 2024: Desk-based assessment suggests building remains At-Risk.

Guides to Development

Conservation Area
Planning Authority Contact
PAC Telephone Number
01856 873535

Availability

Current Availability
Unknown
Appointed Agents
Price
Occupancy
Vacant
Occupancy Type
Unknown
Present/Former Uses
Name of Owners
Unverified see FAQ on ascertaining ownership
Type of Ownership
Unknown

Information Services

Additional Contacts/Information Source
Bibliography
ORKNEY ISLANDS TEMPERANCE QUARTERLY, (March 1st-May 1st, 1939); E King, SCOTLAND SOBER AND FREE, THE TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT 1829-1979 (1979).
Online Resources
Classification
Private Halls and Clubs
Original Entry Date
03-SEP-09
Date of Last Edit
06/03/2014