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Palace Hotel, Buxton

Coordinates: 53°15′39″N 1°54′53″W / 53.2608°N 1.9148°W / 53.2608; -1.9148
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Palace Hotel
Devonshire Dome and Palace Hotel
Map
General information
Town or cityBuxton, Derbyshire
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°15′39″N 1°54′53″W / 53.2608°N 1.9148°W / 53.2608; -1.9148
Construction started1864
Completed1866
Design and construction
Architect(s)Henry Currey
Designations
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated18 October 1994
Reference no.1258009

The Palace Hotel was opened in 1868 in Buxton, Derbyshire, England. It holds a prominent position in the town's central Conservation Area overlooking the town. It is a Grade-II listed building.[1]

It was built from 1864 to 1866 as the first-class Buxton Hotel on the hill next to Buxton's two new railway stations. It cost £50,000 to build and had 105 rooms, a grand ballroom and 5 acres of landscaped gardens with croquet lawns and a tennis court. After its construction, the venture was liquidated and the hotel was auctioned in November 1867 at the Waterloo Hotel in Manchester. It was bought for £20,000 by a consortium including several of the original investors, the Duke of Devonshire and with the LNWR railway company as a major shareholder. It opened as the Palace Hotel in May 1868. It was the largest hotel in Buxton until the luxury Empire Hotel with 300 rooms was opened in 1903 (although the Empire never repoened after World War I and was demolished in 1964).[2][3][4]

Originally the Buxton Hotel in 1867

The three-storey Palace Hotel is built of millstone grit stone and was designed in the style of a French château (with a Mansard roof with iron ridge railings and a central tower) by Henry Currey. Currey was the 7th Duke of Devonshire's architect and he also designed Buxton's St Ann's Well of 1852, Thermal Baths, Natural Baths, Pump Room, Market Hall, Holy Trinity Church, Congregational Church, Devonshire Park Chapel, Christchurch at Burbage, Wye House Asylum and Corbar Hall. Fellow architect Robert Rippon Duke was the Clerk of Works for the hotel's construction and he designed the grand marble-decorated extensions to the building in 1887, incuding a large new dining room at the rear and a new west wing.[3][5][6]

The hotel was an annexe to the Granville Military Hospital during World War I and used to billet British soldiers and later as a discharge centre for Canadian soldiers. After World War II (when the hotel was used as offices for the British civil service) the Palace Hotel was reopened by the Hewlett family, who also ran the Spa Plaza Hotel (formerly the Buxton Hydropathic). The red neon PALACE HOTEL sign on the tower is a distinctive sight in the town.[3][7]

Football teams including Manchester United, Manchester City, Nottingham Forest and Southampton stayed at the Palace Hotel in the 1950s as a health resort.[6] George Bernard Shaw, Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford and Margaret Thatcher are some of the famous guests who stayed at the hotel. The hotel is now part of the Britannia Hotels group and it has a spa, gym, indoor pool and conference rooms.[7][8][9]

References

  1. ^ Historic England. "Palace Hotel (Grade II) (1258009)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  2. ^ Roberts, Alan (2012). Buxton Through Time. Amberley Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 978 1 4456 0817 4.
  3. ^ a b c Leach, John (1987). The Book of Buxton. Baracuda Books Limited. pp. 75–78, 95–99, 124–127. ISBN 0 86023 286 7.
  4. ^ Morten, David (2018). Buxton in 50 Buildings. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 9781445678948.
  5. ^ Morris, Mel (April 2007). "Buxton Conservation Areas Character Appraisal" (PDF). High Peak Borough Council. Retrieved 10 June 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ a b Langham, Mike (2001). Buxton: A People's History. Carnegie Publishing. pp. 63, 178, 215. ISBN 1-85936-086-6.
  7. ^ a b "Palace Hotel Buxton | Britannia Hotels". www.britanniahotels.com. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  8. ^ "Palace Hotel". www.wondersofthepeak.org.uk. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  9. ^ "Celebrating 150 years of the Palace Hotel Buxton". Discover Buxton. 31 May 2018. Retrieved 10 June 2020.