1
St Peter's Church, Avenue Road
Image: © Roger Templeman
Taken: 19 Apr 2014
0.03 miles
2
Reliance Bus, Grantham Bus Station, 1979
The old (pre 1984) bus station alongside the museum. Reliance (Simmons (Coaches) Ltd of Great Gonerby) shared services in the town with National Bus subsidiary Lincolnshire Road Car. Reliance continued to run after deregulation in 1986, until being bought out in 2003 by Mass Transit of Sheffield. Mass Transit then took over Road Car operations the following year when the latter closed their local garage, but had over-reached themselves financially and pulled out of Grantham in February 2005. The Simmons subsidiary had itself gone into liquidation at the end of the previous year. Since 2005, local services are run by Centrebus.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: Unknown
0.03 miles
3
Grantham Guildhall clock
Detail of the Guildhall http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/3849483 clock tower, with the four-sided clock, which when first built, allowed many Grantham residents to accurately tell the time. As the Guildhall also housed the Sessions House, it is the origin of the local saying "under the clock", meaning to appear in court.
Image: © Richard Croft
Taken: 13 Feb 2014
0.03 miles
4
Former Christchurch Congregational Chapel, Castlegate, Grantham
Built in 1870 to the design of James Tait with Early English style tracery to the windows. The building includes a Sunday School to the left. Now occupied by the Alive Church, and evangelical group. The United Reformed congregation has moved to the Methodist church on Firkin Street.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 9 Feb 2017
0.03 miles
5
Former town lock-up, Grantham
Tucked in at the side of the Guildhall, and probably of slightly later date as the brickwork is slightly different. Listed Grade II. See http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/5286770 for the blue plaque.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 15 Feb 2017
0.04 miles
6
New Life Church, Castlegate, Grantham
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 7 Sep 2013
0.04 miles
7
Grantham Guildhall and Sessions Hall
Now an arts centre, The Grantham Guildhall and Sessions Hall, on St Peter's Hill, is a Grade II Listed Building (English Heritage ID:193008 http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-193008-the-guildhall-and-sessions-hall-lincolns British Listed Buildings) dating from 1867-9.
Notable features include its high-pitched slate roof in modified French style and the tall clock lantern with wrought iron coronet.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 7 Sep 2013
0.04 miles
8
Grantham - upper floors of Guildhall
For an alternative view, please see
Image
Image: © Dave Bevis
Taken: 26 Jul 2012
0.04 miles
9
The Guildhall Arts Centre St Peter's Hill
Guildhall and jail Grade II Listed built 1867-9 and designed by Lincoln architect William Watkins commissioned in 1866 by Mayor Thomas Winter after criminal Jesse Dale twice walked out of the town’s original jail in 1864. On the site was an old school, The Firs, housed in a former town house. This and the adjoining land were bought for £2,100.00. At the height of World War I, the jail in the Guildhall was resurrected and the first female officer to have full powers of arrest, Edith Smith, joined the Grantham force and was based there. As late as 1930, publican Frank Milner of the Victoria Hotel, Commercial Road, was let off with a caution for serving out of hours because he set his time by the clock which was, and still is, a little slow. In 1972, a dome replaced the original wrought ironwork over the clock tower and in 1974, the magistrates moved to the London Road. Much of the building was redundant until 1991 when it was redesigned by Sleaford architect Tim Benton and re-opened as the council owned Guildhall Arts Centre at a cost of £1.2 million. In 2010 a refurbishment, saw the box office move to the front of the building and the Victorian entrance being used once more, a new coffee shop was housed in the jail where the kitchen area is still referred to as ‘the back cell’.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 2 May 2011
0.04 miles
10
Sir Isaac Newton statue
This bronze statue dating from 1858 is sited on the High Street in front of the Victorian gothic Guildhall. Isaac Newton lived nearby in Woolsthorpe Manor
Image and attended the King's School in Grantham.
Image: © Graham Hogg
Taken: 29 Oct 2013
0.04 miles