Latitude: 52.2824 / 52°16'56"N
Longitude: -1.5894 / 1°35'21"W
OS Eastings: 428109
OS Northings: 264997
OS Grid: SP281649
Mapcode National: GBR 5M4.T5R
Mapcode Global: VHBXH.DWMP
Plus Code: 9C4W7CJ6+X7
Entry Name: Former Dale Temperance Hotel and Coffee Tavern
Listing Date: 30 June 2010
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1393866
English Heritage Legacy ID: 508180
ID on this website: 101393866
Location: Warwick, Warwickshire, CV34
County: Warwickshire
District: Warwick
Civil Parish: Warwick
Built-Up Area: Warwick
Traditional County: Warwickshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Warwickshire
Church of England Parish: Warwick St Mary
Church of England Diocese: Coventry
Tagged with: Hotel
WARWICK
811/0/10031 OLD SQUARE
01-JUL-10 16
Former Dale Temperance Hotel and Coffe
e Tavern
II
A temperance hotel and coffee tavern, built in 1880 for Thomas Bellamy Dale to designs by Frederick H Moore, ARIBA (1841-1924).
MATERIALS: The building is constructed from red brick with terracotta detailing, under plain clay tile roofs.
PLAN: The building is orientated east-west, having a four-bay range fronting the street, with a narrow bay set back to the west housing the stair; a large, five-bay range extends to the rear.
EXTERIOR: The building is of three storeys and a basement, with hipped roofs and tall gable-end stacks to the front range. The main elevation has bands of terracotta decoration in guilloche pattern marking the first and second floors, and there are floral decorative details to the window architraves. There are round-arched doorways to either side of the ground floor, that to the west having a moulded architrave with keystone; above each is a panel of terracotta decoration with moulded surround, depicting flowers in an Arts and Crafts style. The ground and first floors have round-arched windows with decorative aprons and moulded architraves to the arches, all with mullions and transoms to the lower parts and multiple smaller panes to the arched sections; those to the ground floor have stained glass in yellow shades depicting flowers and birds. The second floor has rectangular-headed windows of similar pattern; to either side of the second-floor windows are terracotta panels reading COFFEE / TAVERN. The rear elevations are largely plain, and have round-arched windows to the first floor and rectangular windows elsewhere, all set in plain reveals.
INTERIOR: The interior retains part of its original lobby with round-arched glazed arcading immediately inside the entrance. The stair is a closed string with turned balusters and a moulded rail, with square-section newel posts with single flutes, pyramid knops and large ball finials. The principal rooms have all been subdivided into office space, but the original moulded cornice remains in situ, broken by the later partitions; the round-arched windows have matching architraves; and the majority of the original fireplaces are still in situ. The former coffee room on the ground floor and the former club room on the first floor both have good Arts and Crafts stone fireplaces with tile inserts by Minton, designed by John Moyr Smith, depicting scenes from Shakespeare and Tennyson's Idylls of the King.
HISTORY: The Dale Temperance Hotel and Coffee Tavern was built in 1880 by Thomas Bellamy Dale (1809-1890), a local manufacturer and philanthropist who was much concerned with charitable work and the improvement of living conditions within the city. Dale was a partner in the firm of George Nelson, Dale and Co, with his cousin George Nelson; the firm had developed a business manufacturing gelatine for use in the photographic process, and supplied products to the home market as well as exporting to the United States. The building was designed by Frederick Holyoake Moore, ARIBA (1841/2-1924), a Warwick architect who lived in nearby Northgate Street. The site was occupied by two houses until bought in 1879 by Thomas Dale, who erected his Temperance Hotel and Coffee Tavern to provide teetotal entertainment as an alternative to the many public houses which were widely blamed for causing drunkenness and ill-health amongst the working-class people of the town. The facilities included a ground-floor bar and coffee room with service rooms to the rear; the first floor was largely occupied by a bagatelle and smoke room to the front, and a large committee and club room to the rear, capable of division by a folding partition. The second floor housed bedrooms for hotel guests. After Dale's death in 1890, the building, still known as the Dale Temperance Hotel, continued in business as such, until its purchase by Warwickshire County Council for £2550 in 1936, after which it was used as the Council's Staff Club. In the later C20, the interior of the building was partitioned internally to provide office space, in which use it remained at the time of inspection in 2010.
SOURCES: Warwickshire County Council: Shire Hall, Warwick: A Conservation Statement Version 1.0 (May 2007)
Warwickshire County Council: Shire Hall, Warwick: Heritage Audit of Warwickshire County Council Offices, Council Chamber and Members' Area (July 2009)
Obituary of Frederick Holyoake Moore, ARIBA, in Journal of the Royal Institute of British Architects (16 August 1924), 626
REASONS FOR DESIGNATION: The former Dale Temperance Hotel and Coffee Tavern, built in 1880 by Frederick Holyoake Moore for the manufacturer and philanthropist Thomas Bellamy Dale, is designated at Grade II, for the following principal reasons:
* Architectural interest: the building, designed by Frederick Holyoake Moore, ARIBA, is a distinctive and decorative late C19 building with good terracotta decoration
* Historic interest: it is a relatively rare survival of a coffee tavern associated with the temperance movement, which was particularly strong in the period of its construction
* Interior: the decorative scheme includes good architect-designed fireplaces with Minton Arts and Crafts tile decoration by John Moyr Smith, and good coloured glass work by Frank Holt and Co
* Intactness: despite the later internal partitioning and some associated losses, the building retains its historic interior scheme largely intact.
* Architectural interest: the building, designed by Frederick Holyoake Moore, ARIBA, is a distinctive and decorative late C19 building with good terracotta decoration
* Historic interest: it is a relatively rare survival of a coffee tavern associated with the temperance movement, which was particularly strong in the period of its construction
* Interior: the decorative scheme includes good architect-designed fireplaces with Minton Arts and Crafts tile decoration by John Moyr Smith, and good coloured glass work by Frank Holt and Co
* Intactness: despite the later internal partitioning and some associated losses, the building retains its historic interior scheme largely intact
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