Listed Building record MDR25024 - Wesley Hall, Potter Street, Melbourne
Type and Period (3)
- WESLEYAN METHODIST CHAPEL ? (Victorian to 21st Century - 1853 AD to 2050 AD)
- ATHENAEUM (Victorian to 21st Century - 1853 AD to 2050 AD)
- BANK (FINANCIAL) (Victorian to 21st Century - 1853 AD to 2050 AD)
Protected Status/Designation
Full Description
Wesley Hall, Potter Street, Melbourne, built in 1853.
From the National Heritage List for England:
'SK 38/3925 PARISH OF MELBOURNE POTTER STREET 6/159 (South Side) Wesley Hall GV II Savings bank and Athenaeum, now Wesleyan Hall. 1853-4 by H I Stevens of Derby in Italianate style with minor later alterations. Red brick with stone dressings and plinth, rusticated stone quoins and wide plain first floor stone band with similar ground floor sill band and narrower first floor sill band. Hipped slate roof with moulded stone cornice Two storeys and four bays with tower attached to south east corner. Main elevation has advanced single storey porches to either side also with hipped slate roofs, rusticated quoins and moulded cornices. Each porch has a semi-circular headed doorcase with rusticated jambs, moulded arch with console keystone, continuous raised impost bands and a flush panelled door below divided overlight. Between the porches there are four windows in moulded surrounds, plus console keystones, with timber cross windows. To the centre there is an elaborate late C19 ironwork bracket carrying wooden sign. Above there are four, more widely spaced, plain sashes in similar surrounds. Above again is the deep band at the base of the cornice, there is a recessed panel with 'Athenaeum' inscribed in raised capital letters. Similar windows to west gable wall with 'AD 1853' inscribed in the cornice. Similar tripartite sashes in moulded surrounds to east gable wall with 'SAVINGS BANK' inscribed above. Attached tower in similar style except two top stages which have rusticated corner pilaster strips and central panels with blocked circular keystoned openings to lower stage and twin semi-circular headed windows above to each side with a moulded cornice over. Interior is very plain with C20 fittings. The building was opened by Viscount Palmerston, Prime Minister to Queen Victoria between 1855-1858 and 1859-1865 who also laid the foundation stone.
Listing NGR: SK3868525210.'
(1)
Sources/Archives (1)
- <1> SDR19551 Listed Building File: Historic England. 2011. The National Heritage List for England. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1096366?section=official-list-entry.
Map
Location
| Grid reference | SK 38685 25210 (point) |
|---|---|
| Civil Parish | MELBOURNE, SOUTH DERBYSHIRE, DERBYSHIRE |
Related Monuments/Buildings (0)
Related Events/Activities (0)
External Links (0)
Record last edited
Mar 14 2026 6:03PM