place

Amersham Market Hall

AmershamCity and town halls in BuckinghamshireGovernment buildings completed in 1682Grade II* listed buildings in BuckinghamshireMarket halls
Use British English from April 2022
Market Hall, High Street, Amersham
Market Hall, High Street, Amersham

Amersham Market Hall, formerly known as Amersham Town Hall, is a municipal building in the High Street in Amersham, Buckinghamshire, England. The structure is a Grade II* listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Amersham Market Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Amersham Market Hall
High Street,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Amersham Market HallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.6665 ° E -0.6169 °
placeShow on map

Address

Market Hall

High Street
HP7 0DJ (Amersham and Villages Community Board, Old Amersham)
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q17539801)
linkOpenStreetMap (348731504)

Market Hall, High Street, Amersham
Market Hall, High Street, Amersham
Share experience

Nearby Places

Amersham Martyrs Memorial
Amersham Martyrs Memorial

The Amersham Martyrs Memorial is a memorial to Protestant martyrs in Amersham, Buckinghamshire. It was established in 1931 by The Protestant Alliance. The memorial was unveiled by a Mrs L. R. Raine, a direct descendant of martyr Thomas Harding, who is commemorated on the memorial. It is located near the Rectory or Parsonage Woods opposite Ruccles Field. Access is from a footpath from or a separate footpath from Station Road.The memorial commemorates the deaths of seven local Protestant martyrs and Lollards (six men and one woman) who were burnt at the stake in 1506 and 1521. It also commemorates the deaths of three Amersham men who were burned elsewhere including Great Missenden, Smithfield, and Chesham between 1506 and 1532, as well as one Amersham man who was strangled to death at Woburn in 1514. According to the memorial's inscription, the children of William Tylsworth (-1506) and John Scrivener (-1521) were "compelled" to light the fire under their fathers' pyre. The memorial stands 100 yards from the site of the executions.At the unveiling of the memorial in 1931 the assembled crowd was exhorted by a speaker to maintain "Protestant King on a Protestant throne and be ruled by a Protestant parliament". The chairman of the Protestant Alliance, Major Richard Rigg, delivered a speech at the unveiling of the memorial and the hymn "For All the Saints" was sung. In his 2019 book Sacred and Secular Martyrdom in Britain and Ireland since 1914, John Wolffe placed the creation of the memorial and others to martyrs in the context of memorials created in the aftermath of the First World War and their accompanying militaristic imagery.A play about the martyrs, The Life and time of the Martyrs of Amersham and the Community in Which they Lived was staged by the local community in Amersham in March 2016.