Robert Courts poster
Witney Sewing & Knitting Centre
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Witney Market Square
Market Square bus stop
The Horseshoes at Witney
Corn Street shops
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house on The Hill
The Bull at Burford
bottom end of the high street
Cotswold dormer
Burford County Primary School
Priory Lane bus stop
Burford County Primary School
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passing the Golden Pheasant
Burford House Hotel
Burford gables
Bridge Street cottages
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ruined windmill
The Three Horseshoes
passing November
Hensington Road cottages
bread bin architecture
not TOO terrible carbuncle
dog in a raincoat
Goblin narrowboat
St Barnabas in the blue
Lloyds weather vane
Co Co restaurant
another pub turned mosque
dangerous pedestrian zone
Westgate brick
getting on with the Westgate
Bonn Square steps
Oxford County fingerpost
creeper-covered lamppost
Jericho postman
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www.witneyblanketstory.org.uk/WBP.asp?navigationPage=Sites&file=WBPPLACE.XML&record=Blanket%20Hall
The Blanket Hall's chief purpose was to be a central meeting place of the company and somewhere that locally made blankets could be weighed, measured, inspected and marked. The large room upstairs, known as 'The Great Room', was where the main business of the company was debated and in addition to this there was a kitchen, cellar and outbuildings.
It was built in the Baroque style and has a panel on the outside bearing the inscription 'Robert Collier Master 1721' and the arms of the Witney Company of Blanket Weavers. A public clock hangs on the outside of the building which was paid for by the company in 1722. This was at first was only a striking clock with a bell under a cover on the roof (this is still in place) but had no clock face: later a face with a single hand was added to the front of the building.
William Smith (1815-1875), the founder of Smith's blanket company, at one time lived in the Blanket Hall using the attics to store potatoes and later ran a brewery from the cellar of the building.
The Blanket Weavers Company came to an end in 1847 and since then the Blanket Hall has had many business uses; more recently it has become a private house. The internal structure has been subject to many alterations and only the external walls and a floor survive of the original building.
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