Village Halls: Difference between revisions
(Created the entry and added a category.) |
David Coates (talk | contribs) (Added category Britain) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
In the United Kingdom in the nineteenth century, villages halls were amongst a number of community spaces in both rural and urban areas that became home to amateur dramatic performances. Other such spaces include Assembly Rooms, Corn Exchanges, Working Mens Clubs, church school rooms, Town Halls, Agricultural Halls, Guildhalls, Mechanics Institutes, Literary and Scientific Institutes. | In the United Kingdom in the nineteenth century, villages halls were amongst a number of community spaces in both rural and urban areas that became home to amateur dramatic performances. Other such spaces include Assembly Rooms, Corn Exchanges, Working Mens' Clubs, church school rooms, Town Halls, Agricultural Halls, Guildhalls, [[wikipedia:Mechanics'_institute|Mechanics' Institutes]], Literary and Scientific Institutes. | ||
[[Category:Venues]] | [[Category:Venues]] | ||
[[Category:Britain]] |
Latest revision as of 10:07, 21 December 2022
In the United Kingdom in the nineteenth century, villages halls were amongst a number of community spaces in both rural and urban areas that became home to amateur dramatic performances. Other such spaces include Assembly Rooms, Corn Exchanges, Working Mens' Clubs, church school rooms, Town Halls, Agricultural Halls, Guildhalls, Mechanics' Institutes, Literary and Scientific Institutes.