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Brighton Town Hall

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The former Brighton Town Hall is located in Hove , a suburb of Adelaide , South Australia . Its address is 388 Brighton Road, Hove.

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5-400: Brighton Town Hall could refer to: Brighton Town Hall, South Australia Brighton Town Hall, New York , USA Brighton Town Hall, England Brighton Town Hall, Melbourne , Australia Hove Town Hall , Brighton and Hove, England Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

10-531: A place for the business of Government but as a place "to serve the wants of the citizens" for many different activities. On 10 May 1869 a foundation stone was laid by the Hon John Hodgkiss a member of the Legislative Council of South Australia in a ceremony attended by many of South Australia's most important pioneers. Under this stone was placed a time capsule containing copies of the newspapers of

15-638: The day. As the City of Brighton and the population grew the hall expanded. In the early 1900s the original building was added to which allowed the library to house more books in a larger reading room. In 1936 the Brighton Council moved to new chambers and in 1937 the Brighton Town Hall was then leased to the RSL. In 2008 after 70 years the RSL moved. Since 2008, after nearly 150 years of continual community use,

20-513: The title Brighton Town Hall . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brighton_Town_Hall&oldid=1142134986 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Brighton Town Hall, South Australia The Brighton Town Hall

25-520: Was built in 1869 and was just the fourth Town Hall built in the colony of South Australia. The architect and builder was George William Highet who arrived in the colony in 1836. G. W. Highet served as a town clerk and Councillor and died in Brighton aged 80 years. The hall was constructed of stone from Ayliffe's quarry in the Adelaide Hills laid on concrete foundations. The pioneers built it not just as

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