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Victoria Hall - Queen Street

Site of Exeter's first film show

St George's Hall has never quite fulfilled its intended role as a general purpose performance venue, probably because it is not quite large enough.

However, Exeter did once have a hall that could fulfill this function - Victoria Hall in Queen's Street. In December 1868, the Chamber of Commerce, were preparing to host a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, requiring a hall with seating for 2,000 people.

To this end, a company was formed and shares were issued for £5 each to raise the £7,000 cost of construction of a new hall. Designed by Mr C J Phipps of London and built by Mr Diment, the building consisted of the main hall 35 meters long by 20 metres wide. The front of the building, the Upper Hall consisting of a lecture hall with a capacity of 400, committee room and sale room, was built several years later. There was also a cellar that was used as a bonded store.

In 1880, an air-driven concert organ, built by Willis was installed in an organ gallery, at a cost of £2,000. Five years later the circular auditorium was converted for use by travelling circuses.

Apart from public entertainment, the building was used for trade union meetings and as a drill hall for the 1st Devonshire Rifle Volunteers.

Early cinema shows

Magic lantern shows were popular in Victorian times and it is probable that the hall would have been used for such presentations. The first moving film shown in the Victoria Hall was in October 1896, when Mr John D Ablett showed his new moving pictures for three nights. It was only in the previous February that moving pictures were first shown in London by the Lumière brothers. The Exeter Evening Post wrote:

"Twelve scenes were shown, the most successful artistically being undoubtedly that of breaking of incoming waves.... The series which met with the heartiest reception, however, was that depicting the finish of this year’s Derby."

These films had been supplied by R W Paul and Birt Acres, two British pioneers of film - they were shown all over the country and proved to be a sensation.

Travelling film shows such as Poole's Myriorama included the Victoria Hall in their circuit, and would be booked for up to a month. The Boer War saw the interest in moving film increased when in December 1899 the Exeter Evening Post wrote:

“Splendid show of ANIMATED PHOTOGRAPHS descriptive of the life work in the Navy in the Briton v. Boer War”

There were two attempts in 1901 to show films with sound, but the system proved to be unpopular, probably because the hall was too large for the sound equipment at the time and couldn't be heard by most of the audience. From 1910, West's Animated Pictures opened as the Victoria Hall Picture Palace.

Hancock's Gigantic Carnival

Film shows at the Victoria Hall were quickly followed In September 1898, by Hancock’s Electrical BIOGRAPH of ‘LIVING PICTURES’ when they visited Exeter with a film show. The show was in a fairground trailer. They continued to visit Exeter with their film shows until around about 1908 when cinemas became more established.

The Hall Burns Down

On 6 October 1919 disaster struck when the Victoria Hall caught fire.

The fire was discovered by a night watchman at Queens Street Station (Central Station) and at 5:10am Superintendent Pett at the fire service took the call at the Fire Station (now the Old Fire House) in New North Road. When they arrived flames and sparks were leaping from the roof, illuminating the whole area. Units from St Thomas, Heavitree, Exwick, Whipton and Wonford, along with a railway unit were also summoned to help. The heat broke every window and seared the painted surfaces in the window sashes in the side of the Rougemont Hotel that faced the hall. The fire crews had to direct water jets at the eaves of the roof to prevent it catching fire. The Express & Echo reported the fire in detail in the first edition, the same day. They reported that the concert organ was also lost thus:

The Organ's Final Notes

The grand organ, built about thirty years ago by Willis at a cost of about £2,000, and the organ gallery burst like tinder. When the conflagration was at its height, Supt. Pett and the members of the Brigade who were on the adjoining roofs were startled by hearing notes on the organ. As the sounds which seemed like a scale passage being run by a skilful player, fell upon their ears, they thought there must be somebody manipulating the keyboard. They quickly satisfied themselves that was not the case. Some wag on the roof suggested that the grand old instrument, on which Guilmant once played was giving out "The Last Chord". The explanation, of course, was the heat had forced a volume of air through the pipes, and set them speaking. Supt. Pett described the incident as one of the most amusing of his fire experience."

The cellars below the hall were used as a bonded store and a large quantity of wines and spirits had to be removed and placed in a safe place. The hall was also used as an early cinema in Exeter:

"A curious coincidence was that one of the cinema posters which was intact outside the hall this morning bore the words "Flames" in large letters, and contained a picture illustrating an episode in a cinema story of the rescue of the heroine from a burning building."

Damage was estimated at £6,000 of which, £2,000 was the value of the organ. As a result of the loss, part of the Higher Market was converted into a temporary public hall which was used throughout the war years and up to 1970. Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Fleetwood Mac appeared at the Higher Market Hall.

Source: Kelly's Directory, Express & Echo and Two Thousand Years in Exeter by W G Hoskins, the Bill Douglas Centre website. © 2005 David Cornforth - not to be used without permission

Also see History of the Cinema in Exeter
Victoria Hall map
Victoria Hall in Queen Street.
A card for an Exhibition at the Victoria Hall
The Indian Exhibition was held in April amd May, 1908, at the Victoria Hall.
The burnt remains of Victoria Hall
The burnt remains of the Victoria Hall.
Exeter College, Queen Street
The Victoria Hall covered the site of the Exeter College, Queen Street, which had been built for Rowe Bros in the 1920's. The main hall was at the rear of Angels the building to the left of the College.


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