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A Stunning Venue – public and private (part 2)

Pittville Pump Room is a visitor destination for the local community and visitors for a diverse range of activities and events, both public and private, and is one of Cheltenham’s most popular wedding venues. It is also a favoured venue for orchestras, choirs and chamber groups for its stunning acoustics, which sees the venue take [...]

A Stunning Venue – public and private (part 2)2022-02-15T14:40:58+00:00

A Stunning Venue – public and private (part 1)

Pittville Pump Room has hosted a varied succession of events throughout its lifetime. From balls, Royal receptions, race launches, fetes and fireworks events to horticultural shows, tightrope walkers and menageries hosting improbable sights. One eyewitness account from the 1800s recorded seeing ‘a stupendous elephant swimming in the Pittville Lake’.

A Stunning Venue – public and private (part 1)2022-02-15T14:37:00+00:00

A New Beginning – a new century

In 2003, it was discovered that the old Victorian wells at the Pump Room were leaking and allowing ground water to dilute the natural mineral water to such an extent that it no longer qualified as ‘spa water’, and the well was shut down.

A New Beginning – a new century2022-02-15T14:34:28+00:00

The Duke of Wellington

Public subscriptions came to the rescue, which were accompanied by Public Works grants and Historic Building Council contributions. A total of £43,250 was raised and by 1960 the building was partially restored to its former glory and re-opened in 1960 by the Duke of Wellington. The old card room has been replead by a new [...]

The Duke of Wellington2022-02-15T14:28:55+00:00

Debt and dry out

Unfortunately like many bankers of his time, Pitt later ran into financial difficulties, the building went out of favour and it was eventually sold to the Borough of Cheltenham for a mere £5,400 in 1890 - a fraction of the original cost. During the Second World War the Pump Room housed British and American army [...]

Debt and dry out2022-02-15T14:16:56+00:00

A Grand Opening – with a price tag

The total cost of the project was over £40,000 - not small by today's standards, but incredibly high at that time. The decoration is based on the Ionic order  and the great hall reflects this with spa opening on the north side and the gallery and dome surmounting the hall. The original official opening of [...]

A Grand Opening – with a price tag2022-02-15T14:32:58+00:00

Pitt the Man

In the early 1820s a banker named Joseph Pitt commissioned the architect, John Forbes, to design a pump room that was to act as the centrepiece  to his vision o a town to rival Cheltenham - a town he would call Pittville. The foundation stone was laid on 4 May 1825 and the work completed [...]

Pitt the Man2022-02-15T14:33:03+00:00

A Monument – to waters and spas

The Pittville Pump Room is a monument to the more than 100 years of fame that Cheltenham enjoyed as a spa town. The waters were first discovered in 1716 on a site now occupied by Cheltenham Ladies' College. In 1788 George III and Queen Charlotte came to take the waters, and their visit set the seal [...]

A Monument – to waters and spas2022-05-03T15:26:06+01:00
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