The town in the 19th century
In 1801-2 the
Wilts. & Berks. canal was extended to the
Town mill at the east end of Cox's Hill from a
basin 200 m. south of the mill. The extension
was achieved by canalizing the Marden. A
wharf was built on the west side of that
stretch of the canal and, 120 m. south of the
mill, a building was erected incorporating a
wharfinger's house and what was probably
warehousing. (fn. 54) Unusually for Calne, the house
is of sandstone; its front range has a threebayed ashlar façade with a fluted frieze similar
to that of Castle House. The building was in
use as a community centre in 1999. About 1806
a new mill was built near the existing mill,
which was demolished. (fn. 55)
When the wharf was built the bridge over
the Marden linking Patford Street and Patford
Lane was replaced by a new bridge, on the
same site or nearby, near the wharfinger's
house, and in 1801 a new road was built along
the east bank of the canalized river to link
Patford Lane to Port bridge at the north-west
end of Butcher Row. Patford Lane was widened
and the name New Road was given to the whole
stretch of road from the south-west corner of
the Green to Port bridge. (fn. 56) In 1801 Butcher
Row, until then probably the main course of
the London road through the town, was considered too narrow for the traffic using it, (fn. 57) the
new bridge over the canalized Marden near the
wharfinger's house, although it linked New
Road and the wharf, did not link New Road
and Patford Street, and from 1801 London-
Bristol and London-Bath traffic bypassed Back
Street, Church Street, Butcher Row, and Patford Street by using New Road. (fn. 58) About 1801
Port bridge was rebuilt as a longer and wider
bridge to make it easier to use from New
Road. (fn. 59) In 1863 a road was built to link New
Road to the railway station then opened southwest of the wharf. (fn. 60)
Between Port bridge and the Town mill
there was a pool in the Marden to serve the
mill, (fn. 61) and from the 17th century or earlier the
adjoining land was called the Strand. (fn. 62) From c.
1801 the Marden fed the mill and the canal
through a long and narrow pond across the
Strand, where there was a place for horses to
be washed and watered. The water was
confined to vaulted culverts between 1840 and
1843, and the Strand, which from about then
was used as a market place, became a town
square. (fn. 63)
Calne seems to have flourished in the 19th
century and, although the built-up area was
little extended, (fn. 64) there was much new building,
public and institutional, industrial and commercial, and domestic. The predominant
building material was local limestone, mostly
laid in regular courses and sometimes used as
ashlar for dressings. Brick was widely used
from the mid 19th century, but stone remained
the preferred material for facing and few buildings were entirely of brick.
The market house, the first floor of which
was converted to a town hall between 1826 and
1829, was demolished in 1882, Town mill was
demolished in 1884, (fn. 65) and a new town hall, (fn. 66)
completed in 1886, was built on the site of the
mill. The new town hall was designed by Bryan
Oliver, who won a limited competition in 1883.
It is in Franco-Flemish late Gothic style and
consists of two parts linked by a gatearch. The
east part, a buttressed block adjoining New
Road, contains the hall and, on its north front,
has a clock tower facing the Strand. The west
part, which may have been built shortly after
the east, was a police station. (fn. 67) Between 1811
and 1877 three more nonconformist chapels
were built, in Back Road, Pippin Road, and Silver Street, and others were rebuilt, and in
1867-8 a free church was built on the north
side of the old Butcher Row. (fn. 68) On the west side
of the Green two schools were built, and
Bentley's school was rebuilt, in the earlier 19th
century, and on the south side a technical
school with large upper windows was built in
1894. A school was built in Mill Street in 1835,
and in the mid 19th century schools were built
in the angle of Wood Street and Curzon Street
and behind the free church in the old Butcher
Row. (fn. 69) A plain, late classical, ashlar-faced
building erected in Church Street (now no. 13)
in or shortly after 1840 was intended to be the
premises of the Calne Society for the Cultivation of Useful Knowledge and was in use as a
Mechanics' Institution in 1848, when it was
bought by Calne Savings Bank. It was used by
the bank until 1893, housed the reading room
and library of the society, later Calne Literary
Institution, from 1852 to 1905, and was an
Oddfellows' hall from 1893. (fn. 70) At the north end,
and on the west side, of the old Back Street a
Constitutional club was erected in the late 19th
century; (fn. 71) it is a large building in Queen Anne
style with shell doorhoods. On the north-west
edge of the town the union workhouse was built
c. 1847, (fn. 72) a cemetery with a mortuary chapel
was opened in 1867, (fn. 73) and a hospital was built
in 1888. (fn. 74) The workhouse, designed by Thomas
Allom and in Jacobean revival style, had a main
three-storeyed block and two-storeyed flanking
wings. (fn. 75) On the east edge of the town a recreation ground with a cycle track was laid out,
and a caretaker's lodge and a pavilion were
built, in 1890-1. (fn. 76) The lodge is a symmetrical
three-bayed house in northern French halftimbered style; the pavilion has timber-clad
walls and a steeply hipped roof on cast-iron
brackets.

Thomas Harris's bacon factory, behind High Street, in 1887
In the early 19th century there were apparently many buildings in which cloth was made,
besides the factory erected in Silver Street in
the 1790s. They included premises on the
north-east side of the Green and behind houses
on that side. (fn. 77) A three-storeyed and five-bayed
factory (called Weavers House in 1999) with
two-light mullioned windows was built on that
side of the Green c. 1800, and another (nos. 8-
9 the Green in 1999), of four storeys and attics
and of five bays with three-light mullioned windows, was built shortly after 1828. (fn. 78) Later in
the 19th century the first was used by a dealer
in cheese and afterwards as a store for sawdust,
and the second, which was built as a silk mill,
was used as an orphanage and afterwards as a
school; (fn. 79) both were in residential use in 1999. A
gasworks was built in Horsebrook shortly after
1835, (fn. 80) and a foundry was built there probably
in the later 1850s. (fn. 81) By the late 19th century
two factories for curing bacon had been erected,
one on the right bank of the Marden behind
buildings in High Street, and one on the left
bank on and behind the south side of the old
Butcher Row. As depicted in an idealized view
in 1887 that on the right bank consisted of a
group of linked buildings, mainly of two or
three storeys with round-arched windows and
pitched roofs, and included three tall chimneys
and a water tower. A club house for employees
was built in New Road behind the factory on
the left bank. (fn. 82) In the 19th century many of the
houses in the centre of the town were used as
shops or had other commercial uses. (fn. 83) Shops
lined both sides of the old Butcher Row, the
east side of High Street, and, perhaps to a lesser
extent, the west side of Church Street, (fn. 84) and
shops were incorporated in many of the houses
erected in the 19th century to replace earlier
buildings. In High Street new houses with
shops included no. 15, a three-storeyed building dated 1876, no. 17, a similar building dated
1898, nos. 19-21, a building with a canted bay
and Greek detail, and no. 23. In Church Street
nos. 27 and 29 were probably commercial
premises. In Wood Street nos. 5, 7, 9, and 9B
are houses incorporating shops, and no. 9A is a
meeting house rebuilt in 1838 and converted to
a shop. (fn. 85) A new bank (Lloyds TSB in 1999) was
built in High Street probably in the 1870s: it is
three-storeyed, ashlar-faced, and Italianate, its
frontage having been doubled in identical style
in the 1890s. (fn. 86) In the early 19th century, apparently before 1828, an inn in High Street (the
King's Arms in 1999) was rebuilt, (fn. 87) and in the
mid 19th century the King George public
house was built in the angle of New Road and
the old Back Street.
Most domestic building in the town in the
19th century consisted of the replacement or
refronting of existing houses. The Green was
much altered in the earlier 19th century when,
besides the building of two new factories and
two new schools, on the north-east side nos. 1-
5, a row of mostly three-storeyed houses, and
on the south side no. 14 were rebuilt; on the
north-east side no. 12 was refronted. (fn. 88) On the
north part of the Green no. 3 Kingsbury Street,
no. 30 the Green, and three pairs of houses
(nos. 4-5 and 6 and 9 Kingsbury Street, and
nos. 31-2 the Green) were built either side of
the almshouses. In the mid 19th century on the
west part two pairs of houses were built (nos.
21-2 and 24-5 the Green). The appearance of
the Green has changed little since the school
was built on the south side in 1894. (fn. 89) In Church
Street a pair of three-bayed and three-storeyed
houses with Venetian ground-floor windows
(Bentley House in 1999) was built in the early
19th century, and in the south part of the old
Back Street several cottages were replaced or
refronted during the 19th century. (fn. 90) Like that
of the Green, the appearance of Church Street
(excluding the old Butcher Row) and of the old
Back Street changed little in the 20th century.
The house called South Place which stood at
the corner of Silver Street and the London road
may have had an 18th-century house as its core.
About 1870 an ashlar-faced bow embellished by
a machicolated parapet was built at its north
corner and linked a two-storeyed and possibly
18th-century house beside the London road to
a plain three-storeyed warehouse beside Silver
Street which was converted to living accommodation; the south-east garden front of the lower
range was of three bays, and in the 19th century
a Renaissance-style flat-roofed extension was
made to it. South Place was demolished in
1962. (fn. 91) Fewer houses with non-commercial uses
were built on the right bank of the Marden than
on the left. No. 1 Patford Street, in use as
offices in 1999, and no. 10 Curzon Street, which
has segmental-headed windows and was originally two cottages, were apparently built
shortly before 1828. (fn. 92) Also in the earlier 19th
century, and both in the old Hog Street, a pair
of houses (nos. 6 and 8 Castle Street) was built
to replace existing houses, and a house (no. 14
Castle Street) was rebuilt or refronted.
Of the houses built on new sites in the town
most and the most notable stood in and off New
Road. (fn. 93) At the south-east end of the road (formerly Patford Lane) c. 10 cottages and small
houses were built in the early 19th century on
the north-east side of the road soon after it was
widened, (fn. 94) and c. 10 more were built later in the
century. In 1999 a pair of houses dated 1869
stood among them. On the east side of New
Road near its north end a large house called St.
Dunstan's was standing in 1828. It was separated from the road by its garden and was built
almost certainly after 1801, the year in which
the road was made, and probably not long before 1828. (fn. 95) In 1920, when its site was used for
a factory at first called St. Dunstan's after it, (fn. 96) it
was taken down and rebuilt in Lickhill Road, (fn. 97)
the extension of North Street north of the
town. The house, which was a nursing home in
1999, is of squared limestone rubble and in
Tudor-Gothic revival style; the fidelity of the
rebuilding may not be complete. (fn. 98) Also on the
east side of New Road a pair of red-brick villas,
of two storeys and a half and with a basement,
had been built in high Victorian style by 1885,
and Kerry Crescent, a terrace of three houses
on a splayed plan, was built between 1885 and
1899. (fn. 99) Kerry Crescent is in a free Queen Anne
style (fn. 1) and was probably built at the same time
as the Constitutional club, which is in similar
style, stands on an adjoining plot in the old
Back Street, (fn. 2) and is linked to New Road by a
broad passage through the terrace. The factory
built on the north side of Silver Street in the
1790s, and the house adjoining it to the southwest, were bought in 1869 by Charles Harris, (fn. 3)
the proprietor of the factory in the old Butcher
Row. (fn. 4) Harris demolished the house and factory
in Silver Street and c. 1870 built the mansion
called Woodlands on a plot behind them. (fn. 5)
Woodlands, faced with ashlar and designed in
an eclectic Renaissance style, was set in a small
park and was approached by a drive from New
Road. It was demolished in 1983. (fn. 6)
On the edge of the town 15-20 large houses
were built. (fn. 7) Castlefield House, at the west end
of Castle Street, was built in the earlier 19th
century, probably for H. A. Merewether (d.
1864), serjeant-at-law and town clerk of London 1842-59. It is in picturesque Tudor revival
style and was standing in 1828. It stood in a 33a. park extending north-westwards from it to
the Bristol road, has its back to Castle Street,
and was approached by a long drive from the
Bristol road; (fn. 8) a contemporary lodge in the same
style as the house stands where the drive joined
the road. Castlefield House was a nursing home
in 1999. A house north of Curzon Street standing in 1828 had been enlarged, or replaced by a
larger house, by 1885. (fn. 9) In 1907-8 the house was
bought for use as St. Mary's school and greatly
extended by the addition of a gabled block to
the east. Off the west side of North Street a
villa was built in the mid 19th century and became part of the school in 1916. (fn. 10) Wellington
Villa, on the north-west side of Oxford Road, is
a stone house built in the earlier 19th century;
it is in similar style to two houses on the southeast side of the road, one of which may be an
altered house of earlier origin. Along the west
side of North Street five detached villas at intervals near the south end, and one at the north
end, were built before 1885 on land sold for
building in the 1850s; on adjoining plots along
the east side near the north end five were built
probably in the 1890s and one was built soon
after. (fn. 11)
Cottages and small houses built on the edges
of the town in the 19th century mostly stood
in terraces. (fn. 12) An exception was a lodge built
where a drive from Bowood House joined the
London road south-east of the town; (fn. 13) the
lodge was standing in 1843, and by then three
rows of lime trees called Wessington Avenue
had been planted on the north-east side of the
road to embellish the approach from London. (fn. 14) On the south-east edge of the town
Lansdowne Row, a terrace of 20 small stone
houses, was built on the south-west side of the
London road c. 1813; (fn. 15) each of the houses has a
symmetrical front of three bays with stone
mullioned windows and stone doorhoods. Opposite Lansdowne Row land on the north-east
side of the road was sold in 1883 for building, (fn. 16)
and, south-east of that, a pair of villas had been
erected on that side of the road by 1885. Between 1885 and 1899 Shelburne Road was laid
out on the land sold in 1883 and much of it
lined with detached houses, pairs of villas, and
terraces of houses and cottages. Sunny Terrace,
consisting of four cottages, is dated 1889; a terrace of 11 houses with bay windows and a larger
pair at the north-west end faces London Road.
Also between 1885 and 1899 a terrace of 22
houses was built beside London Road between
Shelburne Road and the villas standing in 1885.
The new buildings in London Road linked the
town to the church which had been built between Calne and Quemerford in 1852-3, (fn. 17) and
north-west of Lansdowne Row terraces of
houses replaced older buildings beside the road.
On the north-west edge of the town Hungerford Row, a terrace of 15 cottages, was built on
the north side of Curzon Street on a slight
curve between 1817 and 1828; (fn. 18) the cottages are
of two bays and have plain two-light mullioned
windows. Further west along Curzon Street on
its south side a terrace of four cottages with
upper windows in simplified Gothic style was
built in the earlier 19th century, a house in Tudor style and facing east was added at the east
end of the terrace in the mid 19th century, and
there are two pairs of late 19th-century cottages. On the north edge of the town several
pairs and terraces of houses were built in North
Street, including York Villas, a late 19th-century
terrace of three red-brick houses. Alma Terrace
and Victoria Terrace are short streets containing terraces of cottages built off North Street,
mostly by 1885, on the land sold in the 1850s.
On the east edge of the town two adjacent terraces of four cottages (now even nos. 48-62
Anchor Road) were built of brick in the mid or
later 19th century. (fn. 19) Eastman Street, under the
name Broken Cross Road, began to be embraced by the town in the late 19th century and
early 20th when terraces of houses were built
on both sides of it. (fn. 20) In the 1890s terraces of
four and six were built on the west side and, a
little to the west, a terrace of nine had been
built in the Pippin by 1899. (fn. 21) That in the Pippin has been demolished.