In the early 1850s, a group of local businessmen formed the Banbury Corn Exchange Company, to finance and commission a
corn exchange for the town. The site they selected was in the northeast corner of the Market Place in an area known as Cornhill. The group received political support from the
Conservative councillors and their building was financed by
Gilletts Bank. The new building was designed by
William Hill of
Leeds, built by Messrs Kimberly of Banbury in
ashlar stone and was officially opened on 3 September 1857. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage of five bays facing onto the Market Place. The central section of the three bays featured tall round headed openings with
architraves and
keystones on the ground floor, and small round headed windows with architraves on the first floor. The outer bays contained blind round headed windows on both floors. The bays of the central section were flanked by pairs of
Corinthian order columns supporting a
frieze, an
entablature and a
pediment. There was a
quatrefoil surmounted by a ram's head as well as fruit and foliage in the
tympanum, and, at the apex of the pediment, there was a statue of the Roman goddess of agriculture,
Ceres. The elaborate stone carving was undertaken by Thorpe and Ponder. The architectural historian,
Nikolaus Pevsner, criticised the design describing it as "a pompous classical palace". The Cornhill Corn Exchange got into financial difficulty after suffering substantial competition from a rival group of businessmen which formed the "Central Corn Exchange for Banbury Company": this group had political support from
Liberal councillors and their building was financed by Cobbs Bank: it was erected on a site in the southwest corner of the Market Place and opened it on the same day as the Cornhill Corn Exchange. Instead, it was converted into a public house known as the Vine Tavern in 1891. Most of the building was demolished in 1973 leaving the façade to become the entrance to the new Castle Quay Shopping Centre. ==See also==