ABOUT THE HALL
Rooms & Facilities
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Facilities
The Hall has a total of four event spaces which can be hired separately or as part of a package.
The Hall also has a fully-equipped, catering-grade kitchen and separate bar area which can serve both the Murrells Hall and the Cutten Room.
The Hall is situated within 8 acres of beautiful green space with access to a children's playground and multi-use game area.
Please contact us directly for more information about our special rates for weddings, private functions and children's parties. -
Cutten Room
This is the second largest room with access to our south facing patio.
There is plenty of natural light and would make the ideal space for arts & crafts, smaller parties or business meetings/conferences.
This room can seat up to 40 people and can be laid out as a board room or in a theatre style.
The room has an induction loop and has access to the kitchen and a bar if required.
The room can also be divided in two by means of an acoustic partition which has a connecting door.
Fully air conditioned. Please contact us directly for room rates. -
Murrells Hall
Our large hall is 157.5m sq. with a seated dining capacity of up to 120 people.
It is a versatile room with it high ceilings, a curtained stage area, bar & access to a professional kitchen.
Doors lead out onto a south facing patio which looks over 8 acres of lovely green space.
We have a choice of tables & chairs available for you to use it the Ideal space for weddings, parties or conferences
Fully air conditioned with an integrated sound & PA system. -
Marshall Room
This room is 36m sq it’s the smallest room with outdoor access.
Perfect for small and start up groups and small business meetings. The room has an induction loop and access to the south facing patio. Fully air conditioned.
Please contact us directly for room rates. -
Upton Room
14.5m sq. This room was originally designed as a treatment room but is also utilised as a private meeting room or as a changing room for weddings or events. We can also provide you with a key to the room as a storage space for bigger events. Please contact us directly for room rates.
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Business Meetings
Barnham Community Hall provides:
Modern professional facilities in a quiet parkland setting.
Plenty of on-site free parking. Conveniently a 5 minute walk from a main-line train station.
Up to 5 meeting and syndicate rooms – capacity 2-150 people.
Air-conditioning
Free guest wi-fi
Professional, friendly and attentive staff
Direct patio and park access
Projectors, sound systems and flip charts available on request.
Barnham and Eastergate Community trust is a registered charity and therefore not VAT registered.
Our history
The development of a meeting place for the villagers of Barnham closely mirrors the increase in population since the opening of Barnham Station. There are three phases to Barnham Parish Hall to present time. It is important to record these phases as the current hall was demolished in May 2013 and was replaced with housing now that the new hall on Murrell’s field is open.
Phase 1 – the thatched cottages
Until 1834 the village poor were the responsibility of the parish and this worked well while communities were for the most part rural. However, the Poor Law of that year took the main responsibility from the local parish to a group system. In the case of Barnham and neighbouring villages this was Westhampnett Rural Council and the poor (or work) house was located there. In Barnham the parish poorhouse had been a thatched building said to have been built by French prisoners during the Napoleonic wars. This was situated in Yapton Road along the roadside where the entrance to the new village hall is today. The tithe map off 1846 lists the land in the ownership of Barnham Parish, and the tenants were Henry Fisher and George Sanford – presumably living there with their families in two cottages. Later, the building was used for ‘technical classes’ and the parish council thanked the county council ‘for the liberal grant made by them towards the Technical class’. This then was the first meeting place that was not an alehouse. The building was demolished and replaced with a carpark.
Phase II – the corrugated hut
Parish councils were formed under the Local Government Act 1894. In Barnham, E.J. Marshall, the Brighton Grammar School Headmaster newly retired to The Cottage, Church Lane, and W.A. Hounsom, gentleman farmer of Bonhams in Yapton, were two of the founder members of the new civil parish council. The old thatched building may have been suitable for technical classes but E.J. Marshall decided to pay for a new meeting room. This became known incorrectly over the years as ‘The Tin Hut’ but also variously referred to as the Club Room, the Reading Room, and the Recreation Room. At this time so-called ‘Tin Tabernacles’ could be ordered from a catalogue in kit form. They were timber-framed buildings externally clad with galvanised and corrugated iron and lined with quality tongue and groove boarding. By March 1895 the hut was being used for the parish council meetings and it has outlasted its expectations by still standing (just) in 2013. According to the late Harry Dart the hall was used for Workers’ Educational Association classes and offered a meeting place away from the public house. Mr Howard Rhind, manager of Sunnyside Nurseries (living in 1920 at Ivy Cottage, now Rose Cottage, Yapton Road), organised whist drives, ‘sing songs’ and dances, including the popular Country Dance Club. On the death of E.J. Marshall in 1899 the meeting room was formally presented to the parish.
In 1908 the parish council purchased from Thomas Boreham Borrow a strip of land amounting to one quarter of an acre to the rear (south) of the cottages. The parties involved are named as William Allan Hounsom, Chairman of Barnham Parish Council, John Baker and Richard Collins, and the sum paid was £25. Presumably John Baker, the miller at Barnham Mill, and Richard Collins of Parsonage Farm were also parish councillors. It is said that the extra land was initially used for allotments.
Phase III – a larger hall is built
By the 1920s the number of villagers wanting to use the hall had increased to the point where a new larger hall was required. The Barnham branch of the Women’s Institute was formed in May 1924 with Mrs H.R. Marshall (daughter-in-law of E.J. Marshall) as the first president. The WI worked hard to raise a large proportion of the cost through fêtes, jumble sales and so on. Their president laid the foundation stone in 1927 and the hall, built by Mr Dart snr, was opened in 1928. The new hall was to the rear of but adjoining the old hut – an odd relationship that necessitated internal steps linking the two. More money was needed to service the Parish Hall Debt Fund and contributions continued to be made by the WI together with the provision of a piano, china and a clock which were made available free of charge for hall users.
By the 1990s it was evident that a larger, multipurpose building was needed in the village with outside space for sports and recreation. Once again, the needs of the villagers had outgrown the hall and the building itself was at the end of its useful life. The village has turned its attention to fundraising and the obtaining of grants and loans. B.L.A.D.E (Barnham Leisure Amenities Development Enterprise) was set up as a charity by the parish council and other interested local people to develop leisure facilities in Barnham, and registered in April 2001. The new facilities opened in May 2013, administered by the Barnham Community Centre Charitable Trust.
In June 2001 West Sussex County Council and Barnham Parish Council entered into a 99 year lease relating to 3.64 hectares of land behind the ‘old hall’ land on which the new hall & recreational facilities were to be built.
In 2013 Barnham Community Centre Charitable Trust was set up to run the new Barnham Community Hall. B.L.A.D.E fundraised for the new hall and field maintenance.
BCCCT AND B.L.A.D.E merged in 2016 and B.L.A.D.E was formally wound up and effectively Barnham Community Trust (BCT) was formed.
This new charity was responsible for the management and improvement of the new Community Hall and Murrells Field.
Once the two parish councils Barnham and Eastergate combined in 2019 Barnham and Eastergate Community Trust (BECT) was created to managed both Barnham Community Hall and Eastergate Village Hall. This is still the case today and the charity is thriving, financially stable and is creating a wide variety of classes, courses, indoor and outdoor events for enjoyment and social benefits of the wider community of Barnham and Eastergate.
4,808
Community Residents
54,000
People Joined Hall Events
3,600
Groups & Events Every Year