St. Andrew's Church website
Royal Parade
St. Andrew's Church, the "Mother Church" of Plymouth, dates originally from 1264 but was left a shell in 1941. It was finally re-consecrated in 1957.
Inside St. Andrew's 1 2 |
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Plymouth City Museum & Art Gallery website
Drake's Circus (opposite the University on North Hill)
Concerts are held in the Maritime Gallery up the stairs. Disabled access at rear (ring bell) and lift available.
Jeanie Moore introducing a Museum Concert |
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Plymouth Guildhall
Royal Parade, Plymouth
The Guildhall is a civic building originally opened by the Prince of Wales in 1874 but gutted during the Plymouth blitz in 1941 and re-opened by Field Marshall Montgomery in 1959.
It is widely used for large scale concerts as well as fairs, presentations, speech days and civic events.
Inside The Guildhall |
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Mayflower Steps (Map) and River Tamar
Follow the Pilgrim Fathers and set sail from the Mayflower Steps in the Barbican!
Cruise past Plymouth Hoe, past the dockyard, under the Tamar Bridge and up the picturesque river Tamar. |
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University of Plymouth Sherwell Centre website
The University of Plymouth Sherwell Centre, on North Hill, is a sympathetically converted church now housing an excellent 270 seat lecture theatre / concert hall.
It is used regularly for recitals and chamber concerts, particulary those organised by the Plymouth Chamber Music Trust. |
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New Continental Hotel website
Plymouth's largest independent hotel is a Victorian Grade II Listed Building, with its own car park and large ballroom (pictured). |
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