
The Great Hall
Our Town House was completed in 1860, and a month later a Town Meeting was
held in the Great Hall on the second floor. The present grand staircase was not
yet built and, of course, there was no elevator. There were three front doors
and one led directly into a staircase. In the ensuing years the grand staircase,
a balcony, a stage with curtains (1870), the beautiful light fixture and the
wall stenciling were added. The stenciling above is from the wall of our Great
Hall.
For about 100 years, the Hall was the home to much diverse activity. The
Catholic Society were weekly renters from the beginning. In the days before
television, radio or film, live entertainment was frequent and varied. Local
societies and traveling groups were delighted to present their lectures and
performances in the grand new facility. For nearly half a century, beginning in
1898, the West Brookfield Fire Department held its annual gala Firemen's Ball
there. In 1930, moving picture projection equipment was purchased by the
town and movies were shown in our Great Hall each Saturday evening until the
advent of local theaters put them out of business. Anna Carter and Anne
Watkins of West Brookfield and Olive Fountain of Warren played piano
accompaniment to the silent films of Charlie Chaplain, the Marx Brothers, and
Mary Pickford, etc. Minstrel Shows were regular surefire crown pleasers.
Chautauqua lectures, a Wild West Show, various musical performers, all availed
themselves of our Great Hall's fine acoustics and small town ambience. Whist
parties, Halloween parties, the stuff of small town living all took place there,
including the annual Town Meetings. Sports even found a home here, a basketball
league played regularly for years.
The Hall sat unused for many years, but now through the efforts and
cooperation of our town, it is available to us again.
White Christmas in West Brookfield is celebrated on
the first Sunday in December and the White Christmas Chorus concert is held at
the Great Hall on Sunday evening after the lighting of the Christmas Tree on the Common.