Fitzalan Square is a municipal square situated in the city centre of Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England. The present day square is one of the busiest areas of the city centre with traffic and pedestrians continually moving through the area. It has a Sheffield Supertram stop and a taxi rank. This area of the city had been the market quarter since the Medieval era and the modern square takes its name from the Fitzalan Market Hall, which stood near the site from 1786 to 1930. The Fitzalans were a lesser branch of the Howard family, Dukes of Norfolk and the major local landowners at that time.
Sheffield's Head Post Office operated in the square for almost ninety years. Built in 1910 as an addition to the 1897 post office building on Flat Street, it closed in 1999, with the main post office moving to new premises within the Co-op store on Angel Street. The Grade II listedEnglish Heritage (1973) Head Post Office and attached railing. Images of England (accessed 21 January 2006). Post Office building was up for sale for a considerable time before finally been sold for development in early 2006. On the west side of the square is the Grade II listed White BuildingEnglish Heritage (1992) The White Building. Images of England (accessed 21 January 2006).. Built in 1908 by Gibbs and Flockton, it is faced in faience, which was intended to resist the soot that blackened many of Sheffield's buildings at the timeHarman, R. & Minnis, J. (2004) Pevsner City Guides: Sheffield, p17 & pp150–151. New Haven & London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300105851. The early square also had the Electra Palace Cinema, which opened February 1911 and became the Classic Cinema in 1962. It closed in 1982, and the building was destroyed by a fire in 1984. The site is now occupied by an amusement arcade. Next door to the cinema was the Bell Hotel public house, which is now a gift shop. Another public house, the Elephant Inn, stood on the corner where Norfolk Street entered the square, this closed in the 1960s, it later became a branch of Halfords and then a charity shop. The well known Sheffield company of Wigfalls also had a shop in the square for many years, this is now a betting shop. However, the most well known structure in Fitzalan Square is the “Marples” building.
On the night of Thursday 12 December 1940, 300 German bombers attacked Sheffield in what has become known as the Sheffield Blitz, their target was the steel works producing armaments in the east end of the city, however a mistake in navigation caused the city centre to become the main target. Fire bombs caused widespread panic and many people took shelter in the Marples’ extensive cellars, believing they were safe under the robust seven storey building. At 11.44 p.m. the Marples building took a direct hit from a bomb which plunged through the building and detonated just above the cellars killing approximately 70 people and reducing the building to a fifteen foot high pile of rubble. The next day seven men were dug out of the rubble, as a small section of cellar roof had amazingly withstood the impact.
The Marples site stood derelict until 1959 when the brewing company John Smith opened a new public house on the site, this time officially called “The Marples”. The pub closed in 2002 and is now occupied by the Hein Gericke motorcycle clothing and accessory outlet.
Streets and squares in Sheffield | Sheffield Supertram stops
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