Share your Memories: Ipswich's Old Town Hall

Share your Story!

Whitehead Studios, Ipswich Post Office and Art Gallery, Brisbane Street, Ipswich 1959 | Courtesy Picture Ipswich, Ipswich City Council.

Submit by 14 September 2025

Whitehead Studios, Ipswich Post Office and Art Gallery, Brisbane Street, Ipswich 1959 | Courtesy Picture Ipswich, Ipswich City Council.

Share your memories of The Old Town Hall, Ipswich Art Gallery's heritage-listed building.

The Ipswich Art Gallery’s heritage-listed building has had many lives over its 164-year history, contributing to the life and character of its city.

We are calling out to both current and former Ipswich residents, near-and-far, to share their stories of The Old Town Hall.  

Memories of excited crowds, choir performances, department store excursions, and gallery visits are all welcome.

Selected stories will be featured alongside archival images of our heritage-listed building on the Ipswich Art Gallery social media and website as part of the Galvanized Festival.

Submit your story via the link below by Sunday September 14, 2025. 

Learn more about the history of the Old Town Hall building by visiting Picture Ipswich, or join in on our Heritage Architecture Tour with Mark Tendys, City Architect on the 14 September 2025.  

Share your Story!
Supported by Ipswich Festivals

Supported by Ipswich Festivals

About our Building

Our heritage-listed building was originally the Mechanics’ School of Arts, built for a cost of 150 pounds and opened in 1861 by Governor Bowen. In 1864, the building was extended to the Brisbane Street frontage. By 1869, the Ipswich Municipal Council had moved in and the building became the Town Hall for the people of Ipswich.

For more than a century the Town Hall was a significant site in the public life of Ipswich, playing host to a gala dinner for the Prince of Wales in 1920, wartime dances for American armed forces in the 1940s and everything from roller-skating to immunisation clinics. It was even briefly home to the city’s department store after fire destroyed Reids in 1985.

In 1999, the building was renovated and extended, to again provide the cultural hub of the city. Heritage features have been restored, including the magnificent proscenium arch, scissor beam roof and arched windows. The hall, which was the hub of community life for over 100 years, has taken on a new life as a major public art gallery and museum.

Brisbane Street, looking towards Limestone Hill, Ipswich 1884 | Robyn Buchanan Collection, Ipswich Genealogical Society.
Courtesy Picture Ipswich, Ipswich City Council.

Interior of Town Hall, Brisbane Street, decorated for the visit of Prince Of Wales 1920.

Whitehead Studios
Ipswich Post Office and Art Gallery, Brisbane Street, Ipswich 1959 | Courtesy Picture Ipswich, Ipswich City Council.

Ipswich Art Gallery, d'Arcy Doyle Place Entrance. Image by Kelley Sheenan.