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The Crescent Hotel, Buxton, visitors book

The Crescent Hotel, Buxton1868

Derbyshire Record Office

Derbyshire Record Office
Matlock, United Kingdom

Page from the visitors book for The Crescent Hotel, Buxton. The book records the names of those staying at the hotel between 1868-1895.

The 5th Duke of Devonshire commissioned the Crescent around 1779. His aim was to turn Buxton into a fashionable Georgian spa town, like Bath. The centrepiece of this transformation was to be the Crescent, comprising two hotels, lodging houses, thermal baths and an Assembly Room where balls and concerts could be held. The Duke commissioned the architect John Carr to design the building in the fashionable neo-classical style. It is not known exactly when the Crescent was completed but balls commenced in the Assembly Room in 1788.

The Crescent Hotel closed in the early part of the 20th century. Derbyshire County Council purchased the building in the 1970s using it as offices and the public library until 1992 when it finally closed due to structural defects.

The Crescent, a Grade I listed building, which had been vacant for over 2 decades, underwent essential repair work in the 1990s. In 2003 the ‘Buxton Crescent and Thermal Spa project’ was launched by High Peak Borough Council and Derbyshire County Council, supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund. In 2020 the Crescent finally opened its doors once again as a 5-star spa hotel.

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  • Title: The Crescent Hotel, Buxton, visitors book
  • Creator: The Crescent Hotel, Buxton
  • Date Created: 1868
  • Location: Buxton, Derbyshire, England, United Kingdom
  • Location Created: Buxton, Derbyshire, England, Derbyshire
  • Provenance: Collection of Buxton Miscellanea (D272/ZZ/4)
  • Subject Keywords: Hospitality, Travel, Health, Alternative therapies, Architecture
Derbyshire Record Office

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