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==History==
[[19th-century London|London in the 19th century]] was the most populous city in the world, and yet its indoor meeting places were inadequate. The largest, the [[Freemasons' Hall, London|Freemasons' Hall]], could only fit about 1600 people, so a consortium decided that it was time to build a larger venue. Exeter Hall was erected between 1829 and 1831 to designs by [[John Peter Gandy]],<ref>
The official opening date for Exeter Hall was 29 March 1831. The façade on The Strand featured a prominent recessed central entrance behind a screen of paired [[Corinthian order|Corinthian columns]] set into a reserved [[Georgian architecture|Late Georgian front]] of housing over shopfronts. The smaller auditorium could hold around 1,000 people, and the main one, more than 4,000.<ref>Anon, ''Random Recollections of Exeter Hall, in 1834–1837; by One of The Protestant Party'', James Nisbet and Co., (London), 1838, p.7.</ref>
Exeter Hall hosted religious and philanthropic meetings, including those of the [[British and Foreign Bible Society]] (founded in 1804), the [[Protestant Reformation Society]] (founded in 1827), the [[Protestant Association]] (revived in 1835), and the [[Trinitarian Bible Society]] (founded in 1831). The [[Peace Society]] (founded in 1816) used the hall to hold their twentieth anniversary meeting on 25 May 1836.<ref>{{cite book
Significant events there included a huge seven-hour public meeting hosted by the [[South Australia Company]] on 30 June 1834 to support the establishment of the free colony of [[South Australia]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.exploringaustralia.com.au/history.php?s=adel|title=
In addition to its primary function as a meeting place, Exeter Hall was also the headquarters of the [[YMCA]] (founded in 1844), a concert hall for the [[Sacred Harmonic Society]] in 1834, and the venue from 1848 to 1850 of the [[Wednesday Concerts]]. [[Hector Berlioz]] first conducted concerts there in 1852, and again in 1855.<ref>[http://www.hberlioz.com/London/BLExeterHall.html Berlioz in London: Exeter Hall].</ref><ref>{{cita libro|autore=Chitty, Alexis|curatore=George Grove|titolo="Wednesday Concerts"|url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/A_Dictionary_of_Music_and_Musicians/Wednesday_Concerts|anno=1900|editore=[[Macmillan Publishers]]|città=Londra|lingua=en|opera=[[Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians]]}}</ref>
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