Above the door, there was a panel bearing the coat of arms of the town and, above that, there was a wooden clock turret with a spire and corner spirelets.
[7] In the early 20th century, a local naval officer, Commander Edward Charlton, presented a gingal to the parish council which was duly placed outside the town hall: he had captured it during an attack on the northwest Taku Fort while serving on the cruiser, HMS Orlando, in June 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion.
[8] A memorial, in the form of a fountain sheltering a figure of a soldier, which was designed to commemorate the lives of local service personnel who died in the Second Boer War was initially unveiled at the cross roads in the middle of Bellingham in 1902 but later relocated to a site just to the northeast of the town hall.
[2] The building also continued to serve as the meeting place of the parish council into the 21st century,[12] as well as being the location of the local community library.
[13] Following the disruption to power supplies caused by Storm Arwen in November 2021, a meeting was held with residents at the town hall to review the response[14] and it was subsequently agreed that the town hall would be made available as a refuge for residents in case of future disruption caused by storms.