Cashel Town Hall

[1] At that time the old borough council chose not the use the market house as their meeting place and instead met at the mayor's office in John Street.

[4] The rebuilding was undertaken to a design by James Edward Rogers in the neoclassical style, executed by Robert Boles in ashlar stone at a cost of £616 and was completed in 1867.

[5] The construction work involved "a new roof and alterations", implying that the shell of the earlier building was retained.

[8] A memorial in the form of a celtic cross, intended to commemorate the life of the former Archbishop of Cashel, Thomas Croke, was erected to the southwest of the building in 1895.

[10] The building continued to serve as a meeting place for Cashel Urban District Council until 2000, when the council relocated to new the Cashel Civic Offices (Irish: Áras Chaiseal Mumhan) in Friar Street.