The Moot Hall is a prominent historic building situated at the southern end of Main Street in Keswick, Cumbria, England.
[2] After the building fell into a dilapidated condition, it was thought to have been rebuilt with stones from the remains of the Radclyffe mansion on Lord's Island in 1695.
[1][7] It was designed with a square tower on the north end with a round-arched doorway and a double flight of steps inside and with what the Keswick Tourist Information Board describes as an "unusual one-handed clock" at the top.
[8] The clock, attributed to Richard Young of Newcastle,[9] is dated 1814; it strikes the hours on a bell which (along with the weather vane on the roof) is said to have come from Lord's Island on Derwentwater.
[13] As a central landmark in Keswick, the Moot Hall is used as the official start and/or finish point for various challenge events including the Bob Graham Round[14] and runs visiting all the 214 Wainwrights.