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Stage is set after Jenny’s three-year labour of love

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Music Hall is returned to its former glory

An ambitious project to revamp a 144-year-old music hall has finally come to an end.

The Blue Town Heritage Centre now boasts a 120-seater theatre as well as a museum packed full of the Island’s history.

Proud Jenny Hurkett in the hall of the Criterion Music Hall, at the Blue Town Heritage Centre
Proud Jenny Hurkett in the hall of the Criterion Music Hall, at the Blue Town Heritage Centre

Jenny Hurkett has sat in every single one of the new chairs which now fill up the Criterion Music Hall, full of emotion that her hard work has finally paid off.

Since she took on the building with her husband Ian in 2004 it has changed drastically and now, as the Blue Town Heritage Centre, it is Sheppey’s only cinema, a theatre, a museum and a recognised tourist information point.

When they became owners, the building in the town’s high street was cavernous and almost derelict.

Initially they had planned to convert it into a kitchen showroom, warehouse and offices, and Blue Town Kitchens did run from there for several years.

However, when Mr Hurkett fell ill the couple were forced to close the business.

But Mrs Hurkett had begun to learn about the heritage of Blue Town and the very building she had taken on and said she was hooked on the history and couldn’t just let it be forgotten.

Seating for the theatre bar
Seating for the theatre bar

“I just kept thinking why hasn’t anyone ever done anything about it,” she said.

“We have got this music hall and all the history of Blue Town, and people don’t know about it so, in the end, I thought why don’t I do it.

“I thought it would just be a little project. I didn’t expect it to get as big as it has.”

Work to transform the building started in 2009, when Mrs Hurkett got Remember Blue Town registered as a charity so she could apply for grants.

Over the three years, the Hurketts and a team of dedicated volunteers have worked tirelessly to realise the vision of an 19th century music hall.

The "royal box" of the Criterion Music Hall, at the Blue Town Heritage Centre, Sheerness
The "royal box" of the Criterion Music Hall, at the Blue Town Heritage Centre, Sheerness

The revamp has cost about £25,000 and Mrs Hurkett said big thanks should go to the Queenborough Fisheries Trust and the Heritage Lottery Fund for their input.

As well as the new chairs and stage, there is a chandelier, insulation and a projector.

But the journey hasn’t stopped here, there are big plans to turn the first floor into an educational reference centre and archive of the Island.

Mrs Hurkett added: “I just didn’t realise how much heritage there is here and to restore it has been absolutely amazing.

“I was quite emotional and I just couldn’t stop thinking we’ve done it.”

The Criterion Music Hall opened with a sell-out old time variety show on Sunday, June 3. BBC Radio Kent’s Paul Harris and Paul James were there and it was broadcast on the radio which Mrs Hurkett said has attracted dozens more visitors.

  • For more information call 01795 662981, email bthc@btconnect.com or visit the website

The Criterion in Blue Town as it was in the late 1930s/early 1940s
The Criterion in Blue Town as it was in the late 1930s/early 1940s
  • As far back as 1841 there was a wooden pub on the site called the Royal George.
  • The building was renamed the New Inn in 1855 and in 1868 it waspulled down and rebuilt in brick.
  • In 1876, it became the Criterion and that year saw the first appearance of Richard Nemo, a one-armed juggler and comedian.
  • It was renamed the New Criterion Palace of Varieties in 1883 and there were performances by vocalists The Brothers Tabra, a sketch called the Lion Tamer by the Bunch family and the Hadji Troop of Arabs dancers.
  • In a 1902 local directory it was listed as the New Palace of Varieties and Criterion Hotel.
  • An advert in 1909 called it the Criterion Picture Palace where they were showing a Ruffle’s bioscope – an early form of projector – making it both the first and last cinema on Sheppey. A matinee for children cost 1d.
  • In 1917 it lost its liquor licence because the local authority said the 50 pubs already in Sheerness was too many. It became Gieves and Co which made uniforms for the Royal Navy.
  • On June 5, 1917, it was bombed by a Gotha plane in the First World War. It wiped out the frontage of the building. Manager Edward Perry was killed along with George Frier and Herbert Lucas –believed to be dockworkers – and Royal Navy gunner HerbertGandy.
  • It remained Gieves up until 1927, in 1932 it was listed as H WJeans automobile and in 1954 Sheerness Motorlaunch Co Ltd and in1976 it became Swale Engineering Services Ltd.
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