The site currently occupied by the building was occupied by a series of closes and tenements.[2] The foundation stone for the building was laid by King George V and Queen Mary on 10 July 1914.[3] It was designed by the town architect James Thomson, assisted by Vernon Constable,[4] while the decorative plaster work was produced by H. H. Martyn & Company of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, holders of the Royal Warrant.[5] The building, which was named after its benefactor, the jute baron, Sir James Caird, was officially opened by the Prince of Wales on 26 October 1923.[6] The hall's pipe organ was built in 1923 by Harrison & Harrison, who also completed a restoration in 1992.[7]
20th century
Throughout the 20th century, the Caird Hall hosted an impressive array of concerts that cemented its place in Scotland's live music scene. One of the Caird Hall's most notable performances came from The Beatles who performed at the venue in 1963 and 1964. The Beatles' 1963 concert in Dundee at the Caird Hall was where the term "Beatlemania" was coined by promotor Andi Lothian.[8]
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Caird Hall was used as mass vaccination centre operated by NHS Tayside. It opened on 2 February 2021 and closed on 20 September 2021, completing 135,000 vaccinations.[11]
The Hall celebrated the 100th anniversary of its opening in October 2023 with an exhibition celebrating its history.[12]
The exterior of Caird Hall was used as a location during the filming of the Alan Bennett scripted An Englishman Abroad in 1983. It was decorated with placards of communist leaders, to take the part of a theatre in Moscow.[15]
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John H. M. Whitaker (1985). The Best – History of H. H. Martyn and Co., Carvers in Wood, Stone and Marble, Casters in Bronze, Founders of Gloster Aircraft Ltd. ISBN0951025201.
^"City Square". Dundee City Council. Retrieved 16 April 2020.