Greenwich Park

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The Queens House and Canary Wharf from Greenwich Park

Greenwich Park is a former hunting park in Greenwich, Kent and a remarkable green space in the otherwise urban conurbation grown out from London; it is the largest single green spaces in the south-eastern part of that development.

The Park stretches up from Greenwich to Blackheath. Its slopes are a favourite place for walks, exercise and picnicking in summertime. Local people and visitors from around the world coming to experience the sights of Greenwich flock to and enjoy the park.

Greenwich Park is a Royal Parks, and the first to be enclosed (in 1433). It covers 180 acres,[1] and is part of the Greenwich World Heritage Site. It commands fine views over the River Thames, the Isle of Dogs and the City of London. The park is open from 06:00 for pedestrians (and 07:00 for traffic) all year round and closes at dusk.

History

Greenwich Park gates

The estate of some 200 acre was originally owned by the Abbey of St Peter at Ghent, but reverted to the Crown in 1427 and was given by Henry VI to his uncle Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester. He built a house by the river, Bella Court, and a small castle, called Greenwich Castle as well as Duke Humphrey’s Tower, on the hill. The former evolved first into the Tudor Palace of Placentia and then into the Queen's House and Greenwich Hospital. Greenwich Castle, by now in disrepair, was chosen for the site of the Royal Observatory by Charles II in 1675.

In the 15th century the park was mostly heathland and probably used for hawking. In the next century, deer were introduced by Henry VIII for hunting, and a small collection of deer is maintained today in an area to the south east. James I enclosed the park with a brick wall, twelve feet high and two miles long at a cost of £2000, much of which remains and defines the modern boundary.

In the 17th century, the park was landscaped, possibly by André Le Nôtre who is known at least to have designed plans for it. The public were first allowed into the park during the 18th century. Samuel Johnson visited the park in 1763 and commented “Is it not fine?”. The famous hill upon which the observatory stands was used on public holidays for mass ‘tumbling’.

In the 1830s a railway was nearly driven through the middle of the lower park on a viaduct but the scheme was defeated by intense local opposition. However, the London and Greenwich Railway was later extended beneath the ground through a cut-and-cover tunnel link between Greenwich and Maze Hill which opened in 1878 (the tunnel alignment is on the north side of the northern side of the park's boundary wall, running beneath the gardens of the National Maritime Museum and Queen's House).

In 1888 the park got a station of its own when Greenwich Park railway station was opened. The station was not successful, with most passengers preferring the older Greenwich station and in 1917 Greenwich Park station and the line it ran on closed down.

Geography

The park is roughly rectangular in plan with sides 1000 yards by 750 yards and oriented with the long sides lying NNW to SSE. It is around located at grid reference TQ390772. The 0° meridian runs through the park; indeed the Prime Meridian of the world, the Greenwich Meridian is defined by reference to the Royal Greenwich Observatory in the park.

The park stretches along a hillside and is on two levels. The lower level (closest to the Museum, Queen's House and, beyond them, the Thames) lies to the north; after a steep walk uphill, there is a flat expanse that is, essentially, an enclosed extension of the plateau of Blackheath.

Roughly in the centre, on the top of the hill, is the Royal Observatory, Greenwich. To the north is the National Maritime Museum and Queen's House, and beyond those Greenwich Hospital. To the east is Vanbrugh Castle. To the south is Blackheath and in the south western corner is the Ranger's House, looking out over heath. To the west lie the architecturally fine streets of Chesterfield Walk and Croom’s Hill (Pevsner 1983).

A wide view of London from the Royal Observatory in Greenwich Park

Royal Observatory

The Royal Observatory.

The Observatory is on the top of the hill. Outside is a statue of General James Wolfe in a small plaza from which there are majestic views across to the former Greenwich Hospital (the Old Royal Naval College and now the University of Greenwich) and then towards the river, the skyscrapers of Canary Wharf, the City of London to the northwest and the Millennium Dome to the north.

Amenities

On the lower level of the park there is a popular children's playground (north-east corner, close to Maze Hill railway station) and an adjacent boating lake. There is also a herb garden (close by entrance to Greenwich town centre).

On the upper level, there is an extensive flower garden complete with large duck pond, a rose garden, a cricket pitch, many 17th century chestnut trees with gnarled, swirling trunks, tennis courts, a bandstand, Roman remains, an ancient oak tree (the 'Queens Oak', associated with Queen Elizabeth I) and an enclosure ('The Wilderness') housing some wild deer.

Nestling just behind the Observatory is the garden of the former Astronomer Royal, a peaceful secluded space which is good for picnics and also sometimes used by theatre groups (Midsummer Night's Dream, etc.). On the opposite side (i.e., just south of the Wolfe statue) is the Park Café. There is another, smaller café by the north west gate.

It is possible to park (pay and display) in areas along the main roads entering from Blackheath. Cycle routes criss-cross the park (as do runners, roller-bladers, dog-walkers, etc.), but other road traffic (cars and motor-cycles only) can only use the park road linking Blackheath and Greenwich at peak periods on weekdays.

Sport

London 2012 Olympics

For the Summer Olympics in 2012, Greenwich Park is the venue for the equestrian events and for the riding and running parts of the modern pentathlon events. For the Summer Paralympics in 2012, Greenwich Park is the venue for the equestrian events. After the Games, plans are to remove the venue back to its original state.

The use of Greenwich Park for Olympic equestrian events has caused some contention between the London Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games 2012 (LOCOG) and some local area residents. NOGOE (No to Greenwich Olympic Equestrian Events) is a community action group whose members believe Greenwich Park is not a suitable venue for the 2012 Olympic equestrian events. NOGOE started a petition to get the equestrian events relocated which, by February 2009, had gathered over 12,000 signatures.[2] The NOGOE demonstration at the Equestrian Test Event in 2011 numbered between 2 and 25 people at various times throughout the day.[3]

Others

The park staged the start of the final stage of the 2006 Tour of Britain cycle race (3 September).

The Park hosts the Greenwich Meridian 10 km in March every year.[4]

British Military Fitness runs classes in the park when daylight permits.

Joggers are a frequent sight in the park all year.

Pictures

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Greenwich Park)

Further reading

  • Barker, Felix (1999). Greenwich and Blackheath Past. Historical Publications. ISBN 0-948667-55-9. 
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus (1983). The Buildings of England, London 2: South. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-300-09651-8.  (with Bridget Cherry).

References