Castle Green, Essex
| Castle Green | |
| Essex | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
| Grid reference: | TQ472837 |
| Location: | 51°31’60"N, -0°7’21"E |
| Data | |
| Post town: | Dagenham |
| Postcode: | RM9 |
| Dialling code: | 020 |
| Local Government | |
| Council: | Barking and Dagenham |
| Parliamentary constituency: |
Barking |
Castle Green is a park and suburb in Essex. The locality is close to Creekmouth in the conurbation.
Castle Green contains a secondary school, a library, theatre, arts and conference spaces, sports facilities which house Barking RFC and a community centre.
History

The area was rural into the 18th century but was dominated by manorial estates dating from the mediæval period. Some of these were demolished for market gardening with the expansion of the city. In the 1920s, the manors of Parsloes and Valence were acquired for the Becontree housing estate; remnants of the manors still exist as parks. Valence House now houses the Valence House Museum. Over the 19th century, industrialisation moved into the area; the borough remains the most industrialised in London. The growth in population necessitated urban expansion. The area became important as a place for social reform. With the expansion came a need for public parks as amenities. In the 1890s Barking town centre became planned out with Barking Park being established in 1898. The Becontree estate was created between 1919 and 1935 as a public housing for returning soldiers and to relieve overcrowding in the centre of London, covering the last of the borough's rural area. The estate accommodated a population over 167,000 and also included Valence and Parsloes parks, Mayesbrook Park, Castle Green and Goresbrook Sports Ground.[1]
The name 'Castle Green' dates back over 200 years to a time when the area was rural. The "castle" that gave its name to the place was a castellated house which was built around 1800 and survived until 1938.
References
- ↑ Alan Aubrey (2008). "Historic landscapes and development in Barking and Dagenham". Historic Environment Local Management. http://www.helm.org.uk/upload/pdf/AAubrey2.pdf?1261893943. Retrieved 2010-01-09.