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Park

Finsbury Park

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Finsbury Park

Dating from 1869, the 110 acre park has a mix of open ground, formal gardens, avenues of mature trees and an arboretum area with more unusual trees. There is also a lake, a children's play area, a cafe and an art exhibition space.

Finsbury Park (via Wikipedia):

The Parkland Walk, a linear park, starts here, and provides a pleasant, traffic free, pedestrian and cycle route with much of the feel of a country walk, that links the park with Crouch Hill Park, Crouch End, and Highgate tube station.

Sports facilities in the park include football pitches, a bowling green, an athletics stadium, and tennis and basketball courts. Unusually for London, the park hosts two facilities for "American" sports: an American football field, home to the 2007, 2009, 2010 and 2011 national champions London Blitz, and diamonds for softball and baseball, home to the 2007 and 2008 national champions the London Mets.

In recent years the park has been used for large public events such as Madstock!, the Fleadh, Big Gay Out, Party in the Park and Rise: London United.

20th century to present

Through the late 19th century and early 20th century the park was a respectable and beautifully manicured space for people to relax and exercise. By the early 20th century, it was also becoming a venue for political meetings including pacifist campaigns during the First World War. During the Second World War, it hosted anti-aircraft guns and was one of the gathering points for heavy armour prior to the Normandy landings on 6 June 1944.

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Harrow Lodge Park

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Harrow Lodge Park

Harrow Lodge Park is an extensive rolling park, formerly the manor of Maylards Green and Wybridge. The original name is derived from the Mayloor family who held the manor in the 13th and 14th centuries. The name was corrupted in the 19th century to Maylands as denoted by Maylands Avenue in Elm Park. In 1594 Maylards was an important house standing near the present boating lakes in Harrow Lodge Park; in 1670 the house was recorded as having 17 hearths and in 1849 the combined manors totalled some 440 acres.There is no longer a house on the site and the park was developed for public use in the 20th century.

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Stephen’s House & Gardens

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Stephen’s House & Gardens

Stephens House and Gardens is something of a hidden gem in the heart of Finchley, offering a slice of the country in the suburbs of the city.

Ink manufacturer Henry Charles "Inky" Stephens (1841 – 1918) of the Stephens' Ink Company bought the house in 1874 and later purchased the adjoining ten-acre Temple Croft Field and employed Robert Marnock, who designed gardens in the 'gardenesque' fashion.

The house and grounds were left to the 'people of Finchley' by Stephens in his will in 1918, with a condition that they be always open for the use and enjoyment of the public. The gardens today feature a number of different habitats, including a bog garden, rockery and the 'Bothy'.

Stephens House and Gardens by Laura Steel (via I Am No Bird):

The house is a beautiful Victorian creation; what was once the front is now the back, and the “back” has been converted to the front of the house – it’s easy to see why. There is currently an exhibition in the basement, Avenue House at War, which looks at the history of the house during the two world wars: in World War I it was a hospital and during World War II it was the headquarters of the Finchley ARP. An escape tunnel is visible in the basement: this was put in place in case of the house being bombed.

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Nelson Gardens

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Nelson Gardens

Just south of the tube station is the church of St John the Divine. Designed by Architect, C. Gage, the church was built in 1913/14 to mark the anniversary of the death of Lord Nelson. The Admiral’s house, Merton Place, stood near the site and the altarpiece in the church is made from timber taken from Nelson’s flagship, HMS Victory.

Like the church, Nelson Gardens Recreation Ground was created on a parcel of land donated by the great nephew of Rear Admiral Isaac Smith, to mark the centenary of Nelson’s death. The site holds a commemorative plaque and a fine pair of 12 pounder guns, once thought to have adorned the Merton Place estate where they supposedly sat to either side of the front door.

A visit to the rather modest Lord Nelson memorial in Merton, south London (via Urban75):

This rather modest memorial to Merton’s most famous resident, Admiral Horatio Nelson, stands on the site of his former properties at Merton Place, south London.

Nelson purchased Merton Place in 1802, and gradually expanded the estate until his Merton property covered most of the area west of the Wandle and north of Morden Hall Park, and also included the whole of the area between Merton Road, South Park Road and Haydons Road.

Inbetween haunts off to the sea, Nelson lived at Merton Place with his mistress Emma Hamilton (and, curiously, her husband Sir William Hamilton, until he died at his London house in 1803).

Nelson wasn’t to enjoy Merton life for too long, as he was killed at the Battle of Trafalgar in October 1805.

I arrived at the park just as it was getting dark but visit urban75 for some fine shots of the guns.

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Dollis Valley Greenwalk

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Dollis Valley Greenwalk

Free Weekend: Walk To The Countryside (well, Totteridge Fields) (via Kentishtowner):

From the Garden Suburb we picked up the Dollis Valley Green Path, a 10 mile route to Moat Mount Nature Reserve in Mill Hill (with links to the 78 mile Capital Ring, which we walked here), through the bluebells of Big Wood and Little Wood, and on to Mutton Brook and Windsor Open Space.

The clear signs make the route a no-brainer, despite its fiddly weaving together of the various green spaces all connected by the tiny Dollis Brook.

Often no more than a few centimetres deep, it’s a tributary of the River Brent (itself a tributary of the Thames) and a calming presence with bridges, waterfalls, tunnels.

It’s hard not be impressed passing under the vast Victorian viaduct, built in 1863 and, at 60 feet above ground level, the highest point on the London underground, with trains rattling along above the trees. Eventually we turned left off the Route along the muddy hedgerow at Woodside Park Sports Club, so we could cross the ancient hay meadows of Totteridge Fields, a beauty spot of ‘Metropolitan Importance.’ And there we were: hello countryside!

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Hammersmith Park

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Hammersmith Park

Hammersmith Park Japanese Garden, by Fran Pickering (via Sequins and Cherry Blossom):

For one thing, it’s the oldest traditional Japanese garden in a public place in Britain. And for another, it’s completely integrated into Hammersmith Park as a place where children can play and their parents sit on shady benches to watch them, with none of the formality you see in other Japanese gardens.

How does it come to be there? Well, it’s all that remains of a much larger garden which was one of the main attractions of the Japan-British Exhibition at White City in 1910. […]

In 2010 Hammersmith and Fulham Council commissioned a restoration of the garden by Japanese landscape architect Yoshihiko Uchida and engineer and traditional Japanese Garden expert Satoru Izawa.

Fran's blog on London living is one of the best, and is beautifully designed. This piece is full of fascinating nuggets, and is the perfect guide for exploring the Japanese garden, for example:

It wouldn’t be a Japanese garden without a dry garden. This one is based on the story of the crane and the turtle and their voyage to the island of eternal happiness.

The Chokushi-Mon (Gateway of the Imperial Messenger, a four-fifths replica of the Karamon of Nishi Hongan-ji in Kyoto) also used to stand in the park; it was moved to Kew Gardens in 1911, where it still can be seen.

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Chorleywood Common

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Chorleywood Common

Chorleywood Common (via Chorleywood Parish Council):

At the centre of Chorleywood lies its beautiful Common, 80 hectares (approx. 200 acres) of grassland, and woodland, declared a County Heritage Site and has Local Nature Reserve status on account of its conservation value and high ecological importance.This is one of the most important wildlife sites in Hertfordshire, combining acid heathland, neutral grassland and chalk meadow all on one site, together with a series of ponds supporting rare plants and amphibians and secondary woodland which has grown up since commoners’ cattle ceased grazing after World War I. Some 70 plant species, 50 birds and almost 300 fungi have been recorded on the Common in addition to squirrels, rabbits, foxes, hedgehogs, voles, woodmice and Muntjac deer.

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Golders Hill Park

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Golders Hill Park

Golders Hill Park is managed by the City of London Corporation and is part of the Hampstead Heath Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation. Unlike the rest of the Heath, Golders Hill Park is closed at night.

It adjoins the West Heath part of Hampstead Heath and is on the site formerly occupied by a large house which was bombed during World War II. Its main characteristic is an expanse of grass, but it also has a formal, beautifully tended, flower garden next to a duck pond with a small humpback bridge, a separate water garden, which leads onto a larger pond with both black and white swans, a separate area for fallow deer, near to a recently renovated small zoo. There are also tennis courts, a well subscribed playground and a putting green. A restaurant stands at the top of the park, on the site of the original house.

During the summer, children's activities are organised and through June and July there is live music on the bandstand on Sunday afternoons. Unlike most of Hampstead Heath, dogs must be kept on a lead in the park.

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