Battersea Park

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Coordinates: 51°28′46″N, 0°09′26″W

The bandstand in Battersea Park
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The bandstand in Battersea Park
The cover of Petula Clark's 2001 box set, Meet me in Battersea Park
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The cover of Petula Clark's 2001 box set, Meet me in Battersea Park
Peace Pagoda, Battersea Park
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Peace Pagoda, Battersea Park

Battersea Park is a 200 acre (0.83 km²) green space in Battersea, London, situated on the south bank of the River Thames opposite Chelsea.

The park occupies a mix of marshland reclaimed from the Thames, and land formerly used for market gardens serving the growing London population.

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[edit] History and some features

Battersea fields as it was once known was once a popular spot for duelling. On March 21, 1829, the Duke of Wellington and the Earl of Winchilsea met on Battersea fields to settle a matter of honour. When it came time to fire, the Duke deliberately aimed wide and Winchilsea fired into the air. Winchilsea later wrote the Duke a grovelling apology.

Original designs for the park were laid out by Sir James Pennethorne between 1846 and 1864; albeit the park as opened in 1858 varies somewhat from Pennethorne's vision.

Battersea Park hosted the first exhibition of football played under the rules of the recently formed Football Association on 9 January 1864. The members of the opposing teams were chosen by the President of the FA (A. Pember) and the Secretary (E.C. Morley) and included many well-known footballers of the day.

[edit] The Festival Gardens

In 1951 the park was transformed into the "Festival Gardens" as part of the Festival of Britain celebrations. As well as a new water-garden and fountains, new features included a "Tree-Walk" which consisted of a series of raised wooden walkways linked together by tree house-like platforms suspended amongst the branches of a number of trees. A popular attraction was the Guinness Clock.

The Grand Piazza -- Festival Gardens
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The Grand Piazza -- Festival Gardens
The Guinness Clock
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The Guinness Clock

Another part of the transformation was the addition of Battersea Fun Fair: rollercoasters, swings, roundabouts and general fun for all the family. It was this element that drew the Park to be immortalised in Petula Clark's 1954 single "Meet Me In Battersea Park". The song was co-authored by Clark's father, Leslie, and her accompanist, Joe "Mr Piano" Henderson. It was also the title of a 2001 boxset focusing on this early part of Petula's career.

The fun fair's most spectacular ride, The Big Dipper, was permanently closed down in 1972 after five children were killed in an accident on 30 May 1972 when one of the cars broke loose and collided with another. The lack of a main attraction led to the decline in the popularity of the fun fair and its eventual closure in 1974.

[edit] "Meet Me in Battersea Park" lyrics

If you're a Londoner just like me, meet me in Battersea Park
If you are young or you'd like to be, meet me in Battersea Park
We'll stroll along by the riverside in sunshine or after it’s dark
There's music and dancing, place for romancing so meet me in Battersea Park

See the people riding on the roundabouts and swings
Children so delighted at the puppets on the strings
Cheer at planes a-whirling as they fly through the air
Take a holiday, have a jolly day, come to the fair

[repeat chorus, then last two lines of chorus]

Written by Joe Henderson, Leslie Clark and David Valentine

[edit] Other features in the park

The Peace Pagoda
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The Peace Pagoda

The former site of the fair was levelled and became a site for travelling fairs and exhibitions, and is currently the site of Battersea Evolution, formerly known as the Battersea Park Events Arena.

Battersea Park was once home to the very famous amateur football team, The Wanderers F.C., winners of the first-ever FA Cup. One team they are known to have played against at Battersea was Sheffield F.C. (the oldest football club in the world) in the 1860s. The Wanderers are planning to reform, however it is unknown whether Battersea Park will be used as their home ground again.

The park is home to a small zoo, all-weather outdoor sporting facilities including tennis courts, a running track and football pitches; a boating lake, as well as being the site of the London Peace Pagoda, erected amidst some controversy during Ken Livingstone's tenure as leader of the now abolished Greater London Council.

In 1985 a replica of the bronze statue of a dog that was the focal point of the historic vivisection-related Brown Dog affair was erected in this park.

Over the course of 2002-4, the park underwent an £11m refurbishment funded in part by the Heritage Lottery Fund, and was re-opened on 4 June 2004 by Prince Phillip.

[edit] Nearby train stations

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Parks and open spaces in London

Alexandra Park | Battersea Park | Brockwell Park | Burgess Park | Bushy Park | Cannizaro Park | Clapham Common | Clissold Park | Eel Brook Common | Epping Forest | Finsbury Park | Green Park | Greenwich Park | Hackney Marshes | Hampstead Heath | Hampton Court Park | Holland Park | Hornchurch Country Park | Hyde Park | Island Gardens | Kennington Park | Kensington Gardens | Kilburn Grange Park | Lincoln's Inn Fields | London Fields | Mile End Park | Morden Hall Park | Morden Park | Osterley Park | Oxleas Wood | Parliament Hill | Parsons Green | Plumstead Common | Primrose Hill | Queen's Park | Regent's Park | Richmond Park | Kew Gardens | South Norwood Country Park | St. James's Park | Streatham Common | Trent Park | Valentines Park | Victoria Park | Victoria Tower Gardens | Wandsworth Common | Waterlow Park | West Ham Park | Wimbledon Park | Wimbledon and Putney Commons | Wormwood Scrubs

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