Victoria Park, Leicester

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Victoria Park, Leicester
Victoria Park, Leicester

Victoria Park in Leicester, England is a public park of 69 acres (279,000 m²). It is in the south-east, just outside the city centre, backing on to the University of Leicester and close to the Leicester railway station.

It has facilities for various sports, including tennis, basketball, bowls, croquet, football and cricket. A skate park has been recently added. The park is sometimes used as a venue for outdoor events - in recent years these have included BBC Radio One's One Big Sunday, the Leicester Caribbean Carnival, and Leicester Pride. A pavilion provides changing facilities, and also the site of a cafe.

Lutyens's War Memorial in Victoria Park, Leicester
Lutyens's War Memorial in Victoria Park, Leicester

It was historically part of the South Fields of Leicester, and was used from 1806 to 1883 as a racecourse - a function that was then transferred as to the purpose-built Leicester Racecourse in Oadby. It was opened as a park in 1882. Leicester Fosse (who later became Leicester City Football Club) played here on various occasions between 1884 and 1890.

The park is home to two memorials. The War Memorial, a quadrifrons arch, was designed by Edwin Lutyens and built in 1923, to commemorate the dead of the First World War. The memorial, a Grade I listed building, stands at the top of an ornamental walkway ("Peace Walk") with gates (also by Lutyens) opening on to University Road. A smaller memorial near the cafe commemorates the American 82nd Airborne Division, stationed in Leicester prior to D-Day.

Gates and lodges on the London Road side of the park were also designed by Lutyens and built in 1930.

Unfortunately the park has gained a reputation for being relatively dangerous at night, mainly due to a small number of attacks on students walking across the park at night. In 2006, a group of University of Leicester students unhappy with this situation started the Student society Torchlight which is currently working with the council, the police and the University of Leicester Students' Union on ways to make the park safer.