Princes Park, Liverpool

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Princes Park in Toxteth, Liverpool is a 45 hectare municipal park, 2 miles south east of Liverpool city centre.

It was originally a private development by Richard Vaughan Yates, but in 1918 the park was acquired by Liverpool City Council.

Prince's Park was designed by Joseph Paxton and James Pennethorne and opened in 1842. The plan was drawn by John Robertson and Edward Milner supervised the work. The original gates can still be seen. With its serpentine lake and a circular carriage drive, the park set a style which was to be widely emulated in Victorian urban development, most notably by Paxton himself on a larger scale at Birkenhead Park.

An obelisk and drinking fountain in the park bears the inscription

"TO THE MEMORY OF RICHARD VAUGHAN YATES THE ENLIGHTENED & PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDER OF PRINCES PARK ERECTED BY PUBLIC SUBSCRIPTION 1858"

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Parks and open spaces in Liverpool

Allerton Tower Park | Calderstones Park | Camphill and Woolton Woods | Church of St Luke | Clarkes Gardens | Court Hey Park | Croxteth Hall and Country Park | Everton Park Nature Garden | Falkner Square | Gambier Terrace | Garston Coastal Reserve Park | Greenbank Park | Newsham Park | Otterspool Promenade & Park | Princes Park | Reynolds Park | Sefton Park | Speke Hall | St. James Mount and Gardens | St. John's Gardens | St. Nicholas Church Gardens | Stanley Park | Walton Hall Park | Wavertree Playground "The Mystery" |