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Canbury Gardens

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34-574: Canbury Gardens is a public space in the Canbury district of Kingston upon Thames , along the Lower Ham Road, covering 14½ acres area between the road and the towpath along the River Thames , downstream from Kingston Railway Bridge . In feudal times parishioners used the area to graze animals and cut turf and timber for fuel. In the 19th century when material for road building became

68-525: A band stand. Several hard surface tennis courts are available to the public. The toilet block, closed in 1984, has been converted into the 'Canbury Secret Café'. The Gardens have been included in the UK Government's Playbuilder Project, a national project funded by the Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) for developing play areas. Also within the site are Kingston Rowing Club and

102-503: A confectionery shop in Thames Street, paid for a bandstand to be erected. He also hoped it would be 'suitable for a summer house or shelter' Kingston Power Station was built on the ground behind which had formerly been used to convert raw sewage to garden fertiliser. Landscaping work in the 1980s restored the gardens and, after the demolition of the power stations, flats were built on its site. On 25 March 1998 poplars separating

136-529: A crowning ceremony at Merton Priory, although the exact nature of this is unclear. The Priory was demolished in 1538, following King Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries , having been valued in the Valor Ecclesiasticus of 1535 at a relatively high sum of £960 16 shillings 6 pence. John Bowles alias John Ramsey surrendered the monastery of 14 canons on 16 April 1538. Much of

170-632: A series of peace conferences culminating in the Treaty of Lambeth in 1217. In 1236 King Henry III held a Parliament at the Priory at which the Statute of Merton was passed allowing, amongst other matters, lords of the manor to enclose common land provided that sufficient pasture remained for their tenants. This was the first recorded statute of the first recorded English parliament. On 1 November 1437, shortly before his 16th birthday, Henry VI had

204-429: A valuable resource, the old grazing land was replaced by a series of pits for gravel extraction. By 1887 the site had become an eyesore and the borough proposed a public garden "that the view from the river shall be a pleasant one and not, as at present, unsightly and obnoxious". The gardens were designed by the borough surveyor Henry Macaulay and opened in 1890. In 1891 Charles Nuthall a former Mayor of Kingston, who owned

238-909: The City of London . It held cultivated land and pastures there and at other places in Surrey and held manors and other lands elsewhere, as well as the patronage of churches, in England. Merton canons are the canons in Canons' Teign , Devon. By 1117 the foundation had been colonised by Canons Regular from the Augustinian priory at Huntingdon and re-sited in Merton, close to the Wandle. The priory became an important centre of learning and diplomacy. Thomas Becket briefly studied there around 1130, and later

272-584: The Mesolithic along the river margins at Kingston, although most of the evidence tends to consist of scattered residual artefacts. Despite numerous archaeological investigations in the area of Kingston since the 1960s there have been few in-situ archaeological finds and features dating to the Roman period. The few finds in Kingston come from Canbury; a burial ground excavated in the 19th century, not far from

306-538: The Native Guano Company . Raw sewage was treated using the ABC Process , toasted in huge ovens to produce a garden fertiliser sold as "Native Guano". King's Passage, at the end of the adjacent Canbury Gardens, was known at the time as "Perfume Parade". The public nuisance contributed to the decommissioning of the works in 1909. A large part of the adjacent area was used for Kingston Gasworks , from

340-605: The "Boater's Inn", a local jazz venue. Until 2009, the gardens hosted the yearly Green Fair event where band concerts were held and fundraising for local charities. This event has since been cancelled. The gardens also host a Dragon Boat race. On the bank of the Thames, next to the Rowing Club, is a memorial (erected 2020) for Rosie Mitchell, aged 15, who collapsed and died from a suspected cardiac arrhythmia while rowing in 2016. Buses that run close to Canbury Gardens include

374-473: The 1850s onwards. Although much of the site has since been redeveloped for retail, leisure, parking and residential use, the gasometers , the last remaining feature of the area, have now been demolished for the Queenshurst development. The coal-fired Kingston Power Station was built in 1894 with coal arriving by barge and rail and ash departing by barge. The station was closed in 1980, demolished, and

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408-434: The 65 . The Thames Path from Teddington Lock passes along the river frontage which faces Steven's Eyot . 51°25′05″N 0°18′18″W  /  51.418°N 0.305°W  / 51.418; -0.305 Canbury Canbury is a district of the northern part of Kingston upon Thames that takes its name from the historic manor that covered the area. There is evidence of prehistoric occupation from at least

442-685: The Canbury Park Road site. The company and its successors remained there, going on to design and build the Hawker Hurricane fighter of World War II amongst many others. Hawker Aircraft bought the Ham factory in 1948 and, after redevelopment, moved from Canbury Park Road in 1958. Both sites have since been redeveloped for residential use. Some areas of open space were retained within the urban development. The riverside walk developed into Canbury Gardens . The nearby Richmond Road ground

476-477: The Dysart estate. The mixed Victorian housing stock that characterises the area today reflects the piecemeal development that occurred during this period. The arrival of the railway also drove industrial growth. The poor sanitation of the expanding town was addressed, in part, by 1877 with the construction of sewage works near the river to the north of the railway line, operated on behalf of Kingston Corporation by

510-523: The advowson, rectory, and manor reverted to the Crown estate of King James I . The Court-rolls show that in 1635 it became the property of William Murray , Esq. afterwards 1st Earl of Dysart, who had also acquired the lease of Ham House in 1626 following Ramsay's death. In 1641 Murray conveyed the manor to Thomas Bruce, 1st Earl of Elgin , a relative of his wife. In 1652 it appears to have belonged to Arabella, Countess of Kent , and others. In 1664, it

544-474: The ancient tithe barn , large enough for twelve teams to unload and with four threshing floors . It was sold in 1850 and pulled down. The manor seems to have disappeared by the beginning of the 19th century following its sale on 4 September 1800 to Wilbraham Tollemache, 6th Earl of Dysart , whose family had retained the manors of Ham and Petersham to the north since their forebear, William Murray, had last held Canbury. The Dysarts' acquisition of Canbury

578-514: The area to scale up aircraft production. By 1915 they were successful enough to build a 5.5 acres (2.2 ha) site further along Canbury Park Road. The company rose to prominence during World War I producing many famous fighter aircraft including the Sopwith Camel and leasing National Aircraft Factory No 2 at Ham. After the war the Ham lease was sold and the company wound up but almost immediately reformed as H.G. Hawker Engineering at

612-424: The area, controversially, redeveloped for high-rise riverside apartments. The felling of a line of trees that had previously helped screen the power station from the river also aroused much local protest. The Sopwith Aviation Company expanded from its early beginnings at Brooklands to a former Roller Skating Rink in Canbury Park Road in 1912, drawing on the availability of boatbuilding and coachbuilding skills in

646-598: The grant of Kingston Church by High Sheriff of Surrey Gilbert the Norman (or "Gilbert the Knight"), in about 1114. The possessions of the Merton monastery in Kingston and Hache , ( Hatch ), exclusive of Berwell, were valued, in Cardinal Beaufort 's time, ( c.  1374 –1447) at 52 s . The manorial holdings included parts of open fields and buildings in the neighbouring manor of Ham with Hatch, probably

680-591: The hill towards Ham, once marked part of the boundary. There is evidence that the area close to present day Kingston town centre was once crossed by many watercourses linking with the Thames and the Hogsmill forming a series of islands upon which Kingston was built, and the Latchmere linked with these. Merton Priory Merton Priory was an English Augustinian priory founded in 1114 by Gilbert Norman, Sheriff of Surrey under King Henry I (1100–1135). It

714-599: The park from the Fairclough Homes site were felled, a cause which had resulted in protests up the trees, an eco-warrior camp, and a 17,000-person petition. The Surrey Comet reported on 27 March 1998 that: "The first of the Canbury Gardens poplars came crashing down on Wednesday evening after a massive eviction operation costing up to £500,000 and involving 300 police, bailiffs, privacy security men, helicopters and boats." The park consists of open lawns and

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748-466: The park wall to the border with the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames at Ham . Canbury lies on alluvial flood plains extending from the river to the foot of Kingston Hill between 5.5m and 9.5m AOD and comprising river gravels overlain by holocene brickearth clays and silts. The Latchmere Stream , a small watercourse now mostly culverted , that flows south–north along the foot of

782-412: The precursor to a section of the modern A307 road . Until this time it probably represented the early endowment of the church, and the manor had followed the descent of the advowson until 1786, when George Hardinge sold the right of patronage, but retained the manor. The manor-house, which was close to the town, was sold to John Eddington, Esq. The manor house, Down Hall or Downhall, stood south of

816-467: The railway line and bridge. It was described in 1911 as being a grey stuccoed house with jalousies and older kitchens behind. It had been held in the 13th century of the manor of Canbury (q.v.) by Lewin and Alan le Mariner , and was afterwards leased to Ralf Wakelin and Beatrice his wife. In 1485–6 it was styled a ' capital messuage ' or "manor," and was held of Merton by Robert Skerne, on whose death in that year it passed to Swithin his son. Robert Skerne

850-536: The result of gifts to the church and priory as Ham had no church of its own until 1832 and lay within the parish of Kingston. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the manor, with the rectory and advowson of Kingston, was the subject of various Crown leases. The manor was bought for £4,000 by Sir John Ramsay in 1618. Ramsay also held land in Petersham and Ham to the north, living at Ham House . Ramsay

884-571: The river and railway line, excavations at Skerne Road in 2005, and the Sopwith Way and Skerne Road areas in 2007. These have revealed evidence of small-scale and agricultural Roman settlements . Despite Kingston's Saxon heritage, Canbury does not feature as part of the settlement of that period. Canbury , or Canonbury , is not mentioned in Domesday Book of 1086, but was held by Merton Priory at an early period, probably dating from

918-527: The southern boundary of Ham Urban District . This, and the southern half of Ham, was absorbed into Kingston, becoming part of the present day Tudor Ward when the Urban District was abolished in 1933. Canbury district extends westwards from the River Thames at Kingston Railway Bridge following the railway line through Kingston station eastwards towards Norbiton railway station and thence north to Richmond Park . It then extends northwards along

952-661: Was an athletics and rugby ground before becoming the home of Kingstonian F.C. between 1919 and 1988. The Latchmere Recreation Ground was conveyed by William John Manners Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart and the Dysart Trustees on 23 February 1904 to the Municipal Borough of Kingston-upon-Thames , "Kingston Corporation", as part of the settlement of the Richmond, Petersham and Ham Open Spaces Act 1902 . The land itself, though, remained within and defined part of

986-473: Was created Baron of Kingston upon Thames and Earl of Holderness in 1620, and obtained a grant of the advowson in 1622. He married Martha, daughter of Sir William Cockayne , and died without issue in 1626. The rectory, manor, and advowson then passed, under a settlement, to his widow, who married as her second husband Montague, Lord Willoughby . On the death of the Countess of Holderness without heirs in 1640,

1020-579: Was situated within the manor of Merton in the county of Surrey, in what is today the Colliers Wood area in the London Borough of Merton . The priory buildings were situated within the Diocese of Winchester (now in the Diocese of Southwark ) and at the point where the River Wandle was crossed by Stane Street (the Roman road to Chichester ), about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) outside

1054-543: Was son of William Skerne, who founded the chantry in Kingston Church. William was nephew to Robert Skerne , who died in 1437, and has a brass in the church. Bray says, in his History of the County of Surrey that this Robert was also of Downhall, but others have been unable to corroborate this. It was conveyed in 1617 by Mildred Bond, widow, and Thomas Bond to Anthony Browne and Matilda his wife. Not far away stood

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1088-476: Was the property of another John Ramsey, Esq. who alienated it to Nicholas Hardinge , Esq. in 1671. It continued in the Hardinge family for a century, becoming the property of George Hardinge Esq. M.P.. The manor included part of the town of Kingston. John Rocque 's map of 1746 shows the area comprising a patchwork of large fields transected by a few roads, the principle north–south route being Canbury Lane ,

1122-506: Was well timed as Kingston expanded northwards during the 19th century. The expansion was driven by the coming of the railway to the area with the extension of the line from Twickenham to Kingston completed in 1863, then extended to Norbiton in 1869 to its terminus at Ludgate Hill . Developers bought 103 acres (42 ha) of Lord Liverpool 's Farm to the north and east of the railway as well as 33 acres (13 ha) next to Kingston Station, and 44 acres (18 ha) of pasture and arable land of

1156-553: Was wont to wear the habit of a Merton canon – as was a successor of his, Hubert Walter . It is thought that Walter de Merton studied there in the 1230s; he established a house for Merton scholars in Old Malden , and this eventually was moved to Oxford, becoming Merton College . Edmund of Abingdon wrote some of his Oxford lectures in the peace of the Priory. In 1205, King John sent a canon of Merton as an ambassador to Normandy; Prince Louis of France did penance there after

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