Stockwood Park
Stockwood Park is a large urban park in Luton, Bedfordshire, in the Farley Hill estate. With period formal gardens, leading crafts museums, Stockwood Park Rugby Club and extensive golfing facilities, it is about 100 hectares in area.[1]
Stockwood Park | |
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Type | public park |
Location | Luton, Bedfordshire England |
Coordinates | 51.865278°N 0.424722°W |
Area | about 100 hectares (one square kilometre) [1] |
Operated by | Luton Borough Council |
Status | Open all year |
Museum
Stockwood Discovery Centre housed in the 18th century stables of the former Stockwood House has displays of rural crafts and trades which give visitors a flavour of life in Bedfordshire before the Industrial Revolution.
The collection of rural crafts and trades on display at Stockwood Discovery Centre was amassed by T. W. Bagshawe and is one of the finest regionally based collections in the country.
History
The park was originally the estate and grounds to Stockwood House, which was demolished in 1964.[2]
When Stockwood house was built in 1740 by John Crawley, the grounds were laid out in a fashion befitting one of Bedfordshire’s leading landowners. The enclosed walled gardens provided shelter for growing fruit and vegetables for the house. One of the walled gardens now displays a series of gardens illustrating the changing styles of gardening through the ages.
Soon after the outbreak of World War II, the house was converted to a hospital catering for children suffering with hip diseases. The patients were transferred by converted single deck buses from the Bartholomews Hospital at Swanley in Kent. It was considered to be too dangerous in that area because it was on the edge of the balloon barrage. However Luton saw enemy activity due to the nearby motor works. Initially there was not any X-ray facility there, but one was added later and housed in the stable block. Before that installation, patients were taken by private car to nearby Luton and Dunstable hospital. The house was then named Alexandra Hospital for Children with Hip Disease.[3]
The park is sometimes used by Irish Travellers as a halting site.
Gardens
The Medieval Garden (12th to 15th century) shows herbs and plants grown for medicinal, cookery and dyeing uses. The 16th-century garden is laid out in a knots, a typical feature of the Elizabethan garden. The knots were planted out with germander, hyssop and box with the open spaces filled with brick dust or crushed shells to contrast the greenery.
Clipped hedges and urns decorate the small formal Dutch garden, replicating those designed by William Kent for Alexander Pope’s garden at Twickenham and the Wilderness Garden at Great Linford Manor.
English 17th-century gardens were heavily influenced by Dutch, French and the Italian styles. The Italian Garden is centered on a well head that once stood in front of Stockwood House.
The Victorian era was a time when plant collectors travelled the world in search of rare and exotic species and styles. Rock gardens and formal flower bedding schemes were also popular, decorated with a bright and showy variety of half-hardy plants. The invention of the practical mowing machine in the 1830s made lawns easier to manage and by 1860 were an essential part of garden equipment.
The Improvement Garden is a classical garden with sculptures full of allusions to ancient Greece and Rome.
References
- "Welcome to Luton.gov/uk Stockwood Park". web page. Luton Borough Council. Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
- "Bedford Today". bedfordtoday.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006.
- "Barts Health - Barts Health NHS Trust homepage". bartsandthelondon.nhs.uk.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stockwood Park. |