www.barnsley.gov.uk/services/environment-and-planning/parks-and-open-spaces/parks/locke-park
History of
Locke Park
www.friendsoflockepark.org.uk/history
.html
A great example of a
Grade II listed Victorian Park, Locke Park is in
English Heritage's
Register of 'Parks and Gardens of
Special Historic Interest '.
Joseph Locke
The park is named after the renowned railway engineer Joseph Locke (1805-60). He is recognised as one of
Barnsley's most prominent figures of the
19th century.
He is commemorated in the park by the bronze statue sculpted by
Baron Carlo Marochetti. It was unveiled by
Lord Alfred Paget on
18 January 1866.
A gift to Barnsley by Joseph Locke's widow.
The original park, then called
People's Park, was opened with some pomp and ceremony on 10th June
1862. Joseph Locke's widow,
Phoebe, had given
High Stile Field to the town on 24
April 1861 to be a park in memory of her husband.
The layout of the early park which amounted to 17 acres of land, about 7 hectares, was organised by Joseph Locke's former partner,
John Edward Errington, who gave the task to Mr Edwards of the office of
Locke & Errington, in
London.
The North Lodge at the entrance to Locke Park was built at this time by
John Moxon, stonemason and architect of Barnsley, and the walls were built by Mr
Tattersall of
Silkstone.
Extending the park in
Victorian times
In 1874, Phoebe Locke's sister,
Sarah McCreery, donated a further 21 acres (about 8.5 hectares) of land, in memory of her sister, who had died in 1866. This doubled the area of the park, now known as Locke Park.
The
Wentworth connection
Mr
F W T
Vernon Wentworth made a further donation of 1.5 acres (about 0.5 hectares) of land at the junction of Keresforth
Hall Road and Racecommon
Lane.
This made the total area of the park up to almost
40 acres (about 16 hectares).
The additions to the park, now called Locke Park, were officially opened on Tuesday 7 August 1877.
In
December 1914 about
7 acres (about 3 hectares) of land east of Keresforth Hall Road and north of
Beech Grove were purchased from the estate of
Samuel Joshua Cooper, completing the outline of the present park.
Locke Park
Tower
Sarah McCreery also instigated the building
of Locke Park Tower.
She commissioned
Richard Phené Spiers, the
Paris trained architect of 12
Regent Street, London to design a tower combining a memorial and 'pleasure observatory', the land and tower costing over £11,
000.
Spiers was a leading architectural teacher in the later nineteenth century, being
Master of Architecture at the
Royal Academy Schools, and a respected scholar.
Work of excavating the tower foundations began in 1875; the contractors were Messrs
Robinson and Son of Barnsley. A contemporary account describes the foundations as 9ft deep and 41 ft diameter, of solid concrete interlaced with rows of strong pit wire. The tower of approximately 70ft (21m) had a weather vane at the apex of the lantern with Sarah McCreery's monogram. The interior of the lantern was painted blue with stencil work of gold stars.
Locke Park Tower was formally opened on
20 October 1877.
The fountain opposite Locke's statue was erected at the same time as the Tower as were the walls along
West View and Racecommon Lane, and the West or
South Lodge.
Spiers also oversaw the laying out of the additional park land which was undertaken by the landscape gardeners
William Barron and Son of Elvaston Nurseries, near
Derby.
A sketch plan by Spiers, dated Feb 8th 1875, shows a layout of serpentine paths with a more formal symmetrical layout to the south-east corner incorporating the tower and flights of steps down to a terrace, providing an axial tendency to the overall design.
Locke Park has been held on trust by
Barnsley Council since the I860s for the people of Barnsley.
Nature:
The 47 acres of Barnsley's Locke Park, only a mile from Barnsley's town centre, are a haven for wildlife.
Locke Park connects to open fields and areas rich in wildlife in a large expanse of green belt to the south, linking to the countryside of the
Dove valley.
A surprising number of birds, small animals and insects can therefore be found in the park as a result.
Locke Park is fortunate in the number of different trees it contains: 26 different genus of tree and 67 different species, including a native midland hawthorn.
The trees that line the footpaths include beech, ash, lime, horse chestnut, sycamore and maple. There are areas of oaks, willow and of scots pine and birch.
Oak, ash and willow are particularly important for the range of insects and other invertebrates that they support.
Areas of garden are planted to attract butterflies and bees.
Look out for hedgehogs, bats and tawney owls as dusk falls.
Spot nuthatches and green woodpeckers during the day.
- published: 08 Jul 2014
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