Everything about Mowbray Park totally explained
Mowbray Park is a
municipal park in the centre of
Sunderland,
North East England located a few hundred yards from the busy throughfares of Holmeside and Fawcett Street and bordered by Borough Road to the North, Burdon Road and the Sunderland Civic Centre to the West, Toward Road to the East and Park Road to the North.
History
Mowbray Park is one of the oldest municipal parks in the North East. It was opened in
1857 in response to a demand for more open spaces in the town. The land was purchased from the Mowbray family, and named after them in recognition. The park was extended in
1866 to include a
lake and a terrace, and in
1879 the
Winter Gardens,
museum and
art gallery were added along the Borough Road side.
The
Second World War had a huge impact on the park. It was hit with numerous German bombs, the iron structures - most notably the
Winter Gardens, a
cast iron bridge, and the
bandstand - were taken away to be melted down for weapons, and the open spaces were converted into vegetable patches.
Following the war, the park fell into neglect. The
civic centre was built on the west portion of the park. The area became known for anti-social and absuive behaviour, and was considered generally unsafe. In August
1993, over £13,000 worth of damage was caused, and a survey by the
Sunderland Echo showed that locals were too scared to use the park.
Following a public campaign, in
1994 work began on restoring the park to its Victorian glory, funded by a £4 million
grant from the
Heritage Lottery Fund, The
Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens were rebuilt, the lake was restored, the bandstand was rebuilt, and the park was re-shaped and adorned with numerous statues. A large adventure play area for children was built. The park officially re-opened in
2000.
In the first year following re-opening, the park received over 800,000 visitors, making it the most visited attraction outside of
London.
Statues, Memorials & Art
Mowbray Park was the original site of the memorial for the
Victoria Hall disaster of 1883 in which 183 children were trampled to death in the Victoria Hall, which overlooked Mowbray Park. The marble statue - of a mother holding her dead child - was later moved to a cemetery, but in
2002 it was restored and moved back to the park.
The Havelock memorial, constructed in 1861, is located to the south of the park and commemorates
Sir Henry Havelock, a celebrated military general born in Sunderland. Either side of the statue are
cannons, replicas of those captured from the
Russians during the
Crimean war. The originals were melted down for metal during the second world war.
Jack Crawford, born in Sunderland, was honoured for bravery when he climbed the mast of his ship - the
HMS Venerable - during the
Battle of Camperdown to nail the British flag back up. Although he died a pauper (he was also the second victim of the
cholera epidemic in Britain), a memorial was erected for him in
1890.
Sunderland has strong links with author
Lewis Carroll - it's believed Carroll wrote, among other things, the poem
The Walrus and the Carpenter in the town. To commemorate the link, a number of statues are located around the park - most notably a
walrus sculpture in the lake.
Roughly in the centre of the park, stands a statue of
John Candlish, who was
mayor and later
MP for
Sunderland from 1866-74.
A potted history of the park
The roots of
Mowbray Park date back to the
1830s, when a health inspector recommended building a ‘leafy area’ in the town after
Sunderland recorded the first
cholera epidemic in
1831. A grant of £750 was provided by the
Government to buy a £2,000 plot of land from the
Mowbray family for a new park.
Work on Mowbray Park – known as The People’s Park – began in the mid-
1850s, with a former
limestone quarry being landscaped. Topsoil was placed over the spoil heaps and original footpaths were gravelled over – leading to the hummocks and winding paths of today.
The day of the park’s opening – May 12, 1857 – saw shops close early as thousands of people flocked to attend the ceremony. An extension to Mowbray Park, from the railway cutting to Borough Road, was opened on July 11,
1866.
Work on the nearby museum began in
1877. Former
United States President,
Ulysses Simpson Grant, was invited to the foundation stone ceremony. His name can still be seen on the stone to this day. The museum, as well as a library and
Winter Gardens – designed as a triple attraction – were opened in
1879. Plans for a civic building on part of the park sparked wide-spread objections around this time and were eventually thrown out.
Park statues include
Jack Crawford, John Candlish, Major General Sir
Henry Havelock and a tribute to the Victoria Hall Disaster victims.
Hitler’s bombs destroyed the Winter Gardens in
1941, along with the nearby Victoria Hall. A heritage grant of £4million saw work start on a project to restore the park to its former glory in
1994. The new Winter Gardens and revamped museum were opened in July
2001. More than 300,000 people visited in the first three months.
Image:Jack Crawford statue.jpg|Statue of Jack Crawford
Image:Havelock & cannon.jpg|Statue of General Havelock
Image:Victoria Hall Disaster Memorial.jpg|Victoria Hall Disaster Memorial
Image:Bandstand - Mowbray Park.JPG|Bandstand
Events
Mowbray Park has become the site of annual
christmas celebrations in the city, focused around a temporary
ice rink.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Mowbray Park'.
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