Brunswick Park, Southwark
Brunswick Park is a public park located in Camberwell, in South East London, and is managed by the London Borough of Southwark. Originally a private square, the park was opened to the public in 1907.
Origins
According to the Domesday survey of 1086, there were of meadows owned by the parish church of St Giles as part of the glebe. That meadow land included the site of what is now Brunswick Park. It was still fields in 1842. Land was purchased by a developer, WJ Hudson, in 1847, with an open space in the centre. That open space was named Brunswick Square, after Caroline of Brunswick, the estranged wife of George IV.The Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell acquired the garden by compulsory purchase in 1901, with the London County Council providing some of the funding. The garden had been divided by a road, and this was then incorporated into the new park, which, after being laid out as a public park, was opened in 1907.
Features
In 1937 two hard court tennis courts and a playground were installed. A drinking fountain was donated by the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association. The park was refurbished in 1999. There are still two tennis courts, and there is now also a basketball court.The park is scheduled under the London Squares Preservation Act 1931. There are no listed structures or buildings in the park itself, although some of the buildings on surrounding streets are listed, including the administration building from the former St Giles' Hospital. A Southwark blue plaque commemorating the activist Una Marson is located at 16 Brunswick Park, adjacent to the park itself.