Eaton Park
Eaton Park is a grade II* listed public park located in Eaton, Norwich, England. The site is in area. It was the largest of the series of parks designed by Captain Sandys-Winsch in Norwich. Largely unchanged from its original layout after opening in 1928, it features a selection of grade II listed buildings.
History
The city bought the site of the park in 1906, aided by the Norwich Playing Fields and Open Spaces Society. It remained a simple open area of grass until city parks and gardens superintendent Captain Sandys-Winsch, a protégé of Thomas Mawson, designed the park in a classical style in the 1920s, and plans were made for its construction in 1923. Its creation was part of a public works programme instigated by the city to try and address the post-war crisis of mass-unemployment; at its outset, the construction of the park was expected to provide work to 140 men for two years. Construction itself began in 1924, and Eaton Park was opened to the public in 1928 by the Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII. It featured pleasure gardens, a restaurant, a yacht pond, and facilities for the playing of cricket, tennis, bowls, football and hockey.In the 1990s, facilities were added to allow for American football to be played.