Identification and description | |||||||
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Name | THE WALKS, KING'S LYNN | ||||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 52.748212 Longitude: 0.40525116 National Grid Reference: TF 62444 19445 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001374 Date first listed: 17-Mar-1998 |
Ornamental public town walks dating originally from the early C18, with development
continuing through to the early C20.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
The foundation for the Walks was a broad expanse of open space which existed between
the town walls to the east and the commercial and residential areas of the town to
the west, crossed from west to east by the lines of the fleet dykes. The New Walk
or Mall was laid out in c 1713, the Mayoral Chronicles of Lynn noting, in 1714, the
handsome lime-planted walk put in the year before. Rastrick's map of 1725 shows a
straight walk between St James' Almshouses to the west and the gate to Sayers Marshes
to the east. This was extended eastwards, the straight path across the marshes of
the late C18 being planted up and gravelled as a formal walk in the mid C19. The Town
Walk which runs north/south, bisecting the east/west orientated Broad and Extension
Walks, was laid out following the demolition of the town walls in the early C19. The
site remains (2000) in public ownership.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING The Walks lie east of centre of the
town of King's Lynn, east of the London Road and south of the railway line, extending
north/south along the line of the town wall (scheduled ancient monument). The 15ha
area here registered starts at the meeting of Windsor Road, Goodwin's Road, and Chanock's
Terrace to the south, and runs northwards to the junction of Blackfriars Road and
St John's Walk. To the west, the site fronts St James' Road; to the east it gives
on to the recreation ground, with two straight avenues extending as far as Tennyson
Road. Until severed by the building of the railway in the 1850s, the Town Walk continued
north of St John's Walk, following the line of the town wall to the site of a former
bastion and the early C19 waterworks at Kettle Mills.
PLEASURE GROUNDS At its southern end, the Town Walk starts as the pavement to the
public road. The grassed bank which marks the site of the former town wall, planted
with mature trees amongst which beeches predominate, slopes steeply to the east, to
a brick wall screening residential development beyond, and to the mid C19 terraced
housing in Russell Street. The Walk passes the east end of Hospital Walk, leading
to a point known as Seven Sisters, c 50m further north. This was the site of a bastion
tower known as the White Mount; it subsequently became the site of a cornmill, this
being demolished in the 1750s to be replaced in 1760, for ornament, by a fenced circle
of trees. These were replanted in 1827 and again in 1896, the area now (late C20)
being marked by a widening of the path round a central pattern of seven raised beds.
To the west, set in its own grounds, is the West Norfolk and Lynn Hospital, erected
in 1834 (now, 1997, closed); to the east lies a football ground with its accompanying
stand.
Some 105m north of Seven Sisters, the Walk passes via a bridge across the Gaywood
River to meet with the Broad Walk at a spot marked by an upstanding section of the
town wall, set with a gothic arch described as 'modern' in 1835. This section was
improved in 1816 as part of the Poor Relief Works.
The Broad Walk, extending in a straight line due west/east from the London Road opposite
the public library, to Tennyson Road opposite Avenue Road, was the first of the set
of walks to be developed. Originally called the New Walk or Mall, it dates from c
1713 and is shown on Rastrick's map of 1725 as a straight walk running between St
James' Almshouses and the town wall. By 1762 it was tree-lined on both sides, with
semicircular alcoves set in the hedges (removed in the 1850s/60s) for seats. R Beatniffe's
description of the 1770s gives its dimensions as 'about 340 yards long and 11 yards
wide between the quick hedge'.
The New Walk was renamed the Broad Walk when the Extension Walk was laid out continuing
the line of the earlier promenade eastwards from the town wall, across a bridge over
the fosse and through the gothic arch. A bridge existed here by 1762 and a straight
walk over this area of the marshes, known as the Chase, was noted in 1794, but its
ornamentation was made possible through the purchase of the common land by the Corporation
in 1813. The actual extension of this way as an ornamental walk was delayed until
its planting in the 1840s and subsequent gravelling in 1854. Now lined with lime and
horse chestnut, the Extension Walk appears to have been first planted formally to
either side c 1835. 1805 had seen improvements by way of the erection of gates (removed
in the Second World War) at the east and west ends of the Walk and planting in the
pasture to the north to screen farm buildings, although this land was not opened to
the public until 1864. The ground to the south had been planted by the 1830s, additional
trees going in in 1849 when this land was opened.
Carried on a raised bank, the Broad Walk is also planted as a mixed avenue of lime
and horse chestnut. The western end of the Walk is marked by a sweep of iron railings
to either side, terminated by stone piers. To the south of this entrance, at the east
end of a long lawn, stands a set of almshouses known as Framingham's Hospital (listed
grade II), erected by the Corporation 1846(8 and named after an earlier building,
the gift to the town of Henry Framingham, alderman, on his death in 1704. East of
this complex, between the Walk and the former West Norfolk and Lynn Hospital, lies
the serpentine course of the Gaywood River. North of the Walk an open grassed area
fills the angle between the two Walks, a belt of mature trees screening a block of
residential development which extends eastwards off County Court Road. This is known
as St James' End and includes the site of St James' Chapel (later a workhouse) and
the Wesleyan Almshouses and was developed as housing round a U-shaped service road
from c 1840; the area was redeveloped in the 1980s.
From its junction with the Broad Walk, the line of the Town Walk continues northwards
to the Red Mount, on top of which stands the C15 Lady Chapel (listed grade I), the
path being carried above the surrounding land on a grassed bank, and planted sporadically
to either side, by former mayors, with catalpas. A route along the town side of the
town walls is evident on C16 maps of King's Lynn and was most likely linked to their
defensive function. The walls were partially demolished as part of the paving, cleaning
and lighting Acts of 1803 and 1806 and ornamentation presumably followed; there is
reference to the Walk being margined with trees and shrubs by 1835 (White).
The fosse forms a loop round the east side of the Red Mount, enclosing a roughly semicircular
area within which the ground is contoured with grass banks planted with mature evergreens
forming a concentric ring around the base of the Mount. Beatniffe's description suggests
that ornamental planting existed here by 1777, he having observed 'plantation and
shrubbery laid out in pleasing taste by the late Charles Turner Esq'. In 1829 the
area was designated pleasure ground or ornamental walks, and in 1841 was recorded
as being planted up in a very ornamental manner (Grigor).
Beyond and parallel with the Gaywood River, and divided from it by a planted strip,
is the Walks Rivulet, widened as an informal canal which feeds the swimming baths
south-west of the Mount. To the east of the stream, the 6ha area defined by the Broad
Walk, St John's Walk, and Tennyson Road, from which it is screened by a belt of mature
planting, is an open piece of land used for sports and recreation. This was purchased
by the Corporation c 1885 and shortly afterwards the eastern boundary was planted
up. In 1892 the Corporation resolved, in line with the fashion for more active recreation,
to make better use of the Walks area for sport. In 1906 the lime avenue which forms
the extension of St John's Walk was put in and at a similar date the small ornamental
garden and bandstand which lie to the south-east of the Red Mount were added.
North of the Mount the Town Walk continues until it meets with St John's Walk which,
laid out between 1887 and 1929, leads from this point as a straight lime-planted avenue,
eastwards along the north side of the recreation ground to Tennyson Road. A shorter
avenue, planted when the Walk was severed by the purchase of land for the railway
in 1851, leads from the junction with these two Walks westwards to Blackfriars Road,
running along the south side of a bowling green and accompanying pavilion, and the
Vicarage and its grounds. To the north, beyond a high red-brick wall, lies the station
and the railway lines which run eastwards from it. To the south of the Blackfriars
Road entrance stands St John's church, prominent in views from the Town Walk although
partially obscured by the sets of hard tennis courts which lie between. The foundation
stone for the church, built to the designs of Anthony Salvin, was laid in April 1845.
A linear depression south of the church marks the site of the Purfleet which, before
it was filled in in 1857, ran east/west across St James' End.
The ground south-west of the church, bounded by St James' Road to the west and Blackfriars
Road to the north from which it is divided by a run of iron railings, is laid out
as a public garden known as St James' Park which opened in 1902. Its focus, standing
at the centre of a diagonal cross of paths, is an early C20 fountain. The grassed
area south of the church, planted with a number of specimen trees of varying ages
and species, including many late C20 plantings, was in 1760 'garden ground' but by
1841 (Grigor) had become the new burial ground for St Margaret's parish. In 1857 it
was planted and improved, the expenses for the work being defrayed by the sale of
the building materials from the demolition of St James' Chapel, a small section of
which survives as part of the building line at the southern end of the current (late
C20) nursery school grounds (outside the area here registered). These two areas are
separated by a gravelled walk, fenced and planted on both sides, laid out in 1875.
OTHER LAND To the north of the railway, towards Kettle Hills, and formerly continuous
with the southern, extant end of the Town Walk, is a path through a strip of open
land which follows the line of the town walls to the west, upstanding lengths of which
here survive, and the Water Drain to the east. Initially, following the Railway Company's
purchase of land in 1851, this northern part of the Walk was maintained, a bridge
being erected over the new railway line. By 1870 however the Railway had been empowered
to stop up the public walk north of St John's, the bridge was removed and the Walk
blocked off with fencing and planting. Subsequently, the northern area progressively
lost its ornamentation. This area north of the railway is outside the area here registered.
To the south of the eastern half of the Broad Walk, between the Town Walk to the west
and Tennyson Road to the east, is an area now dominated by a football stadium, this
land having been allotted to the Lynn Town Football Club in 1871. This area also lies
outside the area here registered.
REFERENCES
R Beatniffe, Norfolk Tour (1777) White, Directory of Norfolk (1835) J Grigor, The
Eastern Arboretum (1841) A Taigel, Norfolk Gardens Trust Town Gardens survey (1997)
[copy on EH file]
Maps Rastrick, Map of Lynn, 1777 (Norfolk Record Office)
Archival items The Hall Books (1644-1911) are held by the Norfolk Record Office, King's
Lynn branch (KL/CL; KL/TC).
Description written: March 1998 Amended: April 2000 Register Inspector: EMP Edited:
March 2001
This garden or other land is registered under the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 within the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens by Historic England for its special historic interest.