Identification and description | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Moor Park | ||||||
Location |
|
||||||
Localisation | Latitude: 53.773020 Longitude: -2.6986436 National Grid Reference: SD 54052 30969 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
||||||
label.localisation | [53.7752206514319,-2.69335651528091], [53.7751764842399,-2.69301293329884], [53.7750910166914,-2.69262712578785], [53.7749904855942,-2.69218652204846], [53.7749063962853,-2.69182931284475], [53.7747562761102,-2.69118271859697], [53.7746155606009,-2.69058491504386], [53.7745055298413,-2.69010852247079], [53.7744755437148,-2.6899729699899], [53.7743431663462,-2.68998378669918], [53.7742030958125,-2.68999447712173], [53.774012603056,-2.69002207795797], [53.7737703783181,-2.69008488164874], [53.7735135141595,-2.6901425889437], [53.7728797133111,-2.69030780120115], [53.7720141250659,-2.69052443203346], [53.7715700446182,-2.69064469689871], [53.7714098424078,-2.6906784347637], [53.7711540571076,-2.69074694064015], [53.7711753091133,-2.69163304112608], [53.7711901798837,-2.69227057362], [53.7711932863176,-2.69278137462082], [53.7712058563503,-2.69304021117574], [53.7712154152598,-2.69362517557569], [53.7712429345114,-2.69494288724141], [53.7712622168151,-2.69580064754189], [53.7712736831121,-2.69617256282145], [53.7712800857815,-2.69673658420686], [53.7712834247204,-2.69713770878732], [53.7712666518198,-2.6971842226774], [53.7712452442822,-2.69740473338097], [53.7712853997385,-2.69742237722009], [53.7712948440702,-2.69752933292626], [53.7713065570754,-2.69793050565464], [53.771117384927,-2.69795015553009], [53.7709134579773,-2.69797377829761], [53.7709295804083,-2.69893811222094], [53.7709551490059,-2.70011509306354], [53.771342056887,-2.70010091405082], [53.7713462544002,-2.70038396628027], [53.7713718903219,-2.70154242008047], [53.7713946852425,-2.70272361704294], [53.7714294847145,-2.70461624414052], [53.7714480201109,-2.70559676174586], [53.7716743857072,-2.7056826280813], [53.7718441933848,-2.70574018991942], [53.771987977832,-2.70579510030283], [53.7721783447325,-2.70586889400824], [53.7725446266038,-2.70604373421308], [53.7728542251763,-2.70621305858298], [53.7731018464135,-2.70635856961137], [53.7732656522474,-2.70643703508497], [53.7735163636377,-2.70659804720807], [53.7739532204657,-2.70687335021293], [53.7742124940527,-2.70703791043261], [53.7744474455044,-2.70718264144443], [53.7747280856166,-2.70735295159187], [53.7747261829948,-2.70715292983888], [53.7747366539495,-2.70694272210611], [53.7747528923222,-2.70653782591728], [53.7747746425548,-2.70597976714696], [53.7747941500673,-2.70554116349678], [53.7748352965879,-2.70508472891919], [53.7748911762947,-2.70447789497444], [53.7749420368377,-2.70393851403484], [53.7749957642506,-2.70343553624129], [53.7750219564499,-2.70316584980322], [53.7750339510223,-2.70295825984917], [53.7750414240775,-2.70194544002416], [53.7750555032188,-2.70111713771343], [53.7750575805983,-2.7004990051811], [53.7750606910081,-2.69996662201569], [53.7750700525413,-2.69941614931761], [53.7750923977983,-2.69901392827537], [53.775149738201,-2.69841490642734], [53.7752118010146,-2.6977977678316], [53.7752558859099,-2.69735956362332], [53.7752989850534,-2.69682782526909], [53.7753193923772,-2.69649310781151], [53.7753355201469,-2.69610117414042], [53.7753490463217,-2.69562608945546], [53.7753494835946,-2.69528585137563], [53.7753395959095,-2.69486750932369], [53.7753188435248,-2.69446718160646], [53.7752807787146,-2.69386657634419], [53.7752206514319,-2.69335651528091] | ||||||
Localisation | [53.775122725811,-2.69426471014604], [53.7750882082515,-2.69437847522989], [53.7750417100864,-2.69450296743237], [53.7750255503575,-2.69454621908802], [53.7749834224619,-2.69464397099106], [53.7748540418655,-2.69462770710809], [53.774780029612,-2.69461745623242], [53.7747176761492,-2.69463958140965], [53.7746617049496,-2.6946879562205], [53.7746307564162,-2.69471469691841], [53.7745331396094,-2.69481635618263], [53.774494084364,-2.69482282735071], [53.7744761566864,-2.6947896195526], [53.7743315265784,-2.69444242578878], [53.7742894025612,-2.69439215818286], [53.7742636765284,-2.69436144699812], [53.7741587348716,-2.69427069132601], [53.7741103140719,-2.69425386875273], [53.7740991015728,-2.69436941186513], [53.7740891776678,-2.69444403812846], [53.7739467146704,-2.69432151206977], [53.773717677027,-2.6941245436083], [53.7736954338461,-2.69400769071955], [53.7736490685548,-2.69377088930762], [53.7736153929612,-2.69364922037532], [53.7735540284041,-2.69342748236092], [53.7734535881629,-2.69310535192639], [53.773607816206,-2.69288000573224], [53.7736142667847,-2.69285874798124], [53.7737430579714,-2.69253382318846], [53.7739781543338,-2.6919406954002], [53.7740004224559,-2.69191969756116], [53.7740594772003,-2.69192396181761], [53.7741473631911,-2.69193027849193], [53.7743209068343,-2.69194278421941], [53.7743852864391,-2.6919666190492], [53.7747283026048,-2.69207870672909], [53.7747467471,-2.69209570136317], [53.774884575671,-2.69240784843191], [53.774938605016,-2.69254762373166], [53.7749423577984,-2.69281119362223], [53.7749461010139,-2.69307476340656], [53.7750401307576,-2.69322943219671], [53.7750579284193,-2.69361608177863], [53.7750785167652,-2.69370367095398], [53.7751167784494,-2.69383428136952], [53.7751086784079,-2.69395877059187], [53.7751766230655,-2.69408709443313], [53.775122725811,-2.69426471014604] | ||||||
Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1001309 Date first listed: 08-Nov-1994 Date of most recent amendment: 20-Aug-2013 Statutory Address 1: Moor Park, Preston |
In 1253 Henry III granted by charter to the burgesses of Preston, 324 acres of moorland.
At the end of the C17 the land was used for horse racing, the course pegged out across
the moor being in regular use until 1791. On 24 August 1795, a group of freemen of
the borough met to discuss a complaint of encroachment on the moor which was increasingly
being lost to industrial development. It was from this meeting that the proposal for
the setting aside of the land as a public park evolved. In September 1833 legal steps
were taken by the borough council towards enclosing a defined area of what remained
of the moor, partly for housing development, but primarily to form a public park.
This involved abrogating the bye-law whereby a small number of freemen still had rights
of pasturage, and declaring that 'the land may hereafter be enclosed and managed in
such a manner as the common-council or other persons lawfully entitled to administer
the affairs of the borough may from time to time lawfully direct'. This initiative
made Preston the first industrial town to create a municipal park.
The 'Plan of improvements on Preston Moor', published in the Preston Chronicle (1833),
shows the boundaries and basic design of the site remain unchanged. The moor was drained
at great expense to provide an open central area labelled 'Green Pasture' (let as
grazing until 1865), lightly planted with trees and surrounded by a perimeter walk,
serpentine along the northern boundary. A lake was formed towards the north-west corner
of the site and Ladies' Walk (Moor Park Avenue) was laid out along the southern boundary.
The park was described thus by Charles Hardwick (1857):
'The Moor Park already possesses something of an ornamental character. The fine straight
avenue, from west to east, called 'the ladies' walk', is adorned by plantations, and
picturesque entrance lodges. The 'Serpentine Road', across the northern side of the
moor, is likewise varied by some planting. A small lake and picturesque lodge also
add to the variety and beauty of the park. Much, however, is yet required in the shape
of landscape gardening before the corporation can be said to have carried out their
original purpose. The air is very salubrious, and the situation admirably adapted
to meet the growing wants of the town on the north. Even in its present condition,
Moor Park is much frequented, and will doubtless, in a short time, become so general
a promenade, that further additions to the planting and laying out of the ground may
confidently be anticipated.'
During the Cotton Famine of the early 1860s, the Town Council commissioned Edward
Milner (1819-94) to prepare a report on Preston's parks. This was part of a wider
scheme to assist out-of-work cotton operatives by employing them to carry out public
works, financial support coming from the Public Works Loan Commissioners. Milner submitted
proposals in February 1864 and was subsequently invited to design and oversee the
building of two new parks, Avenham and Miller Parks (qv), and to improve Moor Park.
At Moor Park, Milner retained all the features of the original plan of 1833, adding
roads across and round the site, enhancing the tree cover and plantings of ornamental
shrubs and landscaping the north-west quarter of the site, including the addition
of a rockery and cricket ground. The total cost of these improvements was £10,826
7s 9d and the park was formally opened on 3 October 1867, along with the Town Hall
and Avenham and Miller Parks. Hewitson (1883) praised the bowling greens, the walks
round the lake, and the flower gardens in the north-west corner, beyond the area used
as a cricket ground. A 'very considerable portion of the centre' still remained in
agricultural use in the 1880s.
Moor Park has significant archaeological interest, the principal western Roman Road
linking the north and south of the country having run across the centre of the site.
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Moor Park occupies a 40ha (131 acres)
rectangular site on the north side of Preston, to the south of Eaves Brook which forms
the boundary with Fulwood. Blackpool Road, formerly Serpentine Road, marks the northern
edge of the park, while Garstang Road and Deepdale Road run along the western and
eastern sides respectively; Moor Park Avenue forms the southern boundary. The park
is on very gently sloping ground, falling from south-east to north-west.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES There are entrances at each of the four corners of the site,
and also a little to the east of centre on the northern and southern boundaries. The
West Lodge stands at the south-west corner of the park and the North Lodge is on the
north boundary, adjacent to the north-west corner of The Serpentine.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS A serpentine walk through perimeter plantings surrounds
the open centre of the park, while a cross-walk roughly bisects it, crossing from
the entrance opposite St Paul's Road to the south and passing to the west of the lake.
Approximately in the centre of the site is a mid C20 pavilion, to the north-west of
which is a C17 stone known as the 'starting-chair', said to have been a marker post
of the earlier race course (Dr Crosby). The heart of the park is planted with the
remains of several clumps.
The north-west corner, developed by Edward Milner in the 1860s, is landscaped with
a series of paths weaving through a rockery with artificially undulated ground, and
is crossed by a bridge constructed of vast blocks of Longridge stone. Also in this
corner of the site is the early C20 observatory, to the east of which lie former tennis
courts, which have been redeveloped into a multi-use games area.
In the south-west quarter and near to the southern boundary a set of bowling greens
(present by the late 1860s), accompanied by a pair of mid C20 pavilions, project northwards
into the open ground. East of them, but still to the west of the entrance from St
Paul's Road, is a playground occupying the site of the mid C19 gymnasium.
A school situated in the north-east corner of the park lies within the site boundary
although the buildings are excluded from the registered area. Immediately to the south
of this is the site of the open air baths, opened in 1907 but now demolished. To the
west of the school is a lake, The Serpentine, at the northern end of which is a viewing
platform and shelter. There is rockwork at the southern end, but Milner's iron bridge
which originally carried the perimeter walk across it has gone, and the southern tip
of the water has silted up. Adjacent to the north-west corner of the lake is the North
Lodge, to the west of which runs the north end of the cross-walk. A stone cross stands
by the walk near the entrance on to the Blackpool Road.
The park also contains examples of Pulhamite rockwork, designed by James Pulham, including
rocks which the bridges within the park rest on; a drinking fountain and the rocky
tunnel and roadway.
A public park laid out in 1833-5 and improved by Edward Milner in the 1860s.
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.
Moor Park, Preston, laid out 1833-5 and improved by Edward Milner in the 1860s, is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons: * Date: the park is an especially early example of a municipal park; * Design: although enhanced, the park’s design is essentially unchanged from its C19 layout; * Designer: Edward Milner, who in the 1860s enhanced the park and laid out two others in Preston, was a leading designer of parks in England; * Historic interest: the first municipal park laid out by an industrial town; * Structures and features: the park retains numerous features of C19 date; * Planting: Moor Park retains much of its C19 planting.
Books and journals
A Topographical description of Preston's Parks, (1868), pp 45-9
English Heritage, , Durability Guaranteed Pulhamite rockwork - its conservation and repair, (2008)
Hardwick, C, History of the Borough of Preston and its Environs, (1857)
Hewitson, , History of Preston , (1883), pp 326-9
Other
Dr A Crosby, Moor Park, Preston: notes on the history (nd),
Summary of the history of the park, Garden History Society (July 1994),
Title: Plan of the Intended improvements to Preston Moor Source Date: 1833 Author: Publisher: Surveyor: