Identification and description | |||||
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Name | BROADFIELD PARK | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 53.613335 Longitude: -2.1599441 National Grid Reference: SD 89516 12988 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II List Entry Number: 1001522 Date first listed: 24-Apr-2001 |
A public park designed by Messrs Stansfield and Sons, and opened in successive phases
between 1870 and 1874. It was designed to form a setting for Rochdale Town Hall and
was extended in the 1930s. The park was formerly known as 'Rochdale Park', or simply
'The Park'.
HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT
Broadfield Park and Sparrow Hill Slopes were laid out on former glebe land acquired
by the Rochdale Corporation in 1860, and were designed by Messrs Stansfield and Son,
Landscape Gardeners, of Todmorden (Wrigley and Sons 1871). By the 1890s Broadfield
Slopes had been added to the park and were laid out to a design by, and at the expense
of, Mr J Ogden Kilnerdeyne (Souvenir of Rochdale). By 1910 Broadfield Slopes had been
extensively remodelled, with a new entrance from the Manchester Road (Derek Lovejoy
Partnership 1998). The site of Packer Spout and St Chad's Gardens was presented to
the town in 1893 but was not laid out until 1925 to a design by the Borough Surveyors
Department (ibid). Parts of the western sides of Sparrow Hill Slopes and Broadfield
Slopes were destroyed as a result of the widening of the Manchester Road in the 1970s.
The site remains (2000) in use as a public park in the ownership of Rochdale Metropolitan
Borough Council.
DESCRIPTION
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Broadfield Park lies to the south of
Rochdale Town Hall on a spur of the River Roch and covers an area of c 6.8ha. Broadfield
Park is a complex site which incorporates three distinct areas: the formal layout
of Broadfield Park on high ground to the south-west of Rochdale Town Hall; Sparrow
Hill and Broadfield Slopes to the west of Manchester Road; and The Esplanade, and
Packer Spout and St Chad's Gardens lying between Rochdale Town Hall to the north and
St Chad's church to the south.
The formal area of Broadfield Park lies on a plateau and is bounded by Sparrow Hill
(formerly Vicarage Road) to the north, Vicar's Drive to the east, St Albans Street
to the south, and to the west by the footpath which runs between this part of the
park and Sparrow Hill and Broadfield Slopes to the west and north. There are terraced
houses to the south of this part of the park, while to the north is Sparrow Hill Primary
School, the Broadfield Hotel, and the vicarage of St Chad's church. The boundaries
of this part of the park are marked by a low stone wall which forms a retaining wall
on the northern boundary. The western boundary was marked in the late C19 by an iron
fence, now replaced by concrete posts and wire although the central iron gate survives.
Sparrow Hill and Broadfield Slopes lie to the west and north-west of the formal area
of Broadfield Park. These two areas are bounded to the south by St Albans Street,
and to the east by the footpath which separates it from the formal area of Broadfield
Park. To the west this part of the park falls steeply to the Manchester Road (A58).
The Slopes continue to the north, separated from the main area of the park by Sparrow
Hill. The southern boundary of this part of the park is marked by the boundaries of
Sparrow Hill Primary School, the Museum, and part of St Chad's churchyard. To the
north the land falls steeply to The Esplanade. The park boundary is formed by a 1.2m
high retaining wall to the north, a retaining wall and banking to the west, a 1.5m
high wall to the south, and a low wall to the east.
Packer Spout and St Chad's Gardens at the north-east tip of the site are bounded to
the north by Nelson Street, to the east by Church Lane, to the south by St Chad's
churchyard, and to the west by Broadfield Slopes. This part of the park is bisected
by a flight of 122 stone steps which connect the church with Town Hall Square. Packer
Spout Gardens is bounded by a low stone wall to the north and east and by the high
stone wall which surrounds the church.
From the formal area of Broadfield Park on the plateau to the south-west of the Town
Hall, the ground falls steeply to the west and south. There are extensive views across
Rochdale and surrounding open country from the park.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES There are four entrances to the formal part of Broadfield
Park. Two entrances give access from the public footpath which crosses the site linking
St Alban's Street and Sparrow Hill on the western boundary of this part of the site.
A further entry at the north-east corner gives access from Sparrow Hill and Vicar's
Drive, and an entry on the southern boundary of the site gives access from St Albans
Street.
There are further entrances to the Sparrow Hill part of the park. An entry on the
northern boundary gives access from Sparrow Hill, an entry on the eastern boundary
gives access from the public footpath linking St Albans Street and Sparrow Hill, a
further entry at the south-west corner gives access from St Albans Street, and an
entry at the north-west corner gives access from Manchester Road and The Esplanade.
These entrances are marked by stone gate piers although the gates are missing.
Two entrances to the southern boundary of Broadfield Slopes provide access from Sparrow
Hill, and two further entrances on the northern boundary give access from The Esplanade.
The sunken path which runs north/south across the site has its steep sides retained
by massive rockwork. There are no entrance gates.
There are five entrances to Packer Spout and St Chad's Gardens (formerly Nelson Street
Slopes). Two entrances on the northern boundary give access from Town Hall Square.
Both these entrances have steep flights of stone steps leading to the Market Cross
and to St Chad's churchyard. A further entrance at the at the north-east corner of
the site gives access from Nelson Street and Church Lane, and an entrance to the south-east
gives access from Church Lane. On the southern boundary an entrance gives access from
St Chad's churchyard.These entrances are marked by stone piers. The eastern part of
this area is closed to public access (November 2000).
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS Broadfield Park has four distinct areas. Broadfield Park
itself is on a level site and has a formal layout. Sparrow Hill, to the west of the
formal area, has sepentine paths and a small lake. Broadfield Slopes, to the north
of Sparrow Hill, has massive earth terraces following the contours of the hill and
providing platforms for views across the Pennines to the north. Packer Spout and St
Chad's Gardens, to the south-east of the Town Hall, have a formally laid out path
system connected by flights of stone steps.
The western part of Broadfield Park has large sunken lawns with elaborate ornamental
bedding, at the centre of which is a statue of Alderman G L Ashworth, JP (listed grade
II) erected in 1878. The decorative iron fence which originally protected the statue
has been removed. The paths are tarmacked with stone steps leading down to the sunken
lawns. Three C19 pavilions around the perimeter of the sunken gardens were lost or
removed in the early part of the C20 (Derek Lovejoy Partnership 1998). The Jubilee
Drinking Fountain (Co-operative Memorial) at the south-west corner of the sunken garden
was presented to the town by the Provident Society in 1907. The stone fountain is
disused and has lost the four lions which sat on plinths around the centre, and the
pinnacle which completed the central canopy. From this point the path runs east past
modern timber trellis-work and planting beds and the former site, about 30m from the
St Albans Street entry, of a glacial boulder found at Castleton and placed in the
park in 1893.
The octagonal stone plinth of a bandstand occupies the central section of the park.
The supporting columns and canopy have been removed and only the decorative iron railings
survive. What remains of the structure is protected by modern iron railings. The bandstand
was presented by Alderman Duckworth in 1893. Two bowling greens occupy the eastern
section of Broadfield Park: that at the south-east corner of the park was opened in
1908 when the footpath running diagonally across this area, the former glebeland,
was diverted. The bowling green at the north-east corner was opened in 1927. The bowls
pavilions on the eastern boundary of the park date from this period and the single-storey
brick building to the south-west of the bowling area close to the St Albans Street
entrance dates from the 1970s.
A footpath which starts opposite Broadfield Stile to the south of the site runs north/south
between Broadfield Park and Sparrow Hill Slopes, linking St Albans Street with Sparrow
Hill and then continuing north to The Esplanade. The footpath is of York stone and
is flanked with trees and shrubs. In the Sparrow Hill Slopes area of the park the
ground falls steeply to the west and north and the path system follows the contour
of the land. Winding paths enclose areas of open lawn surrounded by trees and shrubs
with some terraces to the west and north marked by hedgerows supported by concrete
posts and wire fences. There are extensive views out across the surrounding countryside
to the north and west.
A modern play area at the south-east corner of this part of the park occupies the
position of one of the C19 'Play Grounds' or outdoor gymnasia (ibid). The second gymnasium,
the south-west corner of the park, and part of the original western boundary were
lost when the Manchester Road was widened in the 1970s. The footpath system in the
northern half of Sparrow Hill Slopes reflects the C19 layout but two former footpaths
in the west part of the park and a major part of the footpath system in the central
and south-west area were lost as a result of the road widening. A pond occupies the
north-west corner, at the lowest part of Sparrow Hill, close to one of the main entrances
at the intersection of Manchester Road and The Esplanade. The irregularly shaped pond,
lined with York stone, was part of the C19 design but has been reduced as a result
of late C20 road widening. The grassed and wooded area along the western boundary
of Sparrow Hill was laid out following the road scheme, when the former through road,
Vicarage Road, was truncated and renamed.
In the Broadfield Slopes area the three levels of terraces and footpaths running parallel
to The Esplanade reflect the extensive remodelling of this part of the park in the
early years of the C20. The sunken pathway running north/south from Sparrow Hill to
The Esplanade between banks of rockwork divides Broadfield Slopes into eastern and
western sections, connected by the 'Victoria Bridge', an ornate iron footbridge. The
Rochdale Dialect Writers Memorial lies midway along the central footpath of the western
section of Broadfield Slopes. The Memorial, backed by an area of ornamental planting
(2000), was erected in 1900 to commemorate local dialect writers Edwin Waugh, John
Trafford Clegg, Miss Lahee, and Oliver Ormerod. The statue of John Bright (listed
grade II) at the north-west edge of Broadfield Slopes was moved from Town Hall Square
to this position overlooking the roundabout in the 1970s when the original landform
and looped path system were destroyed as part of the road-widening scheme. The eastern
section of Broadfield Slopes is open grass with a central path running down to The
Esplanade. The southern part of this area was reduced in the late C20 to create playing
fields for Sparrow Hill School.
Packer Spout and St Chad's Gardens lie to the east of Broadfield Slopes. Church Steps,
a steep flight of 122 stone steps, lie in the central area of the site and link the
Town Hall Square to the north-west and St Chad's churchyard to the south. The garden
to the east of Church Steps is arranged around three main interconnecting paths with
a central sitting area (this area was closed to the public November 2000). Paths lead
off from the west of Church Steps to an area paved with York stone, laid out in the
1930s, around a drinking fountain and Market Cross. This part of the park rises steeply
from the Town Square but former views to the north across the town and open countryside
beyond are blocked by mature trees and shrubs.
Tree cover within the park is predominantly sycamore, with some ash, lime, and hawthorn.
Elm trees were removed from the park in 1980(8. The vegetation of the park is more
extensive now than at earlier periods and many of the views out from the park are
blocked by over-mature trees and shrubs.
REFERENCES
Rochdale Observer, 7 May 1864 Wrigley and Sons, Rochdale Household Almanack (1871)
Rochdale Times, 19 April 1893 R D Gorman, Broadfield Park, Rochdale, (unpublished
MEd, Manchester University 1983) Broadfield Park Regeneration ( Feasibility and Restoration
Proposals, (Derek Lovejoy Partnership 1998)
Maps OS 6" to 1 mile: 1928 edition 1930 edition OS 25" to 1 mile: 2nd edition published
1893
Archival items Rochdale in the Coronation Year of King Edward VII, souvenir brochure
(1901) (R: 1238), (Rochdale Local Studies Library) Souvenir of the Rochdale Muncipal
Jubilee 1856-1906 (R:1238), (Rochdale Local Studies Library) M Giles, Photographs,
early C20 (Rochdale Local Studies Library)
Description written: January 2001 Register Inspector: JAR Edited: May 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.