Identification and description | |||||
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Name | ROPNER PARK | ||||
Location |
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Localisation | Latitude: 54.557290 Longitude: -1.3313044 National Grid Reference: NZ 43344 18211 Map: Download a full scale map (PDF) |
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Overview | Heritage Category: Park and Garden Grade: II* List Entry Number: 1001628 Date first listed: 28-Jun-2002 Date of most recent amendment: 22-Aug-2013 Statutory Address 1: Ropner Park, Stockton-on-tees |
In 1890 Stockton-on-Tees Town Council appointed a committee to consider the purchase
of land for a public park. On 11 June 1890 the committee recommended that 36 acres
and 26 perches (c 14.6ha) of land known as Hartburn Fields be bought for the sum of
£8250, but concerns were raised by the Council regarding the financial burden to the
town (North Eastern Daily Gazette 1893). In the same month the Council received an
offer from Major (later Sir) Robert Ropner of Preston Hall, a highly successful local
businessman, to pay the cost of the ground. The offer was accepted and, in recognition
of the gift, Ropner was made the first Freeman of the Borough and, although not a
Councillor, accepted the office of Mayor in November 1892.
In 1890 the Council purchased, for £1026 11s 3d, a further 3 acres, 1 rood and 371/2
perches (c 1.2ha) of adjoining ground to the west which sloped down from the level
Hartburn Fields and extended to a stream, Lustrum Beck (Northern Review 1893). This
land included a small area of water and the exchange of some parcels of land with
an adjoining owner enabled the stream to be realigned and the water extended to form
an ornamental lake (Development Plan 1996).
Competitive designs were invited for the park and from the fifteen entries received
the first award was given to Messrs Backhouse and Co of York, the second to Mr H Kershaw
of Bradford, and the third to Mr G I Rose of Manchester (North Eastern Daily Gazette
1893). The Borough Surveyor, Mr K F Campbell, was then instructed to prepare a final
plan for the park on the basis of the three best designs. Laying out of the park commenced
on 25 July 1891 with the cutting of the first sod by Mrs Ropner (Northern Review 1893).
Contracts were awarded to Messrs Meston of London for excavation, drains, and roads,
to W C Atkinson of Stockton for the lodges, railings, and fences, and to Messrs Little
and Ballantyne of Carlisle for trees and shrubs, the total cost of laying out the
park amounting to c £17,000 (ibid). The park was unofficially opened to the public
on 8 June 1893 followed by a grand official opening by the Duke and Duchess of York
on 4 October 1893. The park then included three lodges, a cast-iron fountain by Carrons
of Glasgow, a stone drinking fountain relocated from Stockton High Street, a bandstand
by MacFarlanes of Glasgow, a recreation ground, a bowling green, a tennis lawn, gymnasia
for boys and girls at the south-west and north-east corners and, to the west of the
bandstand, stone steps leading down to a lake and terrace walks (North Eastern Daily
Gazette 1893). The main lodge was occupied by the park's curator, Mr H A Mann, formerly
of the Crystal Palace (qv) (Northern Review 1893). A small nursery area to the north-west
of the park was extended by c 0.5ha in 1938. An open-air theatre constructed in the
south-west of the park in 1951 to celebrate the Festival of Britain was demolished
in c 1984. A lodge in the north of the park was sold to private owners in 1981. The
stone drinking fountain was, prior to 2002, re-sited in the centre of Stockton.
A two year regeneration of the park was completed between 2004-06 to restore the park
back to its former splendour. This included the replacement of original features,
including the grand golden entrance gates. Ropner Park remains (2013) in use as a
public park and in the ownership of Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council.
LOCATION, AREA, BOUNDARIES, LANDFORM, SETTING Ropner Park lies 0.8km south-west of
Stockton-on-Tees town centre. The c 15.5ha site is roughly square with, to the west,
a narrow arm extending north. To the south the main area of the park is bounded by
Hartburn Lane while to the east it is separated from a railway line by Marlborough
Road. In the north-east corner the park is bounded by Balmoral Terrace. These road
boundaries are marked by C20 railings. To the west of Balmoral Road the main area
and northern arm of the park adjoin late C19 housing to the north and east respectively
with these boundaries generally marked by timber fences and hedges with some remnants
of late C19 railings. The northern arm of the park adjoins a nursery and training
area to the north-west and a lodge, now in private ownership, to the north-east. The
former boundary is marked by late C20 railings and the latter by late C20 security
fencing. To the west the park is bounded by the irregular line of Lustrum Beck with
this boundary generally marked by C20 railings with short sections of late C19 railings.
All boundaries are lined with tree and shrub borders, a feature remarked on at the
opening in 1893 (North Eastern Daily Gazette 1893).
The main eastern area of the park occupies level ground. To the west of this area
the ground slopes down to the Lustrum Beck on the western boundary with a lower level
area extending through the northern arm of the park. The surrounding area is mainly
residential with predominantly late C19/early C20 terraced housing to the north and
east, late C19 semi-detached villas adjoining the northern arm to the north and east,
and mid to late C20 housing to the south and west.
ENTRANCES AND APPROACHES The principal entrance is situated at the centre of the southern
boundary with Hartburn Lane. It is marked by a pair of late C19 ornate stone gate
piers and two C20 metal bollards. A 1905 photograph of the entrance (Stockton-on-Tees
Reference Library) shows a central carriage entrance, with a further pair of similar
stone piers, and two pedestrian entrances, all with gates. Immediately to the east
is situated a late C19 two-storey lodge with brick and half-timbered elevations below
steeply pitched roofs.
A second entrance, of carriage width, gives access from Balmoral Terrace at its junction
with Osborne Road (formerly Camford Road) to the north, 360m north-north-east of the
principal entrance. Opposite this entrance, to the south, is situated a small single-storey
lodge in similar style to that at the principal entrance. Further entrances are situated
at the north-west, north-east, south-east, and south-west corners of the main, higher
level of the park. These entrances are generally marked by C20 iron gates flanked
by railings, the south-east entrance without a gate.
Some 260m north-west of the principal entrance a footpath leads over Lustrum Beck
into the lower, western area of the park from Hartburn Avenue. A carriage entrance
situated 480m north-north-west of the principal entrance gives access to this area
via an unmade lane between houses on Richmond Road. This entrance is marked by late
C19 low cast-iron gate posts, flanked by short lengths of late C19 railings, with
one of a pair of gates remaining (2002). At the north-west corner of the park a further
informal entrance leads into the park from Nursery Lane via the adjoining nursery
and training area.
GARDENS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS From the principal entrance a 9m wide axial walk leads
northwards for 150m to the central point of the main level area of the park where
it divides to form a circle around a late C19 ornate three-tier circular cast-iron
fountain. Either side of the path are flower beds set in grass. To the north the central
fountain area is enclosed by an embanked crescent-shaped ornamental planting border
topped with a low hedge and shrubs. This border feature was noted in a contemporary
account of the opening of the park, together with the fountain which had forty side
jets and a central spray (North Eastern Daily Gazette 1893). The fountain has been
renovated and reset, but the side jets are no longer in place. From the fountain wide
cross-axial walks lead c 140m to east and west, bisecting the main level area of the
park within a perimeter path around the main, higher level area of the park. At the
eastern extremity of the cross-axial is an early C21 metal artwork entitled 'Bird
Swallows Fish', replacing the old stone drinking fountain. The axial and cross-axial
walks are lined with double rows of mature trees. To the south of the cross-axial
walks the ground is laid out with intersecting curving paths, some laid to grass,
partially enclosed by narrow belts of trees and shrubs set within open grassed ground,
the whole design being loosely symmetrical about the main axial walk. North of the
main cross-axial walk the shrub- and tree-lined curving paths, intersecting with the
perimeter path, enclose two oval areas of ground at the north-west and north-east
corners of the main area of the park. The area between the two is an irregular grassed
sports ground. The north-west oval contains a sports area. A path leading into this
area from the east is lined with low rockwork. The north-east oval contains two square
bowling greens, a late C20 bowling pavilion, and the northern park lodge. Both oval
areas are shown laid out with tennis grounds on the 1899 OS map with the bowling greens
and a small pavilion indicated on the 1915 edition. The Ropner Park Bowling Club occupies
the north-east corner.
The western arm of the perimeter path around the main area of the park curves to the
right then widens to form a north/south promenade, parallel with the axial walk from
the principal entrance. East of the perimeter path an area has been developed into
a wild flower meadow. The promenade is sited at the tree-lined head of an embankment,
overlooking the lower area of the park to the west, and at its centre intersects with
the main cross-axial walk. This junction is marked by a level circular area above
a semicircular projection in the embankment to the west and is the site of the former
bandstand. A new bandstand was built in 2006. Some 35m to the west a further embankment
follows the line of the promenade. A path at the foot of this second embankment forms
an outer, western, irregular loop to the perimeter path. To the north and south of
the embanked ground, and adjacent to the respective park boundaries, lie two small,
sunken oval areas enclosed by trees and shrubs. These areas are indicated on the 1899
OS map and are identified in reports of the park opening as gymnasia, for girls and
boys respectively (Northern Review 1893). In the mid to late C20 the northern oval
was laid out as a rose garden.
100m north of the bandstand is an adventure playground with C21 play equipment, designed
to emphasis the nautical heritage of the Ropner family. Alongside the playground are
three tennis courts. A pavilion built in early C21 contains a cafe, toilets and changing
rooms. Between the pavilion and the tennis courts is a floral replica of S.S Millpool,
originally one of the Ropner fleet of merchant vessels, lost at sea in a storm. A
memorial plaque remembers those who lost their lives. Around the park are six pieces
from Ropner vessels, which have been restored and painted silver.
From the bandstand a cross-axial path leads west for 100m, with two flights of stone
and concrete steps down the embankments, to the lower level of the park where it joins
an irregular path following the line of the Lustrum Beck on the western boundary.
Low concrete strings to the steps are topped with occasional pieces of rockwork and
an early C20 photograph (Stockton-on-Tees Reference Library) shows this as a continuous
feature. The path divides 150m north-east of the bandstand, the division to the east
continues around the perimeter of the park while the westerly path leads to the lake
with a wooded area to the north and a flat, grassy area to the south, used for games
and events. This path forms a circuit around the perimeter of a long narrow lake of
c 1.4ha which occupies the majority of ground in the northern arm of the park. This
level northern area lies below an irregular embankment to the south-east, which follows
the outline of the lake. The lake has three small islands to the south planted with
trees and shrubs. The edge of the lake is largely lined with narrow beds of tree and
shrub planting between short lengths of irregular stonework. The circuit path is enclosed
with similar, deeper boundary planting. Late C20/ early C21 stonework embankments
define the whole perimeter of both the water and islands.
The layout and character of planting within the park appears to be little altered
from that indicated on the 1899 OS map and described in contemporary reports of the
opening in 1893, although the mature trees now offer a different view of the lake
than those seen in the early photographs.
A public park opened in 1893 and laid out to a plan by the Borough Surveyor, Mr K F Campbell, prepared from the basis of three competitive submissions for the design.
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.
Ropner Park, Stockton on Tees, opened in 1893, is designated at Grade II* for the following principal reasons: * Date: the park is a good example of a late Victorian municipal park; * Design: although enhanced, the park’s design is essentially unchanged from its original layout of 1893; * Designer: the park was designed by the Borough Surveyor, drawing on designs submitted for a competition; * Structures: the park retains various C19 structures; * Planting: the planting within the park appears much as depicted on late C19 OS maps.
Books and journals
Cook, R, Stockton-on-Tees in old picture postcards , (1985), fig 79
Other
B Elliot, Stockton-on-Tees, Ropner Park, (EH Inspector's report 1992),
Drawings for the south lodge and bandstand, c 1892 (Stockton-on-Tees Museum Service),
Early C20 photographs of Ropner Park (Stockton-on-Tees Reference Library),
North Eastern Daily Gazette, 4 October 1893,
Northern Echo, 9 June 1993,
P Vickers and H A Taylor, Public Parks Stage One Survey, Ropner Park, (EH Review 1995),
Ropner Park Development Plan, (Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council 1996),
Stockton Evening Gazette, 11 January 1962,
Supplement to Northern Review, 7 October 1893, p 3,