Place    From 9/8/1869 

Finsbury Park

Categories: Gardens / Agriculture

The land that makes up Finsbury Park was originally part of the Manor of Brownswood. The New River was built 1609-13. Copt Hall was first recorded in 1649 and was probably built to house the people coppicing Hornsey Wood. By In 1750 this was a manor house and it became Hornsey Wood House, a popular tea house. It was enlarged/rebuilt in 1796 to become the Hornsey Wood Tavern and the lake was created with water pumped up from the New River. The wood was reduced to provide space for pleasure gardens.

This early but undated map, Engraved by W.R. Gardner, shows Hornsey Wood House. The map is not well geo-located but comparing the position of the House with the River we'd put it at what is now the centre of the Park, at the top of the knoll, near the lake. Finsbury Park Management Plan has: "The original park design included a refreshment house as a central feature, replacing the Victorian Tavern that existed previously. The Tavern was replaced with an ‘off the shelf’ café design in the 1950s, which remained popular owing to its proximity to the Park’s major amenities, despite its worsening state. The building was subsequently demolished and replaced with a modern café .." So we think the old manor house was on the site of what is now the cafe, to the south-west of, and overlooking, the lake. This is confirmed by a (deteriorating) information board at that site, from which we have gleaned much of the information above.

Hornsey Wood Tavern was demolished in the 1860s when the Park was laid out. However, after the Park had opened in 1869, a pub was opened opposite one of its entrances, at number 376, the east corner of the Seven Sisters Road / Alexandra Grove junction. Confusingly, this was also called the Hornsey Wood Tavern. It was later renamed the Alexandra Dining Room, or Bar, closed April 2007 and was demolished and redeveloped. Closed Pubs have a photo.

Finsbury Park was the result of 30 years of local campaigns, largely led by Frederick Manable, for a Royal Park for the north of London comparable to Regents Park, Battersea Park and Victoria Park. Compulsory purchase of land by the Metropolitan Board of Works began in 1864. The Park was designed by It was designed by Frederick Manable, Superintending Architect to the MBW and the landscape designer Alexander McKenzie. The plans were approved in 1868. In 1889 management of the Park passed to London County Council which replaced MBW.

Most of this information comes from the Friends of Finsbury Park and Wikipedia which clarified a few points for us. Also, the Finsbury Park Blog has an excellent page on the history with some terrific images including early images of Hornsey Wood House/Tavern.

Puzzled why the Park is not named Hornsey Park we found the answer at Islington Guided Walks: originally, when the Park was an idea without a location, it was intended to provide open space for the inhabitants of Finsbury (roughly the area to the south of Old Street Station). At one stage it was to be equivalent in size to Victoria Park and named Albert Park. But London was expanding and land close to Finsbury was getting more expensive, so that plan did not work out and we got the smaller Finsbury Park instead.

Another puzzle concerns the nearby Manor House tube station. It was built in 1932 and named after the pub at the site which was rebuilt at the same time. The original Hornsey Wood House seems to have been the nearest manor house, but it was half a mile away. 

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Finsbury Park

Commemorated ati

Alexander Mckenzie at Finsbury Park

Erected in 2019 and vandalised by the time we visited in 2023 - probably impo...

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Other Subjects

Friends of Friary Park

Friends of Friary Park

From their website: "The Friends of Friary Park was formed in 1990 as the result of local discontent with the deteriorating condition of the Park. More than 200 people attended the inaugural meetin...

Group, Community / Clubs, Gardens / Agriculture

1 memorial
King George's Fields Foundation

King George's Fields Foundation

After the death of King George V the Lord Mayor of London set up a committee to decide on a suitable national memorial. It was decided to erect just one statue and create a number of playing fields...

Group, Gardens / Agriculture, Royalty, Sport / Games

9 memorials
Groundwork

Groundwork

An environmental agency based in Birmingham. It works with communities across the United Kingdom, to help them create places in which to live and work in a greener, more sustainable way and to impr...

Group, Gardens / Agriculture

3 memorials
Angus McGill

Angus McGill

Initiated the Evening Standard's appeal to replace London's lost trees. For 42 years McGill was a columnist with the Evening Standard and was co-creator, with the illustrator Dominic Poelsma, of th...

Person, Gardens / Agriculture, Journalism / Publishing

1 memorial
Wimbledon Common windmill

Wimbledon Common windmill

A Grade II* listed building. It was built by a carpenter, Charles March, and is a rare example of a 'hollow-post' mill. It continued in use until 1864, when the miller was evicted by the Lord of th...

Building, Gardens / Agriculture

1 memorial