Palmer Park, Reading

Palmer Park is a public park in Reading, England. The initial 21 acres land for the park was given to the town in 1889 by the proprietors of the Huntley & Palmers biscuit firm. It was extended to 49 acres in 1891 and contains a statue of George Palmer.

Palmer Park
View across the middle of the park
Location within Reading
TypePublic
LocationReading, Berkshire, UK
Coordinates51°27′07″N 0°56′20″W

The full park was opened on 4 November 1891.[1] The park and pavilion were designed by architect, William Ravenscroft.

Popular with all of the local residents for various activities, it often hosts religious festivals, sports tournaments and small special events. In the past, Carter's Steam Fair visited the park every year. However, they had to suspend the annual event due to the discovery of ground subsidence in the park in 2001.[2] Chalk mines were found underneath the park and the weight of the fairground rides posed a great danger. The areas affected have now been shored up and compacted to stop any incident from occurring and the Fair is visiting again.

Park facilities

The park also contains Palmer Park Stadium, a velodrome and athletics stadium.[3] Included in the park is Palmer Park Library,[4] Palmer Park Bowling Club,[5] two playgrounds,[6] a community cafe[7] and a number of football pitches which are used every week for local matches. During the summer months, some of the goal posts are removed to make way for a cricket pitch.

gollark: I feel like you should need greater-than-majority support to change meta-laws governing parliament.
gollark: Same with the US.
gollark: I mean, it could if people supported it, but it's politically impractical.
gollark: The UK has no constitution and *also* basically cannot change how voting works.
gollark: Which is silly for a variety of reasons - even if you agree with the concept of randomly reweighting votes based on area, at least do it honestly and directly and not in such a bizarre, convoluted and arbitrary way?

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.