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Grove Park, Chiswick

Coordinates:51°28′58″N0°19′15″W / 51.482639°N 0.320942°W /51.482639; -0.320942
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Area of Chiswick, London, England

Human settlement in England
Grove Park
Grove Park Gardens
Grove Park is located in Greater London
Grove Park
Grove Park
Location withinGreater London
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtW4
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°28′58″N0°19′15″W / 51.482639°N 0.320942°W /51.482639; -0.320942

Grove Park is an area in the south ofChiswick, now in the borough ofHounslow, WestLondon. It lies in the meander of theThames occupied byDuke's Meadows park.[1] Historically, the area belonged to one of the four historic villages in modern Chiswick,Little Sutton. It was long protected from building by the regular flooding of the low-lying land by theRiver Thames, remaining as orchards, open fields, and riverside marshland until the 1880s. Development was stimulated by the arrival of the railway in 1849; Grove Park Hotel followed in 1867, soon followed by housing. In theSecond World War, the first successfulV-2 rocket attack on Britain took place in Staveley Road during September 1944.

The architecture of the area includes houses inBritish Queen Anne Revival style, while the station building isItalianate. The 1872 neo-Gothic St Paul's Church is built in irregular blocks of stone. It has a small fleche instead of a spire, as well as an apse at its eastern end.St Michael's Church was designed byW. D. Caröe and Herbert Passmore in 1908 in a domestic style in buttressed red brick with tiled arches and with dormer windows in its roof, while the windows use neo-Gothic stone tracery.

Famous former residents of Grove Park include the actorJohn Thaw, the soldierBernard Montgomery, and the poetDylan Thomas. St Paul's vicarage has repeatedly been used as a film set, including inTinker Tailor Soldier Spy,Killing Eve,Lewis,Grantchester, andThe Theory of Everything.

Geography

[edit]
historic map showing geography before the building of the estate
Grove Park area onOrdnance Survey map, c. 1880. Little Sutton is top centre;Kew Bridge andStrand-on-the-Green top left;Chiswick House and Gardens top centre right, andOld Chiswick top right. Grove House and its Park are centre left between the river and the railway leading toBarnes Railway Bridge. A broad strip beside the river is marked as marsh; much of the peninsula is shown as orchard (arrays of dots) or open fields.

Much of Grove Park was still rural until late in the 19th century; the risk of flooding from the tidal Thames protected it from building.[2][3] One of the four constituent villages of Chiswick,Little Sutton, was in the Grove Park area, about the centre of the parish of Chiswick at that time; two other villages,Strand-on-the-Green andOld Chiswick, lie just to the west and to the east of Grove Park, respectively, withTurnham Green to the north.[3]

History

[edit]

Grove House to housing estate

[edit]

A house stood on the site of Grove House from 1412; it was replaced by 1705 with, according to a contemporary observer, "a spacious regular modern building ... pleasantly situated by the Thames side. Behind it are gardens by some said to be the finest in England".[4] Grove House was owned by the Barker family at that time; from 1745 it belonged to the Earl of Grantham and then to an eccentric animal-lover, Humphrey Morice.[4] The Duke of Devonshire bought the whole estate in the 1840s, reshaping Grove House without its third storey, and letting it to tenants.[4]

The building of the railways includingChiswick railway station in 1849 spurred development.[4][1] Grove Park Hotel was built in 1867, soon followed by housing.[1] Growth was slow but steady, with residential development accompanied by small-scale industry such as soap making.[1]

Robert William Shipway bought Grove House in the 1890s; it was demolished in 1928 and replaced by the houses on the west side of Kinnaird Avenue.[4]

  • Engraving of Grove House by W. Wade, 1792
    Engraving of Grove House by W. Wade, 1792
  • Chiswick Station, 1849, described by Pevsner as "Italianate"
    Chiswick Station, 1849, described byPevsner as "Italianate"
  • Grove Park Hotel, 1867, now Station House
    Grove Park Hotel, 1867,
    now Station House
  • Grove Park Terrace level crossing
    Grove Park Terrace level crossing
  • Large houses on Grove Park Road
    Large houses on Grove Park Road
  • Queen Anne Revival style, Spencer Road, c. 1890
    Queen Anne Revival style, Spencer Road, c. 1890
  • The Turrets, a castellated house, 20th century
    The Turrets, a castellated house, 20th century
  • Corner house with round castellated tower, 20th century
    Corner house with round castellated tower, 20th century

V-2 rocket strike

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On Friday 8 September 1944, during theSecond World War, aV-2 rocket launched fromWassenaar in Holland, by485 Artillerie Abteilung at 6.37pm,[5] landed in Staveley Road near the junction with Burlington Lane, killing three people (including a three-year-old girl), and injuring nineteen.[6] The crater was thirty feet across. It was the first successful V-2 rocket strike in Britain.[7][8][9] The explosion was shown inZDF's 2015 productionHitler's Space Rocket,[10] and in the 1965 filmOperation Crossbow. A granite memorial stone was placed near the site on Staveley Road in 2004.[11]

  • V-2 rocket
  • Memorial to the September 1944 V-2 explosion in Staveley Road, built in September 2004[11]
    Memorial to the September 1944 V-2 explosion in Staveley Road, built in September 2004[11]

Churches

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St Paul's Church

[edit]

Theneo-Gothic St Paul's Church, Grove Park Road, was designed in 1872 byHenry Currey and built at the expense ofWilliam Cavendish, 7th Duke of Devonshire to provide a church for the newly built Grove Park estate. It is made of irregular blocks of stone and has an apse at its eastern end; there is no tower or tall spire.[12] It has instead a fleche (a small spire) atop a mock belfry at the western end. Inside, the church has a high altar fromSt Margaret's,Birmingham, to a design byLord Norton, and a large 16th-centuryFlorentine painting of thetransfiguration of Christ.[13] The stained glass in the apse is modern, byM. E. Aldrich Rope (1891-1988). The Stations of the Cross were painted byEnid Chadwick (1902–1987) of Walsingham, a British artist known for religious art.[13]

  • St Paul's Church, Grove Park
    St Paul's Church, Grove Park
  • Main entrance
    Main entrance
  • Doorway Domus Dei Porta Coeli ("House of God, Gate of Heaven")
    DoorwayDomus Dei Porta Coeli ("House of God, Gate of Heaven")
  • Altar and stained glass
    Altar and stained glass
  • Nave
    Nave
  • Banner
    Banner
  • The Transfiguration, after Raphael, late 16th century
    The Transfiguration, afterRaphael, late 16th century

St Michael's Church

[edit]
photograph of church
St Michael's Church
Main article:St Michael's Church, Grove Park

St Michael's Church on Elmwood Road was designed by the architectsW. D. Caröe & Herbert Passmore; it was founded in 1908 and completed in 1909. It is described byNikolaus Pevsner inThe Buildings of England as "one of Caröe's most interesting churches in outer London".[14] The building was funded by the sale of St Michael, Burleigh Street, onthe Strand (in central London). Pevsner calls the exterior "picturesque";[14] it is in red brick, itsbuttresses joined by tiled arches, and withdormers in the roof. The crossing point of the roof is marked by a turret with shingles and tiles; on the north of the crossing is "a curiously domestic excrescence"[14] for ventilation and the church'sbelfry. The windows have decorative curving stone tracery in "free flamboyant Gothic" style;[14] they are recessed under tiled arches. Inside, the font, lectern, and pulpit were brought from St Michael on the Strand, while the 1911 choir stalls were designed by Caröe. The south chapel's roof has a decoration made by Antony Lloyd in 1932. Thestained glass windows in the south chapel and the sanctuary were made by Horace Wilkinson between 1914 and 1925.[14]

Parks and nature reserves

[edit]
photograph of wartime structure
Second World WarBlockhouse nearBarnes Railway Bridge

Just to the east of the Grove Park area isChiswick House, its gardens a public park. In the south of the peninsula is the open space ofDuke's Meadows, though much of its area is now taken up with private sports grounds andallotments. Just beside the railway bridge is the smallDuke's Hollow nature reserve, which is allowed to flood at high spring tides.

In theFirst World War, a pleasure lake that had belonged to Grove House, at the southern end of Hartington Road, was turned into Cubitt's Yacht Basin; during the war it made cast concrete barges to carry ammunition. When the war ended it was used to moor houseboats.[15]

Residents

[edit]

The actorJohn Thaw lived on Grove Park Road for many years, while the British Army Field MarshalBernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, lived on Bolton Road as a teenager.[1] The poetDylan Thomas lived in the vicarage of St Paul's Church in the 1940s.[13]

In culture

[edit]

St Paul's vicarage was used in the 2011 filmTinker Tailor Soldier Spy ofJohn Le Carre's novel, as was the BBC drama seriesKilling Eve, and the television detective seriesLewis andGrantchester. The vicarage's garden was used "extensively" in the 2014 film about the physicistStephen Hawking,The Theory of Everything.[13]The Beatles filmed two short promotional films on 20 May 1966, ‘Paperback Writer’ and ‘Rain’, in the gardens ofChiswick House.[16]

References

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  1. ^abcdeWilley, Russ (2007).Chambers London Gazetteer.Chambers. p. 205.ISBN 978-0550102591.
  2. ^Bolton, Diane K.; Croot, Patricia E. C.; Hicks, M. A. (1982). "Chiswick: Growth". In T. F. T. Baker; C. R. Elrington (eds.).A History of the County of Middlesex, Volume 7, Acton, Chiswick, Ealing and Brentford, West Twyford, Willesden. London:British History Online. pp. 54–68.
  3. ^abClegg 1995, pp. 6, 12, 17.
  4. ^abcdeClegg 1995, p. 31.
  5. ^Target London: Under attack from the V-weapons during WWII
  6. ^Britain and Ballistic Missile Defence, 1942–2002, Jeremy Stocker
  7. ^Battery 444
  8. ^Rincon, Paul (7 September 2004)."V-2: Hitler's last weapon of terror".BBC News.
  9. ^McCrystal, Cal (3 October 1992)."Notebook: A sudden wallop in Staveley Road: Outraged of Chiswick was noticeable by his absence in the first British street to suffer the ravages of the V2".The Independent.
  10. ^IMDb
  11. ^ab"Commemorating the Chiswick V2". Brentford & Chiswick Local History Society. Retrieved18 March 2025.
  12. ^Cherry & Pevsner 1991, p. 394.
  13. ^abcd"Our History". St Paul's Church, Grove Park. Retrieved26 August 2021.
  14. ^abcdeCherry & Pevsner 1991, p. 394
  15. ^Baker 1982.
  16. ^"50 Years Since Beatles Filmed Two Groundbreaking Music Videos".Chiswick House and Gardens. 20 May 2016. Retrieved8 February 2023.

Sources

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Ealing
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  Bedford Park (part)
Hounslow
Bedford Park (part)
Chiswick High Road
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Location of the London Borough of Hounslow in Greater London
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