Castle Park, Bristol
Castle Park, Bristol | |
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Western part of Castle Park, with ruined St Peter's church, garden and square in centre and Bristol Bridge in top left | |
Castle Park Castle Park shown within Bristol | |
OS grid | ST592731 |
Coordinates | 51°27′21″N 2°35′17″W / 51.4558°N 2.5881°WCoordinates: 51°27′21″N 2°35′17″W / 51.4558°N 2.5881°W |
Castle Park (sometimes referred to as Castle Green) is a public open space in Bristol, England, managed by Bristol City Council. It is bounded by the Floating Harbour and Castle Street to the south, Lower Castle Street to the east, and Broad Weir, Newgate and Wine Street to the north. Its western boundary is less obviously defined and has been the subject of controversy, perhaps because the area around High Street and St Mary-le-Port Church, though not part of the park and always intended for development, is often considered at the same time as the park.[1] The park was completed and opened on 30 September 1978,[1] and occupies most of the site which had contained Bristol's main shopping area. Much of this area was heavily damaged in the Blitz during the Second World War, and that which remained was subsequently demolished.
The ruined tower of St Mary-le-Port church stands to the west of the park, surrounded by derelict financial office buildings. Adjoining the ruins of St Peter's church in the middle of the park is a sensory herb garden, and five silver birch trees as a memorial to the beaches of the D-Day landings. To the east is a grassy arena, and the partially excavated remains of Bristol Castle with a preserved vaulted chamber. There is also a bandstand and a children's play area.
Tree-lined St Peter's Square, to the north of St Peter's church, has been home to various events including German Christmas markets.[2] In recent summers a tethered balloon has been placed near the bandstand, offering ascents to sightseers.
Recent attempts to develop the area between the park's western edge and High Street have proved controversial; Bristol City Council are keen to replace derelict buildings with a mixed-use development to help reconnect the Old City to Broadmead and raise funds to improve the park; others would rather see the park extended to High Street.
History
The town of Bristol was settled at some time in the Anglo-Saxon period on the northern or Mercian side of a crossing point of the River Avon, at or near to the present Bristol Bridge. The town lay entirely between the Avon and the Frome, which at that time emerged into the Avon just downstream of Bristol Bridge.[3]
Archaeological excavations of the area in 1962-1963 suggest that the original settlement was centred to the east of St Peter's Church, with Mary-le-Port on its western limit. The building of Bristol Castle in the latter part of the 11th century resulted in the focus of the settlement being moved to the west, where it developed into a symmetrical plan centred on the crossroads of High Street, Wine Street, Broad Street and Corn Street.[4] The area around Mary-le-Port Street was thus the most ancient part of the mediaeval city. Bristol Castle was home to the Norman garrison, and was a massive structure whose keep was comparable to that of the Tower of London. The castle occupied the whole of the eastern end of today's Castle park, from just east of St Peter's Church to Lower Castle Street.[5]
In 1612 Robert Aldworth, Mayor of Bristol, rebuilt St Peter's Hospital on a site between St Peter's Church and the Floating Harbour. This 'beautiful house with its elaborate carving' became the Bristol Mint in 1695, and was considered to be Bristol's greatest architectural loss of the Second World War.[6][7]
By the 16th century the castle was 'tending to ruin', and following his victory in the English Civil War Oliver Cromwell decreed its destruction in 1655, a process which was completed within a fortnight.[8] The castle had stood on the main route from Bristol to London, and following its destruction a commercial avenue opened along Castle Street from the mediaeval city towards Old Market. The demolition of Lawford's Gate at the eastern end of Old Market Street extended this into West Street, creating an uninterrupted route into the bustling heart of Bristol.[9]
Wine Street and Castle Street became the main shopping streets, where retailers such as Boots, Jones's (later to become part of the Debenhams group), the Co-op and Marks & Spencer traded. Baker Baker had large stores in Bridge Street, Wine Street and Mary-le-Port Street;[10] two of these were connected by a high bridge across Mary-le-Port Street.[11] The area also hosted a cinema (the News Theatre) and its narrow winding back-streets contained many independent shops, hotels, and pubs.[12] At the corner of High Street and Wine Street stood the 'most loved fragment of Old Bristol': The Dutch House.[13]
24 November 1940
On the afternoon of 24 November 1940, 148 aircraft of the Luftwaffe left airfields in Northern France heading for Bristol. The concentration point was to be the City Docks, and their objective was to destroy Bristol's industry and port facilities. 135 aircraft reached the target area, and dropped 156,250 kg (344,470 lb) of high explosives,4,750 kg (10,470 lb) of oil bombs and 12,500 incendiaries. As the raid progressed, the fires could be seen from 250 kilometres (160 mi) away. Wide areas of the city were struck, but the most concentrated damage occurred in the area between Broad Quay and Old Market where fierce fires burnt through the night. By the morning, 200 Bristolians were dead and 689 injured, four Luftwaffe crewmen were dead, one injured and four captured, two aircraft were lost, and a large part of the historic heart of Bristol was a smouldering ruin.[14]
The destruction was not total, however. Post-war photographs show that buildings survived intact on Bridge Street,[15] High Street,[16] Castle Street [17] and Peter Street.[18] The west end of Narrow Wine Street, a 'fantastic little old thoroughfare',[19] was more or less intact; Castle Mill Street and Castle Green received little damage,[20] and Upper, Middle and Lower Terrace survived.[21] More importantly, the irreplaceable mediaeval street plan remained.
Replanning
The idea that Bristol's main shopping area should be moved away from the Castle Street and Wine Street area was first proposed to Bristol Corporation's Planning and Reconstruction Committee by the Multiple Traders' Federation (MTF), representing the larger retailers and chain-stores, in October 1943. They suggested that the pre-war shopping area should be set aside as a civic area with perhaps a concert hall or similar building and an open space, and that the central shopping area should be moved to a less-constrained site. This suggestion formed part of the City Engineer's Master Plan of February 1944, which envisaged that the area would contain a limited number of buildings such as a conference hall, with underground parking for 2,000 cars. The removal of the shopping area was considered desirable because the fire that had destroyed so much of the area was in large part sustained by its congested nature, and in any case many of the chain-stores represented by the MTF wanted larger sites.[22]
The main objection to this plan came from the independent traders who did not wish to relocate because they felt that the proposed new shopping area was 'off the beaten track'.[22] This objection was not unreasonable, as in its pre-war topography Bristol had a long shopping axis that started at Stapleton Road to the east, passed through Old Market into Castle Street, Wine Street, and the City Markets, and then via The Centre and Park Street to Queens Road and Whiteladies Road. Moving the central shopping area would break this axis. There was also concern about the serious negative social and economic impacts of 'sterilising' such a large area in the centre of the city.[22] However, when the Bristol Retail Traders Federation, representing the small traders, produced a poll showing that 13,000 people wished to retain the shopping centre on its current site whereas only 400 preferred to see it moved, the local Labour party dismissed the poll describing it as 'undemocratic' and comparing the Federation's methods to those of Hitler.[23]
By 1966, the shops had been rebuilt in 'barren' Broadmead (at the expense of demolishing an area of Victorian, Georgian and Tudor buildings that had escaped the wartime bombing more or less unscathed),[24] and the Wine Street and Castle Street area was being used for car parking.[1] The picturesque area around Narrow Wine Street and Castle Mill Street had been demolished to create modern Newgate, and Old Market, severed from Bristol's shopping axis by the new Temple Way Underpass and the destruction of Castle Street, was in serious decline.[25] The plan for Castle Park was crystallising, however. The ruined St Peter's Church would be surrounded by a museum and an art gallery; to the east of this there would be an arts centre and the remaining area east to Lower Castle Street would be a park. The south-western corner nearest Bristol Bridge would contain a riverside hotel, and the north-western corner would be home to 'a block for cultural, professional and exhibition purposes'.[1]
In the event, the north-western corner was leased to the Bank of England and Norwich Union Insurance (whose offices now stand derelict), and the critical corner site where the Dutch House had stood was replaced by a link road to a short section of dual-carriageway linking High Street with Wine Street.[1] Plans for a civic centre were dropped as being too expensive.
Finally, in 1977, work began on an 'emasculated' version of the new park. This was designed by Bristol City Council's parks department and, largely for financial reasons, it contained few of the features intended by earlier plans[1] but was much larger than that originally planned. The last remaining vestiges of the mediaeval street plan, Dolphin Street and Peter Street, were buried.
Mary-le-Port development
In 2006, Bristol City Council announced its intention to redevelop the area to the west of Castle Park, known as the 'Mary-le-Port' site. These plans encompassed the by then derelict financial buildings, and the area to the west of St Peter's church, about 5% of the park.[26] It was to be a 400,000 square feet (37,000 m2) mixed-use development to 'regenerate this historic heart of Bristol'[27] and to 'improve connections between Broadmead, the Old City and Redcliffe' and 'enhance the setting of St Mary-le-Port church'.[28] The council selected Deeley Freed as its preferred developer. The scheme provoked opposition from park users who felt that any reduction in the area of the park was not acceptable. 'Surprised by the extent of feeling', Bristol City Council decided to revise the plans.[28] Campaigners then applied to have 'Town Green' status applied to the park, but this was declined in 2009.[29]
In 2010, the Mary-le-Port site was listed as being 'for sale' by Bristol City Council.[30]
Sites of Interest
Very little of Bristol Castle remains above ground. The most tangible survival is a vaulted chamber of the King's Hall, formerly on Tower Street near the now-truncated Castle Street.[31] Other than that, the excavated remains of the south wall can be seen near the landing stage, and near St Peter's Church the sally port and traces of the west wall are visible.[32] The foundations of the keep are on show next to the public toilets on Newgate.[33]
The park contains a number of memorials.[34] The ruins of St Peter's Church are a memorial to the civilians and auxiliary personnel killed in the aerial bombing of Bristol,[35] and a plaque on its wall lists their names.[36] Adjoining the church is a sensory herb garden and The Normandy Garden of Peace, which was opened on 5 November 1995, with five Silver Birch trees trees, managed by Bristol's D-Day veterans,[37] in memory of the five D-Day beaches. There are also memorials for trees for Anne Frank and the victims of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[34][37]
The ruined tower of St Mary-le-Port church, subject of a painting by John Piper that appeared on a 1968 1s. 6d. postage stamp,[38][39] stands on the western edge of the park,[40] surrounded by now-derelict buildings.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Priest, Gordon; Cobb, Pamela (1980). "Open spaces". The Fight for Bristol. Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press.
- ↑ "German Christmas market opens in Bristol". This is Bristol. 20 November 2008. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
- ↑ Little, Bryan (1991). The Story of Bristol. Redcliffe Press. p. 6. ISBN 1-872971-40-7.
- ↑ Watts, Lorna; Rahtz, Philip (1985). Mary-le-Port Bristol Excavations 1962/3. City of Bristol Museums and Art Gallery. ISBN 0-900199-26-1.
- ↑ Brown, Dorothy (1974). Bristol and how it grew. Bristol: Bristol Visual & Environmental Group, with the help of a grant from the South West Arts Association. p. 3. ISBN 0-9504648-2-1.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1978). Bristol as it Was 1939-1914 (5th Edition). Reece Winstone. p. 16. ISBN 0-900814-54-3.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1978). Bristol's Earliest Photographs. Reece Winstone. p. 44. ISBN 0-900814-32-2.
- ↑ Chilcott, John (1826). Chilcott's descriptive history of Bristol. J Chilcott.
- ↑ "Conservation area 16 – Old Market – Character appraisal" (PDF). Bristol City Council. July 2008. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
- ↑ Reid, Helen (1987). Bristol & Co. Redcliffe Press. ISBN 0-948265-61-2.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1973). Bristol Blitzed. Reece Winstone. p. 30. ISBN 0-900814-43-8.
- ↑ "brizzle born and bred's photostream/Tags/streetplan".
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1973). Bristol Blitzed. Reece Winstone. p. 26. ISBN 0-900814-43-8.
- ↑ "The Luftwaffe over the Bristol area 1940-44, page 1". Fishponds Local History Society.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1980). Bristol in the 1940s. Reece Winstone. p. 51. ISBN 0-900814-61-6.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1980). Bristol as it Was 1950-1953. Reece Winstone. p. 43. ISBN 0-900814-60-8.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1980). Bristol as it Was 1950-1953. Reece Winstone. p. 13. ISBN 0-900814-60-8.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1979). Bristol as it Was 1953-1956. Reece Winstone. p. 24. ISBN 0-900814-56-X.
- ↑ Priestley, J.B. (1934). English Journey. Heinemann. p. 26.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1979). Bristol as it Was 1953-1956. Reece Winstone. p. 27. ISBN 0-900814-56-X.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1979). Bristol as it Was 1953-1956. Reece Winstone. p. 28. ISBN 0-900814-56-X.
- 1 2 3 Hasegawa, Junichi (1992). "6 Replanning the city centre: Bristol 1940-45". Replanning the blitzed city centre. Open University Press. ISBN 0-335-15633-9.
- ↑ Hasegawa, Junichi (1992). "7 City planning in the immediate aftermath of war: 1946". Replanning the blitzed city centre. Open University Press. ISBN 0-335-15633-9.
- ↑ Priest, Gordon; Cobb, Pamela (1980). "Setting the Scene: Planning in Bristol since 1945". The Fight for Bristol. Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press.
- ↑ Priest, Gordon; Cobb, Pamela (1980). "Urban renewal". The Fight for Bristol. Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press.
- ↑ "Inquiry to look at park's future". British Broadcasting Corporation. 1 December 2008. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ↑ "St Mary-le-Port, Bristol". Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- 1 2 "Plans for city park reconsidered". British Broadcasting Corporation. 16 November 2006. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ↑ "Town green status for Bristol park 'unlikely'". Bristol Post. 29 July 2009. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
- ↑ "Bristol City Council plot sales could net £50million if it sells four sites in centre". Bristol Evening Post. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1971). Bristol Today. Reece Winstone. p. 16. ISBN 0-900814-37-3.
- ↑ "Open Spaces — Castle Park". About Bristol. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
- ↑ "Map Castle Park — Bristol After the blitz". Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- 1 2 "Bristol : Castle Park". Places of Peace. Arts and Humanities Research Council. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
- ↑ "Churches — St Peter". About Bristol. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ↑ "Open spaces — Castle Park". About Bristol. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
- 1 2 "Peace garden vandalism shocks veterans". Bristol Evening Post. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
- ↑ "British Paintings 1968, Oval Frame First Day Cover". BFDC. Retrieved 3 July 2011.
- ↑ "St Mary le Port, Bristol 1940". Tate Collection. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
- ↑ Winstone, Reece (1971). Bristol Today. Reece Winstone. p. 14. ISBN 0-900814-37-3.
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