Plumstead Common
Coordinates: 51°28′55″N 0°04′41″E / 51.482042°N 0.078020°E
Plumstead Common is a common in Plumstead, (SE18) in the Royal Borough of Greenwich, south-east London. It is bound to the north by Old Mill Road and to the south by Plumstead Common Road. To the east lies Winn or Winn's Common. Substantial remains of the Old Mill still stand and have been incorporated into the public house of the same name.
The common contains deposits of puddingstone, a conglomerate rock formed during a period of global warming 60 million years ago. The rock is more usually found north of the River Thames in Hertfordshire, see Hertfordshire puddingstone.[1][2]
In the 1800s the people of Plumstead protested that they had the right to graze their livestock on the land of Plumstead Common and to use it for sports and recreation. In June 1876 these protests attracted the Irish activist John De Morgan who on 1 July led protestors up from Woolwich Arsenal to Edwin Hughes (leader of the conservative party) house tearing down illegally erected fences on their way. John De Morgan was arrested and sent to prison for seventeen days. The riots resulted in the 1878 Plumstead Common Act ensuring that one hundred acres of land remained as public open space forever.
Edwin Cross was the last known commoner to exercise the right of letting small cattle (goats) graze on Plumstead Common and neighbouring Woolwich Common in the 1970s.
It is an area of diverse religions including Christianity and Islam and this can be seen especially in the neighbouring Barnfield Estate, located to the south of Plumstead Common Road.
Plumstead Common is the venue for the Plumstead Make Merry which is the longest-running community festival in the Royal Borough of Greenwich and is run on an voluntary basis by a group of people who are passionate about the local area.
Plumstead Common is also the venue for the popular Asian Mela, which has been described as the 'Asian Notting Hill Carnival’[3]
References
- ↑ Puddingstone song, Mike Excell singing the Puddingstone Song for Hertfordshire Geological Society, June 2009
- ↑ Wild About Britain , Accessed November 2011
- ↑ Asian Resource Centre Online
External links
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