This image shows the gardens opposite where the Civic Centre is today. It was taken looking north over White Hart Lane. The buildings in the distance now operate as a single establishment - the Grand Palace Banqueting Suite
Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags): wood green high road
Albums: Historical Images of Wood Green | 1 of 2 (F)
Interestingly these gardens have a name ( so I realised when I was looking for something else the other day). They are called
Crescent Gardens and King George VI Memorial Garden
Crescent Gardens were laid out on former rural open space, and by 1894 there were curving paths in the north part, and by 1910 the whole was laid out with serpentine paths, trees, shrubberies and formal bedding. The WWI war memorial on High Road was in place pre-1935. The south end of the gardens was renamed King George VI Memorial Garden and opened on 25 April 1953, laid out with shrub beds behind stone retaining walls, seating and a small circular rose bed in the centre.
...Photographs of the gardens in the 1950s show flamboyant carpet bedding. The striking Portland stone war memorial on High Road was erected in memory of 'the men of Wood Green who gave their lives in the Great War, 1914-18'.
In 1952, the south end of the gardens were laid out and named King George VI Memorial Garden, provided by public subscription and opened on 25 April 1953 by the Mayor of Wood Green, Alderman A R Harrison JP, as recorded in the plaque on site. It was laid out with shrub beds behind low stone retaining walls, seating and a small circular rose bed in the centre; trees and shrubs were donated by schools in Wood Green.
The building in the background in the centre- the Assembly Rooms-was where the first "moving pictures" i.e. films- were shown in the area, in March 1899. Still there today as part of Grand Palace pub/banquet suite.
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