Barn Elms is an open space in Barnes in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, located on the northerly loop of the River Thames between Barnes and Fulham.
The WWT London Wetland Centre (105 acres of what were once reservoirs) lies to the north of the open space, now largely given over to sporting venues. The site is split in two: the Barn Elms Sports Trust (BEST) fields,[1] formerly managed as the Barn Elms Sports Centre by the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames,[2] and the Barn Elms Sports Centre.[3]
Barn Elms Sports Trust
editThere are facilities for much amateur sport, such as football, rugby, tennis, softball and cricket, and an athletics track. It is also the home ground for Barnes RFC, Barnes FC, Barnes Eagles FC,[4] Stonewall FC,[5] London French RFC.[6] and London Exiles RFC.[7] The facilities were under threat of commercial development until the local community petitioned Richmond Council. To ensure the future of Barn Elms as playing fields the community has created the Barn Elms Sports Trust.[8]
Barn Elms Sports Centre
editBarn Elms Sports Centre is a 52 acre, multi-sports facility, with a multi-station gym, 4 beach volleyball courts, 16 tennis courts, artificial hockey playing surfaces and a range of grass sports pitches. It is also the home ground for the semi-professional Barnes RFC.[9]
History
editIts name is derived from the Georgian house and parkland, the original manor house of Barnes, which stood on the site, until it was burnt out and demolished in 1954.[10] In earlier times the manor house of Barnes was in the ownership of the Archbishop of Canterbury and then of the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's Cathedral. The Georgian house replaced the earlier one occupied by Sir Francis Walsingham, "Elizabeth's Spymaster".[11] Queen Elizabeth I would visit Barn Elms to see her Spymaster. Barn Elms features in English literary history from the time the royalist poet Abraham Cowley moved to the house belonging to John Cartwright in 1663.[12]
In the 1660s Barn Elms became a fashionable destination for boating picnics. Samuel Pepys, who arranged many a Sunday afternoon or moonlit evening boating party to Barn Elms himself, recorded that on 26 May 1667:
I walked the length of the Elmes, and with great pleasure saw some gallant ladies and people come with their bottles, and basket, and chairs, and form,[13] to sup under the trees, by the water-side, which was mighty pleasant.[14]
The oldest, and one of the largest London plane trees is in Barn Elms.[16]
When Barn Elms was in the possession of the bookseller Jacob Tonson, the Kit-Cat Club met at Barn Elms for many years. Here the "Kit-Kat portraits" hung;[17] Tonson's extensions to the house, c1703, seem to have been made under the general advice of John Vanbrugh, a Kit-Kat member.[18]
John James Heidegger, the opera impresario, resided at Barn Elms, where he entertained George II, and as Heidegger's guest Georg Friederich Handel stayed here at his first arrival in England, in 1711.[19]
The house was later remodelled or rebuilt for Sir Richard Hoare, who died at Barn Elms,[20] and enlarged in the early 19th century by his son, Richard Colt Hoare. When Hammersmith Bridge was erected in 1824–27, the company that undertook the work bought Barn Elms and drove the access road, Upper Bridge Road, now Castelnau, across the park.[21] The house was also the home of Sir Lancelot Shadwell, who was Vice Chancellor of England in the 19th century: on one occasion he delivered an injunction while up to his neck in the cool lake.[22] From 1883 to 1939 Barn Elms was used as the club-house of the Ranelagh Club.[23]
In 1891 Barn Elms for a short time played host to Queens Park Rangers. The club was forced to move there after it became impossible to play soccer at their home ground in Brondesbury which was shared with London Scottish rugby club.[24] The house became derelict and was demolished following a fire in 1954.[25]
Notes and references
edit- ^ "Barn Elms Sports Trust". BEST. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014.
- ^ "Barn Elms Playing Field". London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ "Barn Elms Sports Centre". London Borough of Wandsworth. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
- ^ Barnes Eagles FC website
- ^ Stonewall FC website
- ^ London French RFC website
- ^ London Exiles website
- ^ Barn Elms Sports Trust
- ^ Barn Elms Sports Centre
- ^ Christopher Hibbert; Ben Weinreb; John Keay; Julia Keay. The London Encyclopaedia, 3rd ed, 2011.
- ^ Robert Hutchinson, Elizabeth's Spymaster: Francis Walsingham and the Secret War That Saved England, 2007.
- ^ Cartwright advertised the house "to let" in 1659 (Colovin 1995, s.v. "Marshall, Edward".
- ^ A trestle table.
- ^ Pepys, Diary, 26 May 1667; see also under 5 August 1666, 28 April, 9 June, 21 July and 25 August 1667; 23 March and 2 August 1668.
- ^ The Great Trees of London. Time Out Guides Ltd. 2010. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-84670-154-2.
- ^ "London's best trees". Evening Standard. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ Victoria County History: Surrey, vol. 4: Barnes; Harry M. Geduld, Prince of publishers: a study of the work and career of Jacob Tonson, 1969.
- ^ Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 1600–1840, 3rd ed. 1995, s.v. "Vanbrugh, John".
- ^ Barrett 1884:27.
- ^ George Lipscomb, The History and Antiquities of the county of Buckingham 4, 1847:390
- ^ Victoria County History: Surrey, vol. 4: Barnes
- ^ Barrett: 1884:29f.
- ^ They were removed from Ranelagh Ground, Fulham (Barrett 1884:33)
- ^ Macey, Gordon (1999). The Official History of Queens Park Rangers Football Club (London: Queen's Park Rangers F.C.).
- ^ C. J. Barrett, The History of Barn Elms and the Kit Cat club: now the Ranelagh Club, 1889.