The sixth and last in a series by local historian Philip Grant
The Travellers and their rubbish (tons of which had to be cleared away periodically) were a continuing source of complaint by local residents, even after the permanent “Book Centre” site in Neasden was completed in the summer of 1988. The last of the occupying caravans finally vacated the Country Park after further court action in 1990. Banks of earth were put in place along both sides of Fryent Way, to prevent vehicle access into the fields in future, and although these looked unsightly at first, they are now a grassy feature.
Another
initiative to encourage visitors to enjoy the Park was Brent’s Countryside Day.
From the 1990s, this annual show brought a range of country activities,
information stands and fairground rides to the event field. Watching sheep dogs
at work, or displays with birds of prey, brought crowds of many thousands. As
well as seeing BHCG members demonstrating wood turning on a pole lathe,
youngsters sometimes got the chance to have-a-go themselves. Unfortunately,
funding for this event was one of the cuts the Council had to make after 2010.
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When London Transport sold their disused sports ground at Old Kenton Lane in the mid-1990s, an extra seven acres were added to the Country Park. This was a condition of the planning permission which had been given to develop part of Masons Field for housing. It was 2011 before Heritage Lottery funding was obtained to restore the field to a traditional hay meadow, with adjoining hedgerows, a green lane and an orchard. That has now been achieved through co-operation between Brent Council, BHCG and the local community.
If you live near it, you don’t even have to visit to enjoy some of its treasures. Butterflies, and colourful birds such as jays and woodpeckers, may visit your garden!
LINKS TO OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS SERIES
The
Fryent Country Park Story – Part 6
Over
the past five weeks, we have wandered through 1,000 years of our open space’s
history, up to 1980. Thank you for your company on this journey, and I hope you
will enjoy the final instalment, which brings us up to date. If you missed Part
5, “click” here.
1. A Spring morning on Fryent Way, as you enter the Country
Park.
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As
part of its plans to improve its open spaces (including the Welsh Harp) in the
early 1980s, Brent Council appointed two Countryside Rangers. In 1984, Brent
combined its Barn Hill and Fryent Way lands, under the name Fryent Country
Park. That year volunteers, who began to help look after this open space in
1983, formed the Barn Hill Conservation Group (“BHCG”).
Among
the first steps taken was the restoration of the existing ponds, and the
creation of some new ones, to encourage frogs and other amphibians. The ancient
hedges also needed attention, to bring the fields back to the way they had been
on the Hovenden Map of 1597 (see Part
2).
BHCG members collected seeds from existing trees and bushes on the Park in the
autumn, growing new ones on an allotment to replant missing hedgerows.
2. BHCG’s 1988 illustrated map of the Country Park, with lists of species. (Photo of an old copy I still have!) |
Group
members also took part in nature surveys, to count the number of different
species to be found there. Around 1990, the Park was declared a Local Nature Reserve.
When BHCG members produced an illustrated map of Fryent Country Park in the
late 1980s, it listed around 550 types of flora and fauna. The map included the
old field names, and the rows of green dots marked new areas of woodland that
were being planted at Beane Hill, in the south-east corner of the of the Park,
growing ash timber for commercial sale.
Efforts
to attract more public use of the Park were dealt a blow in August 1986, when
Travellers occupied land beside Fryent Way. This was partly in protest against
Brent Council’s failure to provide a permanent site for them to use. Towards
the end of the year there were up to 400 Travellers living there, without a
water supply or sanitation, and fly-tippers took advantage of their piles of
rubbish to dump more. The Council took court action to evict them, but then
allowed 30 families to occupy a “temporary site”, with portable toilets, near
the Fryent Way car park, until a permanent site was built.
3. Traveller caravans at Fryent Way, December 1986. (Still from an RTE television news report)
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The Travellers and their rubbish (tons of which had to be cleared away periodically) were a continuing source of complaint by local residents, even after the permanent “Book Centre” site in Neasden was completed in the summer of 1988. The last of the occupying caravans finally vacated the Country Park after further court action in 1990. Banks of earth were put in place along both sides of Fryent Way, to prevent vehicle access into the fields in future, and although these looked unsightly at first, they are now a grassy feature.
4. Hay meadow wildflowers and grasses, and a Gatekeeper
butterfly. (Courtesy of Leslie Williams / BHCG)
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An
“organic” management plan is followed for the Park’s meadows, which have a rich
mix of grasses and wildflowers, and are an important habitat for butterflies.
Annual butterfly surveys have been carried out since 1986, to monitor the
different types and their relative numbers, and several new species have
established themselves. The grass is cut for hay, from July onwards, and where
possible the Council markets the right to come and harvest the crop. In the
photo below, from 2004, a farmer from Wiltshire was preparing to take the hay
home, as winter feed for his organic herd of dairy cows, which provided milk to
make Yeo Valley yogurt!
5. Hay baling in a field behind Valley Drive, 2004. (Photo by the late Ian Stokes, courtesy of BHCG
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A
popular corner of the Park has always been the old Bush Farm, reached along its
drive from the corner of Slough Lane. Two fields were fenced off, as grazing
for horses that are still kept in stables there, and BHCG has worked to restore
the farm’s former orchard (shown on the 1597 map), which as well as old apple
varieties has damsons, mulberries, cob nuts and hops. A wheelchair accessible
path has also been created there, to allow disabled visitors to enjoy some of
the fields and ponds.
6. Horses in a field at Bush Farm. (Photo by David Howard, posted on the Flickr website)
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The Park is covered with a network of
footpaths, and one of the tasks carried out by BHCG on their year-round Sunday
morning projects is to keep these paths clear for walkers to enjoy. The photos
below show volunteers working on a path near Uxendon Hill, which is part of the
Capital Ring. This 72-mile long circular route, around the green spaces of
outer London, was devised by the London Walking Forum and, in normal times, can
be walked in easy stages. The leaflet for Stage 10, “South
Kenton to Hendon”, describes Fryent Country Park as ‘one
of the best surviving areas of traditional countryside in Middlesex’.
7. Before and after views from a Sunday morning footpath
project. (Photos by John Parker / BHCG)
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8. A flyer for the 1999 Countryside Day, and using a pole lathe in 2010. (With thanks to John Parker and Rose Bennett / BHCG) |
Click on the link below to read the rest of this article
When London Transport sold their disused sports ground at Old Kenton Lane in the mid-1990s, an extra seven acres were added to the Country Park. This was a condition of the planning permission which had been given to develop part of Masons Field for housing. It was 2011 before Heritage Lottery funding was obtained to restore the field to a traditional hay meadow, with adjoining hedgerows, a green lane and an orchard. That has now been achieved through co-operation between Brent Council, BHCG and the local community.
9.
Volunteers from Alperton Community School planting wildflower bulbs in Masons
Field, Nov. 2013. (Photo by David McClements / BHCG)
|
An
ongoing BHCG project has been to restore a local stream, Gaderbrook. This
tributary of the Wealdstone Brook takes surface water from the Valley Farm
estate, which had become polluted through incorrect connections of foul water
drains to the surface water sewer. By clearing rubbish, and opening up the
banks, the stream now has a better natural habitat.
10. The Gaderbrook stream, and BHCG volunteers clearing its banks. (Photos by John Parker / BHCG) |
Although
the Park provides open countryside, it cannot completely escape its closeness
to Wembley. The Stadium’s controlled parking zone on event days extends to its
northern edge. For the 2011 UEFA Champions League final, Fryent Way through the
Country Park was even closed, and turned into a coach park for Barcelona fans!
Part of the route for the 1948 Olympic marathon was also used in the early
years of the North London half-marathon
11. The view
across the fields from Gotfords Hill, with the Stadium arch on the skyline,
July 2013.
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12. Fryent Way as a coach park, May 2011. |
13. Half-marathon runners on Fryent Way,
March 2015.
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Thirty-six
years on from its creation, the 100 hectares of Fryent Country Park provide a
beautiful area for the whole community to enjoy (once we return to “normal”),
in the heart of built-up Brent. The Local Nature Reserve now has more than 800
recorded species of wildlife, and has won Green Flag awards, as well as being
voted London’s Country Park of the Year in 2017.
If you live near it, you don’t even have to visit to enjoy some of its treasures. Butterflies, and colourful birds such as jays and woodpeckers, may visit your garden!
I
hope you have enjoyed the story of our Country Park. When you take your
permitted exercise in it (if you live close enough), or when the “lockdown” is
over and we can all visit it again, remember that you are walking through a
landscape that has lots of history. It also has a future.
14. BHCG
volunteers at a Repton woodlands project, on top of Barn Hill. (Photo by John Parker / BHCG)
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You
can be part of the Fryent Country Park Story, by just going to the fields and
woods whenever you can. Or you could get some fresh air and exercise by joining
the volunteers of Barn Hill Conservation Group, when they are able to resume
their valuable efforts again. Visit their website, or call in to their
beautiful base at Roe Green Walled Garden,
when that reopens after the Covid-19 emergency.
Thank
you for your continued interest in coming with me on this journey. And special
thanks to my friends at BHCG and Brent Archives, for their help with pictures
for these articles, and to Martin for allowing me to share them with you.
Philip
Grant
If
you have enjoyed discovering some of the stories from Brent’s past, then look
out for more of them on future weekends. There will be a one-off “special” for
the 75th anniversary of VE Day next week, followed by a new “Story”
series!
LINKS TO OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS SERIES
Thank you very much for this series of articles Philip. It has been very popular (see left side panel of 'Popular Posts'). I have seen many more visitors to Fryent Country park recently - it may be just lockdown exercise but perhaps some have been stimulated to explore this unique remaining segment of Middlesex countryside by your articles.
ReplyDeleteExcellent. Extremely interesting.
ReplyDeleteFantastic series. Thanks Philip
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comments above. I hope you will enjoy the next series as well, which you should find on this website from the weekend of 16/17 May.
ReplyDeleteI'd better get on with writing it!
I am one of the recent visitors to Fryent Country Park during lockdown and have been sending photos from my walks to friends elsewhere in North London who cannot believe these open spaces still exist. After reading the information boards at the Fryent Way car park I was keen to find out about the history of this area. These articles are excellent. Thank you so much.
ReplyDeleteDear Mary,
DeleteThank you for your comment. I'm glad that you've enjoyed walking in Fryent Country Park, and finding out about its history.
There are plenty of interesting things about the places where we live, and I am glad for the opportunity to be able to share some of them. I hope you will find the new series on Wembley Park enjoyable as well.
Thank you so much Philip for all the information. During 2020 we have spent many happy moments of "permitted" exercise in this lovely Country Park. We saw the beginning of Spring, the glorious sparklingly white blackthorn hedges, then apple blossom, hawthorn etc. and the glorious colours of autumn and the silhouttes of the grand oak trees in winter. We have seen many butterflies and loved the wild flowers in the fields and the woodlands. I'm writing this in January and for the moment we are defeated by the muddy conditions under foot but we'll be back. At least the ponds are filling up - good for wildlife.
ReplyDeleteYour Newsletters are wonderful.
Dear Odette,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment, which Martin drew my attention to.
It's great that the Country Park has given you joy during the past year - it is a very special place.
I have started preparing for a new local history series, but you'll have to wait for a few more weekends before it appears on "Wembley Matters". Knowing how muddy the fields and footpaths in the Country Park can get in winter, it may begin publication before you are able to continue your walks there!