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bushy park

Bushy Park

Bushy Park is the second largest of the Royal Parks of London. It is in south-west London, in the borough of Richmond upon Thames.

1100 acres in area, Bushy Park lies immediately north of Hampton Court Palace and Hampton Court Gardens, It includes fishing and model boating ponds, horse rides, formal plantations of trees and other plants, wild areas of bracken inhabited by deer, and wildlife conservation areas.
The area now known as Bushy Park has been settled for at least the past 4000 years: the earliest archaelogical records that have been found on the site date back to the Bronze Age. There is also evidence that the area was used in the Medieval period as fields.
When Henry VIII took over Hampton Court Palace in 1529, the King also took over the three parks that make up modern day Bushy Park: Hare Warren, Middle Park and Bushy Park. A keen hunter, he established them as deer-hunting grounds. His successors, perhaps less bloodthirsty, added a number of picturesque features, including the Longford River, a 19 kilometre canal built on the orders of Charles I of England to provide water to Hampton Court, as well as the Park's various ponds. This period also saw the construction of the Park's main thoroughfare, Chestnut Avenue, which runs between Hampton Court Road in Hampton and Sandy Lane in Teddington. This Avenue and the Diana Fountain it leads to were designed by Sir Christopher Wren.

The Park has long been popular with locals, but also attracts those from further afield. From the mid nineteenth Century until World War II Londoners celebrated Chestnut Sunday here, coming to see the blooming of the trees along Chestnut Avenue (this tradition resumed in 1993).
During World War I, Bushy Park was home to the King's Canadian Hospital, and between the wars hosted a camp for undernourished children. During World War II, General Dwight D. Eisenhower planned the D-Day landings from Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) in the Park. A memorial to this has been laid in the park to mark the spot where General Dwight D. Eisenhower's tent stood. It was designed by Carlos Rey. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushy_Park)

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