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architecture
park
England
Southwater close
Beckenham Place clubhouse


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Beckenahm Place clubhouse

Beckenahm Place clubhouse
This is another sight of the same building visible in my previous photo.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Beckenham Place Park is a large park located in the London Borough of Lewisham. It lies close to the border with London Borough of Bromley. It includes an 18-hole public (municipal) golf course. The Palladian-style former mansion that gave the park its name now serves as an information centre and golf course clubhouse and cafe.

History of the park

Beckenham Manor has medieval origins and is mentioned in the Domesday Book as belonging to the Bishop of Bayeux. In the 17th century, the whole estate was owned by Walter St John, with manorial rights passing to the noted Quaker and MP John Cator in 1773.

Cator, reputed to be friends with Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus and son-in-law of Peter Collinson, introduced many exotic tree species and a lake, which is now dry. Even today, there are reputed to be 60 species of tree on the estate. Cator built the mansion that stands today.[1]

The evidence for a visit by Linnaeus is slim, he is only recorded as visiting England in 1735, long before Cator's
birth and time at Beckenham Place. Although Linnaeus corresponded with Peter Collinson or Collinson wrote to Linnaeus regularly about botonay etc. there is no firm evidence (perhaps yet to be found) that Linnaeus or indeed, Collinson, had direct input into the landscape design of Beckenham Place Park. However, Collinson's daughter Mary, John Cator's wife, would presumably have been influenced by her fathers experience with his gardens at Peckham and Mill Hill as well as his interest in collecting and introducing plants to Britain. Collinson's letters recorded in 'Forget Thee Not My Garden' are interesting and insightful. Investigation of the life spans of Linnaeus, Collinson and Cator and the acquisition of Beckenham Place at least suggest that the meeting and involvement was unlikely if not impossible.

The mansion remained with the Cator family until the 20th century, although inhabited by tenants for most of the 19th century – including a boys school and sanitorium in the early 20th century – before being bought by London County Council in 1927. When the golf course (established in 1907) became in 1929 the first municipally owned course in England (and also reputedly the busiest).

The mansion was retained as a clubhouse.

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Comments
 Fantasyfan
Fantasyfan
Such fascinating place
9 years ago.
 Scott Holcomb
Scott Holcomb club
A stylish 19th hole
9 years ago.
 Roger (Grisly)
Roger (Grisly) club
Good looking building and a nice capture.
Great information.
9 years ago.

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