Vauxhall Gardens | |
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![]() Vauxhall Gardens, Saltley (1850) by J.L. Pedley | |
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Type | Pleasure garden |
Location | Duddeston |
Nearest city | Birmingham |
Coordinates | 52°29′11″N1°52′29″W / 52.486454°N 1.874716°W |
Created | 4 June 1758 |
Status | First closure 16 September 1850 |
Vauxhall Gardens, later Royal Vauxhall Gardens, was a pleasure garden in the Duddeston area of Aston (now Birmingham [a] ), England. It operated from 1758 to 1850. Nothing remains of the gardens today.
The gardens, named after London's Vauxhall Gardens, [1] originated as the grounds of Duddeston Hall [b] , which opened as a public house on 4 June 1758, leased from Sir Lister Holte. [1] [3] At that time, the area was rural, but close to the growing industrial town of Birmingham [c] . [3] The hall was demolished in 1781. [3]
The gardens included statues, a bowling green, and venue for orchestral concerts, with an organ. [1] [3] [4] Other events held there included fairs, firework displays, balloon ascents and cock-fights. [1] [3] [4]
The Grand Junction Railway's original terminus, the first station serving Birmingham, opened nearby in 1837 under the name "Vauxhall station" [d] , [5] . This facilitated day-visits by people in outlying towns such as Wolverhampton, Walsall and by the 1840s Lichfield, Burton-upon-Trent, and Dudley. [6]
Some time in the early or mid 1800s, more respectable people stopped attending the gardens and the entertainments changed to include athletic events for monetary prizes. [7] [8]
In 1846, the proprietor was a Mr. Stewart, and the site known as "Royal Vauxhall Gardens" [9]
The gardens were closed with a farewell dinner and ball on 16 September 1850. The ball ended at 6am the following morning, at which time the first tree was symbolically felled. [1] The site was acquired by the Victoria Land Society, a mutual building society [e] . [1] [3]
Despite this, gardens under the same name were operating again in subsequent years, with events advertised, for example, in Aris's Birmingham Gazette in July 1853, under a new proprietor, John Henry Bradshaw. [6]
Nearby, Aston Lower Grounds, another pleasure garden, also now defunct, were opened to the public by Queen Victoria on 16 June 1858. [12]
Just prior to the 1850 closure the gardens were painted in a bird's-eye view by J.L. Pedley. [13]
The gardens are the subject of the poem Impromptu , by Ned Farmer, lamenting their impending closure, which was written there on 6 March 1850. [14]
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