WAYLAND VAN
HILDYCK-SMITH, of Forde
Park, Newton Abbot, writes:
With more and more of our
prime countryside being gobbled
up by the greedy entrepreneurs
soon there will be
no ‘green lung’ for our cities
and towns, so we must really
treasure what we have, our
PARKS.
We are fortunate in Newton
Abbot having several of these
enjoyable spaces and will no
doubt have to fight to keep
them as they are.
Forde Park, where I live, is
an eight-acre park developed
in the late 1800s. It became
the property of the town as
public pleasure gardens in
1930 and shortly after this a
pavilion was built which
served the tennis courts as
changing rooms etc in the
days when the courts were
manned and a small charge
made for their use.
This was extremely popular
and still is, despite the fact
that the pavilion passed into
the police hands as a training
and sports area, using the
space as a store room for
sports equipment, and members
of the public were
excluded, not that it stopped
the popularity of the tennis
courts.
The police permitted such
as the local Neighbourhood
Watch and other local committees
and clubs to hire the
room but there were no facilities
and the windows permanently
shuttered so that it was
not successful.
The park is, of course, in a
conservation area with its
beautiful Luscombe oaks,
seats and memorial trees to
those who loved it in their
lifetime.
This is, I would imagine,
why it has not degenerated
into the usual type of fairground
park with swings and
slides and remains a quiet
place for older people still to
enjoy the environment and sit
under the trees and read, or
even venture to join the
newly-formed croquet club.
Residents living on the
park are fortunate and we
should all congratulate the
council parks department
for keeping it in such excellent
condition. Let us hope
no-one ever tries to ‘develop’
it, one must fight tooth and
nail to keep what we have as
it gets less and less every
week.





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