Scouts erecting a camp flagpole below Penpole Woods in about 1937-38 with Kings Weston House in the background.

The Scouts at Kings Weston

A wonderful photo has kindly been sent to us of the scouts at Kings Weston on the eve of the Second World War. After the death of the last Squire, Philip Napier Miles, the estate was sold off in various portions. Our understanding is that Bristol City Corporation bought much of the land including Penpole Wood with the intention of leasing it to the city’s scout troops as a camping ground.

We were delighted to discover that a record of the years that they used Kings Weston exists and we were sent this image by Peter Laurie who is recording the journal of scout leader G.K.N. Webber for Mrs Mary Lowden before it is transferred to the Bristol Record Office.

This photo was taken from just below Penpole Wood, about where Mancroft Avenue now lies, and looks across the park towards Kings Weston House in the distance behind the tree. The old kitchen range of the house is still apparent and dates this photo to either summer 1937 or 1938, before work on converting the building into QEH school started. It is a poignant image knowing that many of the scouts would soon have enlisted in the armed services as the Second World War broke across Europe, but this sunny afternoon and the group enjoyment of erecting the camp flagpole is a million miles away from the threats the future held.

COME AND HEAR THE DAWN CHORUS AT KINGS WESTON

Come and hear the dawn chorus at Kings Weston with expert ornithologist Ed Drewitt.
Announcing our first public event of 2014 coming up in April; a dawn chorus walk with Ed Drewitt. Ed’s walks always prove popular and this will be just the right time of year for the best discoveries in the park. Check the details on our poster here with full details of the event which will be run on Saturday the 12th April. Please get in touch on KWAG@theweasels@plus.com or telephone 07811 666671 if you would like to book yourself on the walk. The event will cost £5 and be open for everyone. please feel free to forward this on to anyone else you think may be interested.

Important historic archive finds

You might have noticed we’ve been a little quiet, but this is because we have EXCITING NEWS! Following our sneaky preview a couple of weeks ago that we have forthcoming research progress we can now reveal that we have sourced a huge new archive of material regarding Kings Weston and the family that once lived there. We are delighted that the present Lord and Lady de Clifford have asked KWAG to transfer their family records, those of the Southwell family and their heirs,  to the Bristol Record Office to form part of the public collections there.

We have been very privileged in being able to go through the large volume of material and there are some really exciting finds coming out of it already!

Amongst the hundreds of correspondence there is a wonderful and almost unbroken set of letters sent by Katherine Southwell to her Son Ned (Edward Southwell III). She relays all the tittle tattle from court and goings on at Kings Weston to him as he travels Europe for two years before returning to Kings Weston to started remodelling the gardens and house.

We are continuing through these as we type, but there we are particularly excited by the confirmation that the landscape designer Thomas Wright can now be directly identified as working at Kings Weston in 1762. We know too that the carriage drives were laid out around Kings Weston Hill in 1831, and this delightful excerpt of Katherine’s letters comes from 1749 and sent from Downpatrick, the Southwell’s most important Irish estate:

“…above them is a fine ruined Cathedral, near it is such a round tower as as Killkenny. Your Papa has walled and planted the churchyard belonging to it between that and the almshouse Mr Trotter has planted a grove which, when grown will be very pretty, in the middle of it the statue of Jupiter which went from Kings Weston, who is now called St Patrick, and now with his companion Vesta, now St Bridget, is had in great veneration by the poor Irish who rub their beads and say their Ave Marias before them”

Downpatrick Cathedral before its reconstruction in the early C19th

Downpatrick Cathedral before its reconstruction in the early C19th

Poo bin progress, and other advances

A brief visit yesterday to Kings Weston revealed that work on the new dog poo and litter bin has begun. The concrete base has been poured in a position behind the Echo and close to the path crossing the Iron Bridge. Hopefully the bin itself will be in soon too.

The fallen tree across the Echo path was also in the process of removal with rangers from Blaise Castle estate busy sawing it into manageable chunks for removal. Finally we were delighted to see that the scaffolding has finally come down from the front of Kings Weston House giving the first uninterrupted views of Vanbrugh’s house in many decades.

Park Rangers tackle the fallen tree over the Echo Path

Park Rangers tackle the fallen tree over the Echo Path

Concrete base goes in for the new dog waste and litter bin at Kings Weston

Concrete base goes in for the new dog waste and litter bin at Kings Weston

Working party defies the weather again!

Once again our working party got away with the weather! What was forecast to be a stormy, wet day actually transformed into a sunny afternoon and although were were  reduced in volunteer numbers we managed to achieve an enormous amount.

Swathes of brambles have been removed as well as a number of saplings, opening up views between the ruins of Penpole Lodge and the dial once more. Take a look at our gallery to see exactly the difference we made in just five hours last Saturday.

 

 

Working Party this Saturday

January’s working party was our biggest yet and THIS SATURDAY, the 15th Feb is the follow-up, continuing clearance on Penpole Point (weather permitting).

We will be starting at 10am on Sat 15th Feb and be gathering at Penpole Lane, close to Oasis Academey. From there we will be walking the short distance to the working part area where we will be until about 3:30. You can find where we’ll be on this map https://maps.google.co.uk/maps/ms?msid=210919455143110258951.0004efcb6628f06e600a2&msa=0&ll=51.492386%2C-2.674586&spn=0.001633%2C0.003009

Come along and lend your time to help us in this clearance. You can see some of what we all achieved last month here http://www.kwag.org.uk/gallery/jan-18th-2014-2/january-18th-2014-penpole-point/

 

New Painting discovered

A recent discovery came our way, a previously unknown painting by the Bristol artist Joseph Walter. It shows the view looking out from Penpole Point on the Kings Weston estate at sundown some time about 1840. This was a popular spot for artists up until the trees started to grow up and obscure the views. The small oil painting shows the seat at the stone dial being used by a small group of visitors taking in the spectacular views as the sunset develops. The river Avon below is busy with shipping and further vessels are at anchor in the King Road.

You can see this painting, along with many other views we have collected on our new paintings gallery here http://www.kwag.org.uk/gallery/historic-images/kings-weston-paintings/

 

Have your say on how reduced speed limits could benefit Kings Weston

As part of an informal consultation exercise Bristol City Council are asking for feedback on their proposals. We are keen to promote a much better environment for visitors to the estate and ensure that walkers using its many paths linking disparate parts of the park are better protected. We have highlighted concerns about some junctions along Kings Weston Lane, and crossings over Shirehampton Road, but you too have the opportunity to be let the Council know your thoughts.

Are you a regular walker on the estate, do you use the car park, or have you had problems on the roads that cross through it? Now is your chance to say something. Take a closer look at what’s proposed here: http://www.bristol20mph.co.uk/how/lawrence-weston-shirehampton-henbury-brentry-southmead

New acquisition

A historic document has just come our way related to Kings Weston. It is a contract between Edward Southwell II of Kings Weston, his Court acquaintance James Vernon, and John Lambert, a builder of Lambeth to complete a building at Spring Gardens In London. Spring Gardens was the London home of the Southwell Family and they sought to develop the land they leased from the Crown from the 1730s onwards. This document from 1754 is an interesting insight into Edward Southwell’s development of the site around his Spring Garden Mansion.

Spring Gardens was located on the south side of Trafalgar Square, where The Mall now joins it. It disappeared under the construction of Admiralty Arch at the start of the Twentieth Century, but you can see where it was on this map. The area shown here was the house and garden of the Southwell’s in 1777 after they had leased much of their surrounding property for development.

The document is particularly interesting for its three wax seals, all bearing the arms of Edward Southwell II surmounted with the armorial goat. Edward’s signature bestrides the best of these seals.

spring gardens