Crown Bingo Leigh Park
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Leigh Park | |
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Staunton Country Park | |
Location within Hampshire | |
Population | Approx 27,500 |
OS grid reference | SU712082 |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | Havant |
Postcode district | PO9 |
Dialling code | (023) |
Police | Hampshire |
Fire | Hampshire |
Ambulance | South Central |
UK Parliament | |
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Leigh Park is a large suburb (population 27,500) of Havant, in Hampshire, England. It currently forms the bulk or whole of four electoral wards: Battins, Bondfields, Barncroft and Warren Park (generally referred to as 'The Warren').
Staunton Country Park lies on the northern edge of Leigh Park, also within the Havant boundary.
History[edit]
Leigh Park existed before becoming a post Second world war housing estate,
Early history[edit]
As early as 1750 mention was made of a farm on the site in a will of that year and local historians consider it likely that a farm existed there around 100 years earlier.[1]
Leigh park estate[edit]
Leigh Park Estate may have been formed with the building of Leigh House by the then owner Samuel Harrison some time before 1791.[citation needed] The stables, walled garden and coach house of the house survived as part of Staunton Country Park. The estate encompassed decorative planting, lakes and follies[2] and was described as 'one of the most beautiful spots in the county' in 1826.[3]
In 'The Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales' Leigh is described as a tything of Havant parish two miles to the north west of Havant with a population of 547.[4]
Second world war[edit]
Crown Bingo Leigh Parker
Leigh Park was re-developed as a new suburb for those made homeless in Portsmouth by bomb damage which occurred during World War II and to enable the new roads and parks of Portsmouth to be built.
Post war[edit]
The land for the estate was purchased by Portsmouth City council from the Fitzwygram family in 1944; work started on building in 1947 and the first residents moved in during 1949. The first shops opened in 1952 (in Stone Square) and the main shopping centre of Park Parade / Greywell Shopping opened in 1955.[a]
The majority of homes in Leigh Park were built by Portsmouth City Council, not Havant Borough Council through a financially underwritten cooperation with the former Havant and Waterloo Urban District Council. Most Leigh Park tenants of social housing pay rent to the properties' owners Guinness Partnership (formerly Hermitage Housing) or Portsmouth City Council with has an office near Park Parade. Residents are liable in council tax to Havant Borough Council who provide local services and collect the Hampshire County Council proportion.
Construction of the estate was not fully completed until the early 1970s, although most of the houses in the area were built by 1960.
Hermitage Housing commissions most new housing in Leigh Park.[citation needed]Barratt Homes is currently building on the former Procter & Gamble site in the centre of Leigh Park. Leigh Park was one of the largest wholly council estates in Europe however following the ongoing right to buy many of the properties are privately owned.
In 2004, Leigh Park made the news when a gang stole more than £100,000 from the Nationwide Building Society[5] and a man sleeping on a bench was set on fire, in a separate incident.[6]
Governance[edit]
The suburb of Leigh Park comes under the remit of the local government district and borough of Havant and within the boundary of Hampshire County Council. As of November 2019 the area is broadly covered by the electoral wards of Barncroft, Battins and Warren Park while some northern section of Bedhampton ward might be considered within what might be commonly thought of Leigh Park.[7]
Leigh Park is part of the parliamentary constituency of Havant. As of November 2019 it is served by MP Alan Mak, a Conservative.
Geography[edit]
The modern estate is bordered to the east by the Havant to Petersfield railway line excluding perhaps some industrial units by the railway which would not be considered part of the estate. The Northern extent is approximately defined in line with the A3M and B2150 junction. Staunton Country Park and Leigh Park Gardens may or may not be considered part of the estate, as might the Southleigh House area which lies to the east of the Railway. The western edge is bounded but excluding houses around B2150 road from Old Bedhampton to Waterlooville. To the south, the boundary lies broadly just to the north of the B2149 road.
Leigh Park is broadly flat gradually rising to the North with some sharper rises at fringes around the northern parts.
The Hermitage Stream and tributaries run through parts of Leigh Park while the Lavant stream runs down the left side of the settlement.[8][9] Both run into Langstone Harbour which is approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) to the south at the nearest point.
Culture and community[edit]
There was a Bowling alley beside park parade that was converted to a bingo hall and opened by Diana Dors in 1984.[10]:4
Transport[edit]
The main shopping precinct is served by StagecoachBus Routes 20, 21, 23, 37 and 39, which provide links with central Havant (with some services continuing to Portsmouth and the main area hospital). FirstGroup Runs the 27 service through the estate between Rowlands Castle, Havant and Emsworth.
Havant railway station is the nearest major train station, smaller stations Bedhampton and Rowlands Castle are near parts of Leigh Park. The A3(M) motorway and A27 Havant bypass are the areas' major links to the rest of the country,
Education[edit]
Leigh Park contains several primary schools: Front Lawn, Trosnant, Riders, Sharps Copse, Park House, Warren Park, Barncroft School and St Albans C of E.
Leigh Park is currently served by three secondary schools: Havant Academy (known as Wakefords Secondary School when it opened in 1970[11] and latterly Staunton Community Sports College until 2009), Park Community School (known previously as Broomfield Secondary School, when it opened in 1958,[12] and Broomfield Comprehensive School until 1988) and Prospect School, built in 2008, an education centre for children with learning and social disabilities.
The West Leigh area was also served by Oak Park Secondary School on Leigh Road (close to the junction with Crosland Drive - now demolished), from its opening in 1957 to its closure in the late 1980s.[11] Pupils from that area then attended Warblington Comprehensive School situated some distance from the area on Southleigh Road, Denvilles.
Between 1958 and 1960 Havant Grammar School had shared the Broomfield Secondary School site on Middle Park Way until it moved to its own, new buildings on the corner of Barncroft Way and New Road.[12] The title Havant Grammar School disappeared with the arrival of the comprehensive school system and it became Havant College a sixth-form college in 1974.
Sport[edit]
The suburb's main non-league football side is Havant & Waterlooville who currently play in the Conference South, two divisions below the Football League. The team's main claim to fame is reaching the FA Cup fourth round in the 2007-08 season when they twice took the lead against Liverpool at Anfield before finally losing 5-2.
Havant Hockey Club play at Havant College on Barncroft Way (just on the outskirts of Leigh Park). The team were National and European Champions in the 1990s. The street High Lawn Way just beyond the Crown Bingo Hall also offshoots onto a bowls club, two tennis courts and a common playing fields and children's play area.
Leigh Park boxing club is based at the community centre.[13]
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^The centre consists of two main east-west shopping thoroughfares, with Greywell Road to the north and Park Parade to the south and west, and can be called either name
References[edit]
- ^'Birth of the estate'. Staunton Records. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016.
- ^'Parks & Gardens UK'. Archived from the original on 26 March 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
- ^Scott, Richard (1826) A Topographical and Historical Account of Hayling Island, Hants. Havant: I. Skelton (anonymous) (Reissued by Frank Westwood, Petersfield, Hants, 1974 ISBN0-904172-01-5
- ^Wilson (1870), p. 8.
- ^'Masked robber trio steal £100,000'. 27 November 2004. Archived from the original on 24 March 2016. Retrieved 17 November 2019 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
- ^'Boy, 17, charged over burning man'. BBC News Online. 14 June 2004. Archived from the original on 17 November 2005. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
- ^'HavantWard Boundaries'(PDF). Havant Borough Council. Archived(PDF) from the original on 15 December 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
- ^http://thespring.co.uk/media/2986/a-no-70-the-lavant-stream-at-havant-and-rowlands-castle.pdf
- ^http://thespring.co.uk/media/4403/601-a-history-of-the-hermitage-stream-2.pdf
- ^http://thespring.co.uk/media/3040/b-no-69-the-early-years-of-the-leigh-park-housing-estate.pdf
- ^ ab'Havant Borough Council Timeline 2012'(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 12 May 2014.
- ^ ab'A History of Havant'. www.localhistories.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
- ^'Leigh Park community Centre is saved by charity'. The News (Portsmouth). 8 March 2016. Archived from the original on 5 October 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
Sources[edit]
- Cousins, Ralph; et al. (2017). A History of Leigh Park and the Hamlet of Leigh. Havant Borough.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Hammond, Phil (September 1997). Leigh Park — the first fifty years. The Staunton Park Genealogy Centre.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Community Centre, Leigh Park (1997). Leigh Park — Garden City of the South. ISBN0953142205.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Wilson, John Marius (1870). The imperial gazetteer of England and Wales. 4, L–M. Edinburgh: A. Fullarton. p. 8. OCLC1046644770.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leigh Park. |
Wendy Wild, also known as Wendy Rosher, has waived her right to anonymity). She alleged that Mr Harris assaulted her at the Leigh Park Community Centre in Havant when she was seven or eight years old.
There is no evidence that Mr Harris was ever at the Leigh Park Community Centre. The evidence is that he has never been there.
The Questions
Mr Harris was at the peak of his career in the late 1960s and was playing in venues such as the Royal Albert Hall. Why would he perform in a small community centre on a council estate?
No evidence has emerged this concert ever happened. Seven years of local newspapers were examined and there is no mention in the local press of this concert. The council have no records of hall being used for a performance by Rolf Harris. There are no photographs of this concert. The police checked old people’s homes, local historians and did letter drops in the area. No witness has ever come forward to say they were at this concert.
How could a small community hall afford the fees of a major star and to whom was the fee paid to if there is no record of the community centre hiring out the hall to Rolf Harris?
Wendy Wild described Harris as having hairy hands which he does not have.
Wendy Wild made no mention of Harris having a backing band.
Wendy Wild had difficulty deciding when the incident took place. In one version she said it happend around the time of the moon landings and another it happened in October around the time of her eighth birthday. Rolf said he saw the moon landing in the shop of a TV window in Australia. He said this in his 2001 autobiography long before the allegation was made against him.
Wendy Wild has never identified anyone she knew at the concert.
Three years have passed since Harris was arrested for this incident. How is that in all this time no evidence has emerged this concert took place?
How could Harris molest someone in a packed hall without anyone noticing?
Wendy Wild accused Harris of molesting her at an event which did not take place but it was Harris who was branded a liar.
The hall held only 150 people and was too small to host a visit from a world-famous star;
His agent would not have booked him to perform in a small hall at a council estate community hall (he was a world-famous star at that time);
His fee for appearing would have been too high for such a venue, and even if they did book him the tickets would have had to be priced at a level that would have been unrealistic for members of the local community (this was a children’s event, remember);
No one from the Centre can remember it – there would have been people there to welcome him, to help him set up etc;
Crown Bingo Leigh Park
There are no advertisements or flyers; no tickets or souvenir programmes; no photographs – some of which by now would surely have been sold to the press – or autographs;
Rolf Harris does not have hairy hands nor did he back in 1969;
Crown Bingo Leigh Park Facebook
Two witnesses said that Mr Harris visited Leigh Park at around the time Diana Dors and Sid James visited. They were never able to say when or produce any evidence. Sid James opened a new parade of shops 1966. Diana Dors opened the Crown Bingo in Leigh Park in 1973. Neither appearance was in 1969. Both appearances are remembered and in the newspapers. The witnesses say that the visit was in the papers and the council records: it isn’t. Locals say that Mr Harris has never visited Leigh Park.
If Wendy Wild only wanted closure, why have she and her brother given more post-conviction interviews that any other witness? Why did she make such a song and dance about the level of compensation she received (other that to cash in on yet another paid newspaper story)?