The park contains a small wildlife pond hosting a sculpture called “the drop”, as well as a fountain made from Lamorna stone which was installed in 1909. This originally stood in St Paul's Cathedral churchyard.[2]
History
The park was created in two sections. Two parcels of land at the eastern and southern ends were purchased in 1891 by the Borough of Hornsey at the instigation of Henry Reader Williams and opened in 1896 as the Middle Lane Pleasure Grounds.[2] In 1926 the western section was added after the acquisition of a piece of land known as Lewcock's Field. During World War 1 this had been requisitioned by the council for allotments. After the war an initial plan for the council to develop the field for housing was dropped on grounds of cost, and an expanded park was renamed Priory Park.[3]
References
^"Priory Park". Fields in Trust. 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
^ abSavin, James (1989). "Priory Park: Its purchase and development". Hornsey Historical Society Bulletin. 30. Hornsey Historical Society: 40–46.
^Owen, Janet (2011). "Lewcock's Field or Peacock's Field? A Priory Park Conundrum". Hornsey Historical Society Bulletin. 52. Hornsey Historical Society: 8–14.