The Hounslow Gunpowder Works opened in the late 1760s in what is now the western end of the park. Crane Park Island was created to provide a mill pond for the water to drive the machinery. There were many explosions and the Shot Tower (pictured right) is now thought to have been a windmill for recirculating water to power the mills, rather than a shot tower for making lead shot.
The licence to manufacture gunpowder was withdrawn in 1927, and part of the site was sold to Twickenham Council, which turned it into Crane Park. This opened in 1935, and was inherited by Richmond Council when Twickenham Council was abolished in 1965.[1] The Shot Tower (now officially the Brick Tower) is a Grade II listed building.[5]
Wildlife
The park has large areas of woodland, as well as pasture areas and the river bank, and it also has important industrial archaeology.[1] It is managed to encourage wildlife, and Marsh frogs and the scarce water vole breed on the banks of the river.[2]
Access
Although the park borders the London Borough of Hounslow, it is only accessible from Twickenham. There are entrances on Crane Park Road, Ellerman Avenue, Hanworth Road, Mill Road, Great Chertsey Road, Hospital Bridge Road and Meadway. The London Loop long-distance footpath goes through the park.[1]
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References
^ abcd"Crane Park". London Parks and Gardens Trust. Archived from the original on 7 April 2017. Retrieved 6 April 2017.