Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Cannon Hill Park

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Type
  
Public park

Status
  
Open year round

Location
  
Birmingham, England

Phone
  
+44 121 442 4226

Cannon Hill Park

Operated by
  
Birmingham City Council

Website
  
birmingham.gov.uk/cannonhillpark

Address
  
2 Russell Rd, Birmingham B13 8RD, UK

Hours
  
Open today · 8AM–6PMWednesday8AM–6PMThursday8AM–6PMFriday8AM–6PMSaturday8AM–6PMSunday8AM–7:30PMMonday8AM–6PMTuesday8AM–6PM

Similar
  
mac, Birmingham Wildlife Conserva, Lickey Hills Country Park, Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Aston Hall

Dji phantom 4 cannon hill park


Cannon Hill Park is a park located in south Birmingham, England. It is the most popular park in the city, covering 250 acres (101 ha) consisting of formal, conservation, woodland and sports areas. Recreational activities at the park include boating, fishing, bowls, tennis, putting and picnic areas.

Contents

It also contains Birmingham Nature Centre, the mac theatre, and adjacent to the park is Edgbaston Cricket Ground.

Cannon hill park birmingham


History

In April 1873, a local benefactor, Miss Louisa Ann Ryland (1814–89) of Barford Hill House, Warwickshire, gave 57 acres (23 ha) of meadow land, known as Cannon Hill Fields, to the Corporation and paid for the draining of the site to create a public park. J.T Gibson of Battersea was employed to transform the site. He constructed two large lakes, the smaller ornamental ponds and a bathing pool. 35 acres were devoted to ornamental gardens and shrub borders. Kew Gardens donated seeds and plants to establish the collection, this collection was used by students to enable them to study Botany. It opened to the public in September 1873. A further 7 acres (2.8 ha) were given by the brewer John Holder in 1897, and in 1898 5 acres (2.0 ha) were acquired to straighten the River Rea, which is now culverted and runs along the western edge.

Features

A 1906 granite and bronze memorial to the dead of the Second Boer War by Albert Toft, stands on the western edge of the park. Grade II* listed, it was refurbished in 2012.

In 1911 a 16th-century timbered house was moved from Deritend and re-erected in the park by the Birmingham Archaeological Society, to serve as a refreshment room and cricket pavilion. Named the Golden Lion Inn it is a Grade II listed building but is now in a very poor state of repair and fenced-off. The bandstand, the bridge over the lake ('Red Carriage Bridge'), and Cannon Hill House are also Grade II Listed.

Another memorial, unveiled on 27 July 1924, commemorates Scouts who fell in the first and (by later inscription) second world wars. It is in concrete, and was designed by the architect William Haywood.

A scale model of the Elan Valley Reservoirs, in the form of ornamental ponds, is located in a Japanese garden near the mac. It was built in the 1960s.

Events

A free 5 kilometre parkrun event, an all-inclusive timed run, is held in the park every Saturday morning at 9am. It is presently the second largest parkrun in the UK with over 800 runners at its peak.

The Great Birmingham Run half-marathon also passes through the park at around the 9-mile point of the course.

References

Cannon Hill Park Wikipedia