Queen's Park, Crewe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Queen's Park in Crewe, Cheshire was laid out by railway engineer Francis Webb and garden designer Edward Kemp.[1] It is, allegedly, a product of 1880s railway politics: the London and North Western Railway bought the land and donated it to the town as a park in order to prevent the Great Western Railway from building a railway line through it.
The park is a popular spot for the inhabitants of Crewe and features the largest lake in the area, which also has boats for hire. Other prominent features of the park include a Victorian Clock Tower, a man-made waterfall, a large playground, and several statues and fountains, including a monument to the British soldiers who fought in the first Gulf War.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Queens Park Crewe. Borough of Crewe and Nantwich. Retrieved on 2008-04-24.

