1
The Lamb, Pelly Road, E13
The pub is opposite the junction with Crescent Road. The area is dotted with tower blocks; Smiths Point (left) and Nicholls Point are shown here.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 12 Jan 2011
0.04 miles
2
Crescent Road, E13
Looking in the opposite direction from the point where
Image was taken, across Stopford Road.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 12 Jan 2011
0.08 miles
3
Upton Cross
Traffic lights at the crossroads of the A114 (by the camera and ahead) with Plashet Road (right) and Portway (left). West Ham Park stretches away behind the wall and poster on the left.
Image: © Derek Harper
Taken: 12 Jan 2011
0.08 miles
4
Chadd Green, West Ham
Housing at Chadd Green, in West Ham.
Image: © Malc McDonald
Taken: 3 Sep 2017
0.09 miles
5
Carving in West Ham Park
West Ham Park was formerly the grounds of a large mansion called Ham House, it was owned by Dr John Fothergill, an eminent Quaker physician and botanist, from 1762 until his death in 1780. During this time by commissioning plant hunters, Fothergill amassed a unique collection of several thousand plants and trees from every part of the habitable globe. The collection, partly housed in a run of hot and cold greenhouses 260 feet long, and also including an ornamental canal for aquatic plants, was considered by Sir Joseph Banks to be "second only to Kew" in importance. One of Fothergill's many successes was the first tea tree to flower in England. His main interest in botany was in plants which might be useful in medicine or for food. On one occasion he treated a sea captain with yellow fever and in lieu of payment requested that the captain bring him "two barrels of earth from Borneo, taken from as many points as possible". From this soil, many new plants were obtained and introduced into English gardens.
After Fothergill's death, the plant collection was sold and the greenhouses largely dismantled. The estate passed eventually to Samuel Gurney, a Quaker banker and philanthropist and brother of the prison reformer Elizabeth Fry. After his death in 1856, his grandson John Gurney wanted the estate preserved as an open space and offered it for £25,000. The family put up £10,000, the City Corporation £10,000 and the rest was raised by public subscription. The estate was then conveyed to the City Corporation, and West Ham Park was opened on 20th July 1874. It has been managed by the City ever since. The former site of Fothergill's ornamental canal can still be seen in parts of the park.
This is within the Ornamental Garden in the south-east corner of West Ham Park.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 21 Aug 2014
0.10 miles
6
Sunlight and shade in West Ham Park
Partially shaded path on a very hot afternoon.
Image: © David Martin
Taken: 10 Jul 2015
0.10 miles
7
Cecil Road, Upton Park
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 12 Nov 2017
0.10 miles
8
In the Ornamental Garden at West Ham Park
West Ham Park was formerly the grounds of a large mansion called Ham House, it was owned by Dr John Fothergill, an eminent Quaker physician and botanist, from 1762 until his death in 1780. During this time by commissioning plant hunters, Fothergill amassed a unique collection of several thousand plants and trees from every part of the habitable globe. The collection, partly housed in a run of hot and cold greenhouses 260 feet long, and also including an ornamental canal for aquatic plants, was considered by Sir Joseph Banks to be "second only to Kew" in importance. One of Fothergill's many successes was the first tea tree to flower in England. His main interest in botany was in plants which might be useful in medicine or for food. On one occasion he treated a sea captain with yellow fever and in lieu of payment requested that the captain bring him "two barrels of earth from Borneo, taken from as many points as possible". From this soil, many new plants were obtained and introduced into English gardens.
After Fothergill's death, the plant collection was sold and the greenhouses largely dismantled. The estate passed eventually to Samuel Gurney, a Quaker banker and philanthropist and brother of the prison reformer Elizabeth Fry. After his death in 1856, his grandson John Gurney wanted the estate preserved as an open space and offered it for £25,000. The family put up £10,000, the City Corporation £10,000 and the rest was raised by public subscription. The estate was then conveyed to the City Corporation, and West Ham Park was opened on 20th July 1874. It has been managed by the City ever since. The former site of Fothergill's ornamental canal can still be seen in parts of the park.
This view is within the Ornamental Garden which is in the south-east corner of the park.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 21 Aug 2014
0.10 miles
9
Neville Road, West Ham
Neville Road is a tree-lined residential road in West Ham, in east London.
Image: © Malc McDonald
Taken: 3 Sep 2017
0.12 miles
10
Portway, West Ham
Image: © David Howard
Taken: 12 Nov 2017
0.13 miles