1
Footpath through Highams Park
Image: © Roger Smith
Taken: 3 Nov 2007
0.09 miles
2
Houses in Handsworth Avenue
Image: © David Martin
Taken: 18 Feb 2017
0.10 miles
3
Highams Park lake
During the reign of King Henry VIIIth, the manor of Higham belonged to Sir Giles Heron. The present manor house was built in 1768 for the then Lord of the Manor, Antony Bacon MP. It was he who first enclosed this part of Epping Forest. In 1794 on the advice of Humphrey Repton he formed the tree-line lake.The lake was created partly to provide water for deer living in the nearby woods. For each project Humphrey Repton produced a "red book" containing overlays showing how the redesigned landscape would look. The red book for Highams Park survives and is kept at the Vestry House Museum in Walthamstow. The lake was formed by widening the River Ching. The manor house is now the central part of Woodford County High School.
In 1891 Sir Courtenay Warner sold the lake, together with a strip of land either side, to the Corporation of the City of London for £6,000, assisted by donations from Walthamstow and Woodford local boards and private individuals. The latter amounted to £1,500. This land was added to Epping Forest and opened to the general public. The Great Eastern Railway took advantage of this new attraction and renamed Hale End station as Higham Park station in 1894 but got rather carried away in advertising the delights of Highams Park as "the most beautiful lake within a day's travel of London". Much of the remaining estate was sold during the 1930s and built on.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 1 Apr 2015
0.13 miles
4
Highams Park Boating Lake
Image: © Roger Smith
Taken: 3 Nov 2007
0.15 miles
5
Frosty lake, Epping Forest
Highams Park lake on a frosty morning. The River Ching flows through the lake on its short journey from Connaught Water to the Lea Valley
Image: © John Davies
Taken: 18 Dec 2005
0.15 miles
6
Highams Park lake
During the reign of King Henry VIIIth, the manor of Higham belonged to Sir Giles Heron. The present manor house was built in 1768 for the then Lord of the Manor, Antony Bacon MP. It was he who first enclosed this part of Epping Forest. In 1794 on the advice of Humphrey Repton he formed the tree-line lake.The lake was created partly to provide water for deer living in the nearby woods. For each project Humphrey Repton produced a "red book" containing overlays showing how the redesigned landscape would look. The red book for Highams Park survives and is kept at the Vestry House Museum in Walthamstow. The lake was formed by widening the River Ching. The manor house is now the central part of Woodford County High School.
In 1891 Sir Courtenay Warner sold the lake, together with a strip of land either side, to the Corporation of the City of London for £6,000, assisted by donations from Walthamstow and Woodford local boards and private individuals. The latter amounted to £1,500. This land was added to Epping Forest and opened to the general public. The Great Eastern Railway took advantage of this new attraction and renamed Hale End station as Higham Park station in 1894 but got rather carried away in advertising the delights of Highams Park as "the most beautiful lake within a day's travel of London". Much of the remaining estate was sold during the 1930s and built on.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 1 Apr 2015
0.15 miles
7
Ornamental Lake
This lake in Highams Park http://www.wildessex.net/sites/Highams%20Park.htm, fed by the River Ching was created in the 1790's by garden designer Humphrey Repton https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humphry_Repton .
Image: © Glyn Baker
Taken: 21 Sep 2017
0.15 miles
8
Weir on the Ching
From here on it takes a sometimes culverted course to eventually join the River Lee.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 20 Oct 2012
0.16 miles
9
Cormorants In Highams Park
Waiting for some fishing in the Highams Park
Image for more information see http://www.wildessex.net/sites/Highams%20Park.htm
Image: © Glyn Baker
Taken: 21 Sep 2017
0.17 miles
10
Flats on Gordon Avenue
Slightly odd in appearance, with prominent chimney stacks and curiously studded balconies, the last on an almost-regular-but-not-quite pattern.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 20 Oct 2012
0.17 miles