1
Havering College, Tring Gardens, Harold Hill, Essex
This is the Quarles Annex of the college
Image: © John Winfield
Taken: 13 Jun 2005
0.06 miles
2
Harold Hill: Luton House, Lindfield Road
Luton House is one of nineteen similar housing blocks on the estate north of Dagnam Park Drive, all named after towns in England and Wales. The names of all 19 in alphabetical order are:-
Camelford
Epsom
Gillingham
Glossop
Halifax
Haslingden
Luton
Lynmouth
Macclesfield
Minehead
Morecambe
Nantwich
Nelson
Newmarket
Northampton
Portmadoc
Thrapston
Wilmslow
Wolverton
Quite what the connection is between these 19 is anyone's guess!
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 26 Aug 2013
0.08 miles
3
Figures in Central Park
On the London Loop between Harold Wood and Havering-atte-Bower.
Image: © Peter S
Taken: 23 May 2018
0.17 miles
4
Iron Sculptures in Central Park
Henry the 8th stands beside a policeman and some other character beside this roundabout in Central Park.
On the London Loop path.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 8 Sep 2014
0.17 miles
5
Figures in Central Park, Harold Hill
Central Park is found in Gooshayes Ward of Harold Hill. The name probably comes from Geoffrey Goshaye who cleared the woodland and enclosed the new arable land in the late 12th century. The literal meaning of Gooshayes is 'goose enclosure'. The house at Gooshayes was rebuilt during the reign of Charles II. In front of the brick-built manor house lay terraced gardens, at the bottom of which were two horse-shoe ponds which were medieval in origin. Beyond the ponds ran Payne's Brook. By the late 18th century, the original manor house was in ruins, replaced by a Georgian farmhouse, partly constructed from the remains. All that remained of the house in 1800 were the foundations, the terraced garden and the two fishponds.
After the Second World War the farmhouse and the barn were to have been preserved. The 18th century barn, having been described as "the largest of its type in Essex", suffered the elements, neglect and constant attack by vandals, and was destroyed by fire in 1958. The farm's final use was as a community centre but was demolished in 1961.
The figures here are King Henry VIIIth, Harry Norman Eccleston OBE, the Bank of England's first full-time banknote designer who lived nearby, and Dick Bouchard MBE, the founder of the Romford Drum and Trumpet Corps. For the reason these three were chosen see https://www3.havering.gov.uk/Pages/ServiceChild/CentralPark-LGSL-823.aspx
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 14 Jun 2017
0.17 miles
6
Central Park, Harold Hill
Central Park is found in Gooshayes Ward of Harold Hill. The name probably comes from Geoffrey Goshaye who cleared the woodland and enclosed the new arable land in the late 12th century. The literal meaning of Gooshayes is 'goose enclosure'. The house at Gooshayes was rebuilt during the reign of Charles II. In front of the brick-built manor house lay terraced gardens, at the bottom of which were two horse-shoe ponds which were medieval in origin. Beyond the ponds ran Payne's Brook. By the late 18th century, the original manor house was in ruins, replaced by a Georgian farmhouse, partly constructed from the remains. All that remained of the house in 1800 were the foundations, the terraced garden and the two fishponds.
After the Second World War the farmhouse and the barn were to have been preserved. The 18th century barn, having been described as "the largest of its type in Essex", suffered the elements, neglect and constant attack by vandals, and was destroyed by fire in 1958. The farm's final use was as a community centre but was demolished in 1961.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 14 Jun 2017
0.18 miles
7
Cycleway and Loop
Sustrans cycleway No. 136 runs southwards from here down to Rainham.
Much of the way is shared with the London Loop path.
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 8 Sep 2014
0.19 miles
8
Central Park, Harold Hill
Image: © Des Blenkinsopp
Taken: 8 Sep 2014
0.21 miles
9
Harold Hill Estate, Romford
Harold Hill was a large 'out-County' housing estate built by the London County Council during the early 1950s on a green field site in what was then Essex. The picture shows the junction of Chudleigh Road (left) and Broseley Road (right).
Image: © David Kemp
Taken: 18 Oct 2008
0.23 miles
10
Harold Hill: My Place
Not literally my place, as this is the name of a Big Lottery funded state of the art youth centre with dance and music space, a recording studio, a bike workshop, a computer suite, a juice bar and café and a crèche. The London Borough of Havering were awarded £4,704,492 in funding to achieve the project. The photographer finds it somewhat amusing that it is such a precise figure. Woe betide the construction management team if it had cost £4,704,493. Mr Micawber would have been predicting misery...
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 26 Aug 2013
0.25 miles