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Welcome to Broomfield Park, with a history dating back to 1566.

Broomfield Park is a remnant of an area of mixed woodland and grazing land owned from the 1550s by a succession of city merchants and traders. However, as London grew, the railway and housing intruded on these estates in spite of their attempts to resist urbanisation. The estates around the park were then sold for housing beginning in 1902. However, after a period of indecision, 25 acres were bought for public use by Southgate Urban District Council for £25,000 and opened on 25 April 1903.

HISTORY

The land around Broomfield House has passed through a number of owners and it’s difficult to describe the history of the Broomfield “Estate” as distinct from Broomfield House and it’s immediate grounds.

The owners that we can trace from the 1550’s begin with John Bromfylde, a, a leather merchant. In 1556 he sold ‘Bromehowse’ and its land to Geoffrey Walkenden. He was a Master of the Skinners’ Company and involved in the fur trade with Muscovy. Sir John Spencer then owned the estate from 1599. He was a Master of the Clothworkers’ Company, trading with the Ottoman Empire and the Levant. Lord Mayor in 1594-5, he was reputedly the richest man in England.

His onetime apprentice Joseph Jackson took control on Sir John’s death in 1610 and his descendants, direct or by marriage, owned Broomfield until 1816 when it was passed to the Powys-Lybbe family. The estate owned by the Powys-Lybbe trust in 1902 amounted to around 500 acres and until the 1920s extended to the south far beyond what is now the North Circular Road. The owners did not live in Broomfield House after 1838 and it was leased to a variety of tenants. The most prominent of these were William Rathbone, a Deputy of the Corporation of London (1858-1883), and Sir Ralph Littler QC, who lived there until 1901. In 1903, the House, Stable Yard and 54 acres of land were purchased by Southgate Urban District Council and Broomfield Park was opened to the public.

The name "Broomfield" has its origins in the old word "bromfield", which meant a field of long grass that provided hay and grazing.

The owner of a "bromfield" could take his surname from the word, and some in 1566 John Bromefylde, a London currier (dealer in leather goods) sold what became the the Broomfield Estate to Geoffrey Walkenden, a skinner (dealer in furs).

History of Broomfield Park Download PDF

The name "Broomfield" has its origins in the old word "bromfield", which meant a field of long grass that provided hay and grazing. 

The owner of a "bromfield" could take his surname from the word, and some in 1566 John Bromefylde, a London currier (dealer in leather goods) sold what became the the Broomfield Estate to Geoffrey Walkeden, a skinner (dealer in furs).
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