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Lincoln Arboretum a 22 acres park designed and laid out between 1870 and 1872 by the celebrated Victorian gardener Edward Milner and listed as Grade II importance by English Heritage. Off Monks Road, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.

 

It is located on land that was given to the abbey of St Mary at York after the Norman Conquest; the land was acquired by the city after the dissolution of St Marys Abbey in the 1530s.

 

Following the national trend of providing public parks, and with the closure of the nearby Temple Gardens, which had operated on a semi-public basis, the Lincoln Commons Act (1870) was passed. Monks Leys Common, located to the east of the city, was purchased by the Corporation through Act of Parliament. Authorisation was also given to sell 3 acres (1.2 ha) of the land for residential building purposes to help fund the layout and construction of the Arboretum, which would become Lincoln's first truly public park.

 

The Arboretum has a lodge at its west entrance on Monks Road, and has three terraces of housing adjoining it to its western edge: Arboretum View, Monks Leys Terrace, and Woodland View.

 

As well as the whole park being listed, five of the features in the park are graded as Grade II Listed buildings:

 

The bandstand. A cast Iron structure of 1884.

The telephone kiosk. A type K6 designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.

The Shelter. A Late C19 Cast-iron sheet metal structure made by Lockerbie & Wilson of Birmingham.

The Lion statue. Made larger than life size in 1872 by Austin & Seeley

The Cafe. Gate lodge and refreshment room. 1872. Probably designed by Edward Milner

 

The Arboretum reopened on 19 September 2003, following £3 million worth of restoration work to bring it back to its original state. Works have included: overhauling and improving the facilities at Abbey Lodge to provide a community access centre and visitor tea rooms, restoration of the Victorian bandstand, new period railings, restoration of a cast iron folly, new asphalt footpaths, refurbished gardens and extensive replanting, the introduction of a new children's maze, resurfacing of the major terrace feature, refurbishment of the ponds and bridges, underpinning and replacement of the stone steps, new lighting columns, installation of closed-circuit television (CCTV), refurbishment of the children play area, restoration of the lion statue and restoration of the two fountain features.

 

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Uploaded on November 14, 2020
Taken on April 13, 2014