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Wikipedia

Richmond, London

Richmond is a town in south-west London,[nb 1][2][3][4][5] 8.2 miles (13.2 km) west-southwest of Charing Cross. It stands on a meander of the River Thames, and features many parks and open spaces, including Richmond Park, and many protected conservation areas,[6] which include much of Richmond Hill.[7] A specific Act of Parliament protects the scenic view of the River Thames from Richmond.[8]

Richmond
Richmond Riverside
Richmond
Location within Greater London
Area5.38 km2 (2.08 sq mi)
Population21,469 (North Richmond and South Richmond wards 2011)[1]
• Density3,991/km2 (10,340/sq mi)
OS grid referenceTQ1874
• Charing Cross8.2 mi (13.2 km) ENE
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townRICHMOND
Postcode districtTW9, TW10
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°27′22″N 0°18′04″W / 51.456°N 0.301°W / 51.456; -0.301Coordinates: 51°27′22″N 0°18′04″W / 51.456°N 0.301°W / 51.456; -0.301

Richmond was founded following King Henry VII's building in the 16th century of Richmond Palace (so-named in 1501), from which the town derives its name. (The palace itself commemorates King Henry's earldom of Richmond, North Yorkshire, the original Richmond.) The town and palace became particularly associated with Queen Elizabeth I (r. 1558–1603), who spent her last days there. During the 18th century, Richmond Bridge connected the two banks of the Thames, and many Georgian terraces were built, particularly around Richmond Green and on Richmond Hill. Those that have survived remain well-preserved and many have been designated listed buildings on account of their architectural or historic significance. The opening of Richmond railway station in 1846 was a significant event in the absorption of the town into a rapidly expanding London.

In 1890 the town of Richmond, formerly part of the ancient parish of Kingston upon Thames in the county of Surrey, became a municipal borough, which later extended to include Kew, Ham, Petersham and part of Mortlake (North Sheen).[9] The municipal borough was abolished in 1965, when local-government reorganisation transferred Richmond from Surrey to Greater London.[10]

Since 1965 Richmond has formed part of the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. As of 2011 it had a population of 21,469 (in the North Richmond and South Richmond wards). It has a significant commercial and retail centre with a developed day and evening economy. The name "Richmond upon Thames" often refers, incorrectly, to the town of Richmond: in fact (unlike the case of nearby Kingston upon Thames), the suffixed form should properly apply only to the London Borough.

History

Name

The area was known in the medieval period as Shene, a name first recorded (as Sceon) in the 10th century, and which survives in the neighbouring districts of East Sheen (also known as Sheen) and North Sheen. The manor entered royal hands, and the manor house eventually became known as Sheen Palace, before being largely destroyed by fire in 1497. Henry VII rebuilt it and in 1501 named it Richmond Palace, in allusion to his earldom of Richmond and his ancestral honour of Richmond in Yorkshire. The associated settlement took the same name, although for some years the two names were often used in conjunction (for example, "Shene otherwise called Richemount").[11][12]

Royal residence

 
Richmond Palace – a view published in 1765 and based on earlier drawings

Henry I lived briefly in the King's house in "Sheanes". In 1299, Edward I, the "Hammer of the Scots", took his whole court to the manor house at Sheen, a little east of the bridge and on the riverside, and it thus became a royal residence; William Wallace was executed in London in 1305, and it was in Sheen that the Commissioners from Scotland went down on their knees before Edward.

Edward II, following his defeat by the Scots at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, founded a monastery for Carmelites at Sheen. When the boy-king Edward III came to the throne in 1327, he gave the manor to his mother Isabella. Edward later spent over £2,000 on improvements, but in the middle of the work, Edward himself died at the manor, in 1377. Richard II was the first English king to make Sheen his main residence, which he did in 1383. Twelve years later, Richard was so distraught at the death of his wife Anne of Bohemia at the age of 28 that, according to Holinshed, the 16th-century English chronicler, he "caused it [the manor] to be thrown down and defaced; whereas the former kings of this land, being wearie of the citie, used customarily thither to resort as to a place of pleasure, and serving highly to their recreation". It was rebuilt between 1414 and 1422, but destroyed by fire in 1497.[13]

Following that fire, Henry VII built a new residence at Sheen, and in 1501 he named it Richmond Palace.[14] The theatre company to which Shakespeare belonged performed some plays there during the reign of Elizabeth I.[14] As Queen, Elizabeth spent much of her time at Richmond, as she enjoyed hunting stags in the "Newe Parke of Richmonde" (now Old Deer Park). She died at the palace on 24 March 1603.[15] The palace was no longer in residential use after 1649, but in 1688, James II ordered its partial reconstruction, this time as a royal nursery. The bulk of the palace had decayed by 1779, but surviving structures include the Wardrobe, Trumpeters' House (built around 1700), and the Gate House, built in 1501. This has five bedrooms and was made available on a 65-year lease by the Crown Estate Commissioners in 1986.

18th- and 19th-century development

 
Georgian houses at Old Palace Terrace on Richmond Green
 
The town's former fire station, built in the late 19th century, with a distinctive lantern clock tower

Beyond the grounds of the old palace, Richmond remained mostly agricultural land until the 18th century. White Lodge, in the middle of what is now Richmond Park, was built as a hunting lodge for George II, and during this period the number of large houses in their own grounds – such as Asgill House and Pembroke Lodge – increased significantly. These were followed by the building of further important houses, including Downe House, Wick House and The Wick on Richmond Hill, as this area became an increasingly fashionable place in which to live. Richmond Bridge was completed in 1777 to replace a ferry crossing that connected Richmond town centre on the east bank with its neighbouring district of East Twickenham. Today, this bridge, together with the well-preserved Georgian terraces that surround Richmond Green and line Richmond Hill to its crest, now has listed building status.[16]

As Richmond continued to prosper and expand during the 19th century, much luxurious housing was built on the streets that line Richmond Hill, as well as shops in the town centre to serve the increasing population. In July 1892, the Corporation formed a joint-stock company, the Richmond (Surrey) Electric Light and Power Company, and this wired the town for electricity by around 1896.

World Wars

Like many other large towns in Britain, Richmond lost many young people in the First and Second World Wars. In the Second World War, 96 people were killed in air raids, which also resulted in the demolition of 297 houses.[17] The Richmond War Memorial, which now commemorates both wars, was installed in 1921 at the end of Whittaker Avenue, between the Old Town Hall and the Riverside.[18]

Governance

Current

The town of Richmond is in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames which is governed by Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council. The most recent election was in May 2022 when the Liberal Democrats retained control of the council. Richmond is divided into two wards – North Richmond, which has three Liberal Democrat councillors, and South Richmond, which has two Liberal Democrat councillors and one from the Green Party.

Richmond town forms part of the Richmond Park constituency for the UK Parliament. The Member of Parliament, since 2019, is Sarah Olney from the Liberal Democrats. Richmond is also part of the South West constituency for the London Assembly, which has been represented by Nicholas Rogers from the Conservative Party since 2021.

Historical

Richmond, earlier known as Shene, was part of the large ancient parish of Kingston upon Thames in the Kingston hundred of Surrey. Split off from Kingston upon Thames from an early time, the parish of Richmond St Mary Magdalene formed the Municipal Borough of Richmond from 1890.[19] The municipal borough was expanded in 1892 by the addition of Kew, Petersham and the North Sheen part of Mortlake;[9] in 1933, Ham was added to the borough.[9] In 1965, the parish and municipal borough were abolished by the London Government Act 1963, which transferred Richmond to Greater London. Together with the former Municipal Borough of Twickenham and the former Municipal Borough of Barnes, it formed a new borough, the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.[20]

Geography

 
Aerial view of Richmond and East Twickenham from the north, August 2015
 
Map of the town of Richmond.
Click to enlarge.

Richmond sits opposite East Twickenham on what is technically the south bank of the River Thames but, owing to the way this stretch of the river's meanders, the town is immediately north and north-east of its nearest stretch of river. The Thames curves around the town, and then Kew, in its course; starting from Petersham, it reverts to a more definitively west–east axis. The river is still tidal at Richmond, so, to allow major passenger and goods traffic to continue to operate during low tide, a half-tide lock was opened in 1894 and is used when the adjacent weir is in position. This weir ensures that there is always a minimum depth of water of 5 ft. 8in. (1.72 m) toward the middle of the river between Richmond and Teddington, whatever the state of the tide. Above the lock and weir there is a small footbridge.

Richmond is well endowed with green and open spaces accessible to the public. At the heart of the town sits Richmond Green, which is roughly square in shape and together with the Little Green, a small supplementary green stretching from its southeast corner, is 12 acres (0.05 km2) in size. The Green is surrounded by well-used metalled roads that provide for a fair amount of vehicle parking for both residents and visitors. The south corner leads into the main shopping area of the town; at the west corner is the old gate house which leads through to other remaining buildings of the palace; at the north corner is pedestrian access to Old Deer Park (plus vehicle access for municipal use). The park is a 360-acre (1.5 km2) Crown Estate landscape extending from the town along the riverside as far as the boundary with the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. This contains wide green lawns and sports facilities, and the Grade I listed former King's Observatory erected for George III in 1769. The town's main shopping street, George Street, is also named after the king.[21][22]

 
Asgill House and Richmond Railway Bridge viewed from a houseboat

The town centre lies just below 33 ft (10m) above sea level. South of the town centre, rising from Richmond Bridge to an elevation of 165 ft (50m), is Richmond Hill. Just beyond the summit of Richmond Hill is Richmond Park, an area of 2,360 acres (9.55 km2; 3.7 sq mi) of wild heath and woodland originally enclosed for hunting, and now forming London's largest royal park.[23] The park is a national nature reserve,[24] a Site of Special Scientific Interest[25][26] and a Special Area of Conservation[27] and is included, at Grade I, on Historic England's Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England.[28] It was created by Charles I in 1634[29] as a deer park and now has 630 red and fallow deer[30] that roam freely through much of the park. The park has a number of traffic and pedestrian gates leading to the surrounding areas of Sheen, Roehampton, Putney, Kingston and Ham.

Nearest places

Economy

The London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, of which Richmond North and South make up two of its wards, has the least poverty in London.[31] The town of Richmond has the largest commercial centre in the borough and is classified a major centre according to the London Plan. It is an established up-market shopping destination.[32] Its compact centre has approximately 50,000m2 of retail floor-space that is largely focused on George Street, The Quadrant and Hill Street. It comprises almost exclusively high street chains, the largest of which are Marks & Spencer, Boots, Tesco Metro and Waitrose. A Whole Foods Market with 20,000 ft2 of floor space within a new development opened in 2013.[33] The remaining town centre stores are largely single units.

Mostly independent businesses line the narrow alleyways running off George Street towards Richmond Green and up Richmond Hill, and there is a farmers' market in Heron Square on Saturdays. Richmond has one large stand-alone supermarket, Sainsbury's, with parking for 420 cars to the east of the town, near North Sheen railway station.

A range of convenience shopping, restaurants and cafes can be found on the crest of Richmond Hill lining Friars Stile Road, as well as along Kew Road towards the Botanical Gardens, and on Sheen Road.

Richmond also offers a wide variety of office accommodation and is the UK/European headquarters of several multi-national companies, including eBay, PayPal and The Securitas Group, as well as the head offices of a number of national, regional and local businesses. London's Evening Standard has described Richmond as "the beating heart of London's growing technology industry".[34]

Places of interest

Richmond Riverside

The Thames is a major contributor to the interest that Richmond inspires in many people. It has an extensive frontage around Richmond Bridge, containing many bars and restaurants. Richmond Riverside owes much of its neo-Georgian style to the architect Quinlan Terry, who was commissioned to restore the area (1984–87). Within the river itself at this point are the leafy Corporation Island and the two small Flowerpot Islands. The Thames-side walkway provides access to residences, pubs and terraces, and various greens, lanes and footpaths through Richmond. The stretch of the Thames below Richmond Hill is known as Horse Reach and includes Glover's Island. There are towpaths and tracks along both sides of the river, and they are much used by pedestrians, joggers and cyclists. Westminster Passenger Services Association boats, licensed by London River Services, sail daily between Kew and Hampton Court Palace, calling at Richmond in each direction.

 
The Thames riverfront north of Richmond Bridge. Click the image to access the full-size 12MB panoramic version.

Richmond Green

 
Wide-angle view of the northern half of Richmond Green, showing Pembroke Villas and Portland Terrace
 
Old Palace Lane
 
Maids of Honour Row

Richmond Green, which has been described as "one of the most beautiful urban greens surviving anywhere in England",[35] is essentially square in shape and its open grassland, framed with broadleaf trees, extends to roughly twelve acres. On summer weekends and public holidays the Green attracts many residents and visitors. It has a long history of hosting sporting events; from the 16th century onwards tournaments and archery contests have taken place on the green, while cricket matches have occurred since the mid-18th century,[36] continuing to the present day. Until recently, the first recorded inter-county cricket match was believed to have been played on Richmond Green in 1730 between Surrey and Middlesex. It is now known, however, that an earlier match between Kent and Surrey took place in Dartford in 1709.[37]

To the west of the Green is Old Palace Lane, running gently down to the river. One of the oldest roads in Richmond, it was originally a route from the river, where goods were loaded and unloaded by crane, to the "tradesman's entrance" to Richmond Palace.[38] Adjoining to the left is the renowned terrace of well-preserved three-storey houses known as Maids of Honour Row. These were built in 1724 for the maids of honour (trusted royal wardrobe servants) of Queen Caroline, the queen consort of George II. As a child, the Victorian explorer Richard Burton lived at No. 2.[39]

Today the northern, western and southern sides of the Green are residential while the eastern side, linking with George Street, is largely retail and commercial. Public buildings line the eastern side of the Little Green and pubs and cafés cluster in the corner by Paved Court and Golden Court – two of a number of alleys that lead from the Green to the main commercial thoroughfare of George Street. These alleys are lined with mostly privately owned boutiques.

Richmond Hill

 
The famous south-western view from Richmond Hill, seen in early spring
 
Riverside view from Twickenham bank
 
The former Royal Star and Garter Home on Richmond Hill

Partway up Richmond Hill is the Poppy Factory, staffed mainly by disabled ex-servicemen and women, which produces the remembrance poppies sold each November for Remembrance Day.

The view from the top westward to Windsor has long been famous, inspiring paintings by masters such as J. M. W. Turner and Sir Joshua Reynolds[8] and also poetry.[8] One particularly grand description of the view can be found in Sir Walter Scott's novel The Heart of Midlothian (1818). It is a common misconception that the folk song "Lass of Richmond Hill" relates to this hill, but the young woman in the song lived in Hill House at Richmond in the Yorkshire Dales.[40]

Apart from the great rugby stadium at Twickenham and the aircraft landing and taking off from Heathrow, the scene has changed little in two hundred years. The view from Richmond Hill now forms part of the Thames Landscape Strategy which aims to protect and enhance this section of the river corridor into London.[41]

A broad, gravelled walk runs along the crest of the hill and is set back off the road, lined with benches, allowing pedestrians an uninterrupted view across the Thames valley with visitors' information boards describing points of interest. Sloping down to the River Thames are the Terrace Gardens that were laid out in the 1880s and were extended to the river some 40 years later.[42]

A commanding feature on the hill is the former Royal Star and Garter Home; in the 2010s it was sold for development and converted into residential apartments. During World War I an old hotel on this site, the Star and Garter, which had been a popular place of entertainment in the 18th and 19th centuries but had closed in 1906, was taken over and used as a military hospital.[43] After the war it was replaced by a new building providing accommodation and nursing facilities for 180 seriously injured servicemen. This was sold in 2013 after the charitable trust running the home concluded that the building no longer met modern requirements and could not be easily or economically upgraded. The trust opened an additional home in Solihull, West Midlands, and the remaining residents in Richmond moved in 2013 to a new purpose-built building in Surbiton.[44]

Richmond Park

At the top of Richmond Hill, opposite the former Royal Star and Garter Home, sits the Richmond Gate entrance to Richmond Park. The park is a national nature reserve, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, and a Special Area of Conservation. The largest of London's Royal Parks, it was created by Charles I in 1634 as a deer park and now has over 600 red and fallow deer. Richmond Gate remains open to traffic between dawn and dusk.

King Henry's Mound, a Grade II listed[45] Neolithic burial barrow,[46] is the highest point within the park. From the mound there is a protected view, established in 1710, of St Paul's Cathedral in the City of London over 10 miles (16 km) to the east. At various times the mound's name has been connected with Henry VIII or with his father Henry VII.[46] However, there is no evidence to support the legend that Henry VIII stood on the mound to watch for the sign from St Paul's that Anne Boleyn had been executed at the Tower and that he was then free to marry Jane Seymour.[46]

King Henry's Mound is in the grounds of Pembroke Lodge, which is Grade II listed.[47] In 1847 this house became the home of the then Prime Minister, Lord John Russell,[48] who conducted much government business there and entertained Queen Victoria, foreign royalty, aristocrats, writers (Dickens, Thackeray, Longfellow, Tennyson) and other notable people of the time, including Giuseppe Garibaldi. It was later the childhood home of Lord John Russell's grandson, the philosopher, mathematician and social critic Bertrand Russell. It is now a popular restaurant with views across the Thames Valley.

Also in the park and Grade II listed is Thatched House Lodge, a royal residence. Since 1963 it has been the home of Princess Alexandra, The Honourable Lady Ogilvy, a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II. During the Second World War it was the home of General Dwight D Eisenhower, who later became President of the United States.[49]

Museums and galleries

 
Richmond's Old Town Hall, which now houses Richmond Reference Library, the Museum of Richmond and the Riverside Gallery

The Museum of Richmond, in Richmond's Old Town Hall, close to Richmond Bridge, has displays relating to the history of Richmond, Ham, Petersham and Kew. Its rotating exhibitions,[50] education activities and a programme of events cover the whole of the modern borough. The museum's highlights include 16th-century glass from Richmond Palace and a painting, The Terrace and View from Richmond Hill, Surrey by Dutch draughtsman and painter Leonard Knyff (1650–1722), which is part of the Richmond upon Thames Borough Art Collection.[51] Admission to the museum is free.

The , also at the Old Town Hall, features temporary exhibitions by local artists including paintings, prints and photographs. Admission is free.

Theatres and cinemas

 
Richmond Lending Library and Richmond Theatre
 
The Cricketers on Richmond Green

Richmond has two theatres. The Richmond Theatre on Little Green is a late Victorian structure designed by Frank Matcham and restored and extended by Carl Toms in 1990. The theatre has a weekly schedule of plays and musicals, usually given by professional touring companies, and pre-West End shows can sometimes be seen. There is a Christmas and New Year pantomime tradition and many of Britain's greatest music hall and pantomime performers have appeared here.

Close to Richmond railway station is the Orange Tree Theatre which was founded in 1971 in a room above the Orange Tree pub. As audience numbers increased there was pressure to find a more accommodating space and, in 1991, the company moved to its current premises within a converted primary school. The 172-seat theatre was built specifically as a theatre in the round. Exclusively presenting its own productions, it has acquired a national reputation for the quality of its work for staging new plays, and for discovering undeservedly forgotten old plays and neglected classics.[52]

The town has two cinemas, the arthouse in Water Lane and an Odeon cinema with a total of seven screens in two locations, the foyer of one having the accolade of being the only high street building visible from Richmond Bridge, and the second set being situated nearby in Red Lion Street. The Odeon on Hill Street, built in 1930, is in Art Deco style and is Grade II listed.[53]

Pubs and bars

Numerous public houses and bars scattered throughout Richmond's town centre, and along the river and up the hill, with enough variety to cater to most tastes. One of the oldest is The Cricketers, serving beer since 1770, though the original building was burned down in 1844. It was soon replaced by the present building. Samuel Whitbread, founder of Whitbread Brewery, part-owned it with the Collins family who had a brewery in Water Lane, close to the old palace.[54] Grade II listed pubs include the White Cross,[55] the Old Ship[56] and the Britannia.[57]

Restaurants and cafes

Many of the major restaurant chains can be found within 500 metres of Richmond Bridge. There are also plenty of privately owned restaurants with culinary offerings from around the world, including French, German, Indian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Spanish and Thai.

The Bingham Riverhouse hotel[58] was awarded its first Michelin star in 2010.[59] Overlooking the Thames, it is in a Grade II listed building dating from about 1760.[60]

Societies

The Richmond Local History Society
 
AbbreviationRLHS
Formation1985[nb 2]
FounderJohn Cloake
Legal statusregistered charity (number 292907)[61]
Region served
Richmond, Kew, Petersham and Ham[61]
Membership
400
Chairman
Robert Smith[62]
Main organ
Richmond History (annual journal); The Richmond Local History Society Newsletter (three times a year)
Budget
<£11,000[63]
Staff
none
Websiterichmondhistory.org.uk
The Richmond Society
 
Formation1957
Typecivic society and conservation group
Legal statuscharitable incorporated organisation (number 1169079)[61]
Region served
Richmond, Kew, Petersham and Ham[61]
Membership
1100
Chairman
Barry May
Main organ
The Richmond Society Quarterly Newsletter[64]
Budget
£67,746[65]
Staff
none
Websiterichmondsociety.org.uk

The Richmond Local History Society explores the local history of Richmond, Kew, Petersham and Ham. It organises a programme of talks on historical topics[66] and visits to buildings of historical interest.[67] The Society publishes a newsletter three times a year, an indexed annual journal (Richmond History) and other publications.[68]

The Richmond Society is a civic society and conservation group which was founded in 1957 by a group of local residents, originally to fight against the proposal to install modern lamp posts around Richmond Green. It acts as a pressure group concerned with preserving Richmond's natural and built environment, monitoring and influencing development proposals and presenting annual awards[69][70] for buildings and other schemes which make a positive contribution to Richmond. It also organises meetings on topics of local interest and a programme of guided walks and visits, and publishes a quarterly newsletter.[64][71] Anita Anand, Professor Ian Bruce, Peter Hendy, Baron Hendy of Richmond Hill, John, Lord Lee of Trafford, Sir Trevor McDonald, Ronny, Baroness van Dedem and Lord Watson of Richmond[72] are the Society's patrons.

Richmond Opera (formerly Isleworth Baroque) holds rehearsals in Richmond and gives performances in the local area.[73][74]

Leisure activities

With a third of the borough being green and open space, Richmond has much to offer in the way of leisure activities.

Boating

Skiffs (fixed seat boats) can be hired by the hour from local boat builders close to the bridge, with opportunities to row upstream towards the historic properties Ham House and Marble Hill House. In addition, Richmond Canoe Club,[75] founded in 1944 and now Britain's biggest canoe club, is also on the towpath south of Richmond Bridge.

Cycling

Richmond is part of the London Cycle Network, offering on and off-road cycle paths throughout the area, including along the Thames towpath and in Richmond Park.[76]

Equestrian activities

 
Polo match at the Ham Polo Club

Richmond Park also has bridle paths, and horses can be rented from a number of stables around the perimeter of the park.

Ham Polo Club is on the Petersham Road at the bottom of Richmond Hill. The club was established in 1926 and is now the only polo club in London; it is popular with picnickers during the summer months.[77]

Field sports

Old Deer Park provides open recreation areas, football, rugby and other pitches, and has a leisure centre, Pools on the Park, run by the borough council, with 33m indoor and outdoor pools and a fitness centre. The park also includes the Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Club[78] with both golf and pitch and putt courses, and the Richmond Athletic Ground, home to Richmond F.C. and London Scottish rugby clubs. An additional sports ground is home to both the Richmond Cricket Club and the London Welsh Rugby Union club, as well as tennis courts and a bowling green.

The Prince's Head Cricket Club holds fixtures on Richmond Green throughout the summer.[79]

Running

5K Parkrun events take place every Saturday morning at Old Deer Park[80] and Richmond Park.[81]

Education

Demography and housing

2011 Census homes
Ward Detached Semi-detached Terraced Flats and apartments Caravans/temporary/mobile homes/houseboats Shared between households[82][1]
North Richmond 142 1,093 1,546 1,963 0 27
South Richmond 384 653 1,092 2,995 0 44
2011 Census households
Ward Population Households % Owned outright % Owned with a loan hectares[82]
North Richmond 10,649 5,168 26 30 272
South Richmond 10,820 4,047 28 24 266

German residents

The town and the borough of Richmond have been popular destinations for German expatriates and German British since at least the 19th century. Richmond resident Sir Max Waechter, a German-born businessman and advocate of a federal Europe, donated Glover's Island to the local council in 1900. The German School London opened in nearby Petersham in 1971, continuing the popularity of Richmond for German families settling in London.[83]

Transport

 
A route 190 bus in Richmond
 
The A316 road in Richmond, near Old Deer Park

Thirty per cent of Richmond households do not have a car or van. This figure is well above the borough average of 24%, which may be related to the excellent transport links in the area and the lower proportion of families as reported in the 2001 census. A half of households have one car, in line with the borough average.[84]

Tube/trains

Buses

Richmond is served by a number of Transport for London bus routes.[85]

Roads

Richmond's main arterial road, the A316, running between Chiswick and the M3 motorway, bisects Old Deer Park and the town to its north. The town's only dual carriageway, it was built in the 1930s, cutting off Richmond from Kew and entailing the construction of Twickenham Bridge. This road expands into three lanes and motorway status three and five miles west respectively.

The town centre is on the A307, which used to be the main link between London and north-west Surrey, and was previously one of the main routes of the Portsmouth Road before that was diverted; and on the A305, which runs from East Sheen and over Richmond Bridge to Twickenham.

Nearest hospitals

The nearest acute hospitals, both of which include accident & emergency units and maternity units, are:

Places of worship

Name Denomination/Affiliation Address Website Image
Bethlehem Chapel, Richmond Independent Calvinist Church Terrace, Richmond TW10 6SE website  
Christian Fellowship in Richmond Evangelical Alliance Halford House, 27 Halford Road, Richmond TW10 6AW website
Duke Street Church, Richmond Conservative Evangelicalism Duke Street, Richmond TW9 1DH website  
Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel, Richmond Strict Baptist 17 Jocelyn Road, Richmond TW9 2TJ  
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Richmond Christian Science 35 Sheen Road, Richmond TW9 1AD  
Friends Meeting House, Richmond Quakers 1 Retreat Road, Richmond TW9 1NN website
Holy Trinity, Richmond Church of England Sheen Park, Richmond TW9 1UP website  
Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, Richmond Roman Catholic 222 Sheen Road, Richmond TW10 5AN website  
Raleigh Road United Church Methodist & United Reformed Raleigh Road, Richmond TW9 2DX website  
Richmond & Putney Unitarian Church Unitarian Ormond Road, Richmond TW10 6TH website  
Richmond Synagogue Orthodox Judaism Lichfield Gardens, Richmond TW9 1AP website
St Elizabeth of Portugal Church Roman Catholic The Vineyard, Richmond TW10 6AQ website  
Chapel of St Francis, Hickey's Almshouses Church of England Sheen Road, Richmond TW9 1XB  
St John the Divine, Richmond Church of England Kew Road, Richmond TW9 2TN website  
St Mary Magdalene, Richmond Church of England Red Lion Street, Richmond TW9 1RE website  
St Matthias Church, Richmond Church of England Friars Stile Road, Richmond TW10 6PN website  
The Vineyard Life Church, Richmond Evangelical Alliance The Vineyard, Richmond TW10 6AQ website  

Almshouses

Richmond has eight groups of almshouses. They are all managed by Richmond Charities, which also manages Candler Almshouses and Wright's Almshouses in Twickenham and Colston's Almshouses and Juxon's Almshouses in Mortlake. Six are of historical interest and some were founded in the 16th century:

Name Location Number History Image
Bishop Duppa's Almshouses The Vineyard 10 almshouses The original almshouses were founded in 1661 (on Richmond Hill) by Brian Duppa, Bishop of Winchester. They were rebuilt in 1851 on the present site and are Grade II listed.  
Church Estate Almshouses Sheen Road 10 almshouses Most of the buildings, designed by William Crawford Stow and now Grade II listed, date from 1843 but the charity that built them is known to have existed in Queen Elizabeth I's time and may have much earlier origins.  
Hickey's Almshouses Between Sheen Road and St Mary's Grove 50 almshouses William Hickey, who died in 1727, left the income of several properties on Richmond Hill in trust to provide pensions for six men and ten women. In 1822 the charity's funds were boosted by a major donation by Elizabeth Doughty. Twenty almshouses, designed by Lewis Vulliamy, and a chapel and two gate lodge cottages, were built in 1834 and are Grade II* listed. The property, which includes another 29 buildings behind the almshouses, now consists of 49 flats and cottages, a laundry and a workshop.  
Houblon's Almshouses Worple Way 11 almshouses Now Grade II* listed, these were founded in 1757 by Rebecca and Susanna Houblon (who built nine almshouses). A further two almshouses were added in 1857.  
Michel's Almshouses The Vineyard 17 almshouses These were founded in the 17th century by Humphrey Michel. The original ten almshouses were built in 1696 and were rebuilt in 1811. Another six almshouses were added in 1858. They are Grade II listed.  
Queen Elizabeth's Almshouses The Vineyard 4 almshouses These were founded by Sir George Wright in 1600 (during Elizabeth I's reign) to house eight poor aged women. Known originally as the "Lower almshouses", they were built in Petersham Road, a few hundred yards south of what is now Bridge Street. By 1767, they were almost derelict. In 1767, William Turner rebuilt the almshouses on land at the top end of his estate in The Vineyard. Funds for the rebuilding were raised by public subscription. The almshouses were rebuilt again in 1857. They were damaged during World War II and replaced with four newly built houses in 1955.  

A seventh set of almshouses, Benn's Walk (now with five almshouses), was built in 1983.[86]

An eighth set of almshouses is 10–18 Manning Place (with nine almshouses), just off Queen's Road. The property was built in 1993 and was purchased by The Richmond Charities in 2017.[87]

Local newspapers

The Richmond and Twickenham Times has been published since 1873.[88] The Twickenham & Richmond Tribune, a weekly online newspaper, has been published since 2016.[89]

Notable residents

For centuries, Richmond was home to the country's royal family. It also has a long list of famous residents, both past and present.

Film locations

 
The south corner of Richmond Green

Richmond is a popular filming location. Richmond Park has featured in many films and TV series.

As well as a location for films, Richmond Park is regularly featured in television programmes, corporate videos and fashion shoots. It has made an appearance on Blue Peter, Inside Out (the BBC regional current affairs programme) and BBC Springwatch.[91] In 2014 it was featured in a video commissioned by The Hearsum Collection[97] and in 2017 in a television film featuring and narrated by David Attenborough, which was produced by the Friends of Richmond Park.[98]

The village green, divided into The Green and Little Green, has Georgian splendour, stately listed buildings and paved alleyways leading to the high street. It is a magnet for film crews, particularly when recreating a city square or row of townhouses of bygone years. In 2011, The Crimson Petal and the White was filmed there,[99] as was Downton Abbey in July 2014.[100] Many other films and TV shows have featured The Green or Little Green, including Agatha Christie's Poirot,[101] Simon Schama's Power of Art, Peter Rabbit 2[102] and the 2020 sports comedy TV series Ted Lasso.[103]

Richmond Theatre ranks as a major film location; it has featured in The Naked Truth (1957),[104] Bugsy Malone (1976), The Krays (1990), Evita (1996), Bedazzled (2000), The Hours (2002), Finding Neverland (2004)[105] and The Wolfman (2010).[106]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The London Government Act 1963 (c.33) (as amended) categorises the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames as an Outer London borough. Although it is on both sides of the River Thames, the Boundary Commission for England defines it as being in South London or the South Thames sub-region, pairing it with Kingston upon Thames for the purposes of devising constituencies. However, for the purposes of the London Plan, Richmond now lies within the West London region.
  2. ^ The Society originated as the History and Archaeology Section of The Richmond Society, launched in April 1975. It became an independent society in 1985.
    Cloake, John (July 2014). "Forty Years of Richmond History". Richmond Local History Society. Retrieved 9 September 2018.

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Further reading

External links

  • The Richmond Society
  • Richmond Local History Society
  • Royal Richmond timeline
  • "Richmond (Surrey)" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

richmond, london, richmond, town, south, west, london, miles, west, southwest, charing, cross, stands, meander, river, thames, features, many, parks, open, spaces, including, richmond, park, many, protected, conservation, areas, which, include, much, richmond,. Richmond is a town in south west London nb 1 2 3 4 5 8 2 miles 13 2 km west southwest of Charing Cross It stands on a meander of the River Thames and features many parks and open spaces including Richmond Park and many protected conservation areas 6 which include much of Richmond Hill 7 A specific Act of Parliament protects the scenic view of the River Thames from Richmond 8 RichmondRichmond RiversideRichmondLocation within Greater LondonArea5 38 km2 2 08 sq mi Population21 469 North Richmond and South Richmond wards 2011 1 Density3 991 km2 10 340 sq mi OS grid referenceTQ1874 Charing Cross8 2 mi 13 2 km ENELondon boroughRichmondCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townRICHMONDPostcode districtTW9 TW10Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentRichmond ParkLondon AssemblySouth WestList of places UK England London 51 27 22 N 0 18 04 W 51 456 N 0 301 W 51 456 0 301 Coordinates 51 27 22 N 0 18 04 W 51 456 N 0 301 W 51 456 0 301Richmond was founded following King Henry VII s building in the 16th century of Richmond Palace so named in 1501 from which the town derives its name The palace itself commemorates King Henry s earldom of Richmond North Yorkshire the original Richmond The town and palace became particularly associated with Queen Elizabeth I r 1558 1603 who spent her last days there During the 18th century Richmond Bridge connected the two banks of the Thames and many Georgian terraces were built particularly around Richmond Green and on Richmond Hill Those that have survived remain well preserved and many have been designated listed buildings on account of their architectural or historic significance The opening of Richmond railway station in 1846 was a significant event in the absorption of the town into a rapidly expanding London In 1890 the town of Richmond formerly part of the ancient parish of Kingston upon Thames in the county of Surrey became a municipal borough which later extended to include Kew Ham Petersham and part of Mortlake North Sheen 9 The municipal borough was abolished in 1965 when local government reorganisation transferred Richmond from Surrey to Greater London 10 Since 1965 Richmond has formed part of the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames As of 2011 update it had a population of 21 469 in the North Richmond and South Richmond wards It has a significant commercial and retail centre with a developed day and evening economy The name Richmond upon Thames often refers incorrectly to the town of Richmond in fact unlike the case of nearby Kingston upon Thames the suffixed form should properly apply only to the London Borough Contents 1 History 1 1 Name 1 2 Royal residence 1 3 18th and 19th century development 1 4 World Wars 2 Governance 2 1 Current 2 2 Historical 3 Geography 3 1 Nearest places 4 Economy 5 Places of interest 5 1 Richmond Riverside 5 2 Richmond Green 5 3 Richmond Hill 5 4 Richmond Park 5 5 Museums and galleries 5 6 Theatres and cinemas 5 7 Pubs and bars 5 8 Restaurants and cafes 6 Societies 7 Leisure activities 7 1 Boating 7 2 Cycling 7 3 Equestrian activities 7 4 Field sports 7 5 Running 8 Education 9 Demography and housing 9 1 German residents 10 Transport 10 1 Tube trains 10 2 Buses 10 3 Roads 11 Nearest hospitals 12 Places of worship 13 Almshouses 14 Local newspapers 15 Notable residents 16 Film locations 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 20 Further reading 21 External linksHistory EditName Edit The area was known in the medieval period as Shene a name first recorded as Sceon in the 10th century and which survives in the neighbouring districts of East Sheen also known as Sheen and North Sheen The manor entered royal hands and the manor house eventually became known as Sheen Palace before being largely destroyed by fire in 1497 Henry VII rebuilt it and in 1501 named it Richmond Palace in allusion to his earldom of Richmond and his ancestral honour of Richmond in Yorkshire The associated settlement took the same name although for some years the two names were often used in conjunction for example Shene otherwise called Richemount 11 12 Royal residence Edit Richmond Palace a view published in 1765 and based on earlier drawings Henry I lived briefly in the King s house in Sheanes In 1299 Edward I the Hammer of the Scots took his whole court to the manor house at Sheen a little east of the bridge and on the riverside and it thus became a royal residence William Wallace was executed in London in 1305 and it was in Sheen that the Commissioners from Scotland went down on their knees before Edward Edward II following his defeat by the Scots at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 founded a monastery for Carmelites at Sheen When the boy king Edward III came to the throne in 1327 he gave the manor to his mother Isabella Edward later spent over 2 000 on improvements but in the middle of the work Edward himself died at the manor in 1377 Richard II was the first English king to make Sheen his main residence which he did in 1383 Twelve years later Richard was so distraught at the death of his wife Anne of Bohemia at the age of 28 that according to Holinshed the 16th century English chronicler he caused it the manor to be thrown down and defaced whereas the former kings of this land being wearie of the citie used customarily thither to resort as to a place of pleasure and serving highly to their recreation It was rebuilt between 1414 and 1422 but destroyed by fire in 1497 13 Following that fire Henry VII built a new residence at Sheen and in 1501 he named it Richmond Palace 14 The theatre company to which Shakespeare belonged performed some plays there during the reign of Elizabeth I 14 As Queen Elizabeth spent much of her time at Richmond as she enjoyed hunting stags in the Newe Parke of Richmonde now Old Deer Park She died at the palace on 24 March 1603 15 The palace was no longer in residential use after 1649 but in 1688 James II ordered its partial reconstruction this time as a royal nursery The bulk of the palace had decayed by 1779 but surviving structures include the Wardrobe Trumpeters House built around 1700 and the Gate House built in 1501 This has five bedrooms and was made available on a 65 year lease by the Crown Estate Commissioners in 1986 18th and 19th century development Edit Georgian houses at Old Palace Terrace on Richmond Green The town s former fire station built in the late 19th century with a distinctive lantern clock tower Beyond the grounds of the old palace Richmond remained mostly agricultural land until the 18th century White Lodge in the middle of what is now Richmond Park was built as a hunting lodge for George II and during this period the number of large houses in their own grounds such as Asgill House and Pembroke Lodge increased significantly These were followed by the building of further important houses including Downe House Wick House and The Wick on Richmond Hill as this area became an increasingly fashionable place in which to live Richmond Bridge was completed in 1777 to replace a ferry crossing that connected Richmond town centre on the east bank with its neighbouring district of East Twickenham Today this bridge together with the well preserved Georgian terraces that surround Richmond Green and line Richmond Hill to its crest now has listed building status 16 As Richmond continued to prosper and expand during the 19th century much luxurious housing was built on the streets that line Richmond Hill as well as shops in the town centre to serve the increasing population In July 1892 the Corporation formed a joint stock company the Richmond Surrey Electric Light and Power Company and this wired the town for electricity by around 1896 World Wars Edit Main article Richmond War Memorial London Like many other large towns in Britain Richmond lost many young people in the First and Second World Wars In the Second World War 96 people were killed in air raids which also resulted in the demolition of 297 houses 17 The Richmond War Memorial which now commemorates both wars was installed in 1921 at the end of Whittaker Avenue between the Old Town Hall and the Riverside 18 Governance EditCurrent Edit The town of Richmond is in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames which is governed by Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council The most recent election was in May 2022 when the Liberal Democrats retained control of the council Richmond is divided into two wards North Richmond which has three Liberal Democrat councillors and South Richmond which has two Liberal Democrat councillors and one from the Green Party Richmond town forms part of the Richmond Park constituency for the UK Parliament The Member of Parliament since 2019 is Sarah Olney from the Liberal Democrats Richmond is also part of the South West constituency for the London Assembly which has been represented by Nicholas Rogers from the Conservative Party since 2021 Historical Edit Richmond earlier known as Shene was part of the large ancient parish of Kingston upon Thames in the Kingston hundred of Surrey Split off from Kingston upon Thames from an early time the parish of Richmond St Mary Magdalene formed the Municipal Borough of Richmond from 1890 19 The municipal borough was expanded in 1892 by the addition of Kew Petersham and the North Sheen part of Mortlake 9 in 1933 Ham was added to the borough 9 In 1965 the parish and municipal borough were abolished by the London Government Act 1963 which transferred Richmond to Greater London Together with the former Municipal Borough of Twickenham and the former Municipal Borough of Barnes it formed a new borough the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames 20 Geography Edit Aerial view of Richmond and East Twickenham from the north August 2015 Map of the town of Richmond Click to enlarge Richmond sits opposite East Twickenham on what is technically the south bank of the River Thames but owing to the way this stretch of the river s meanders the town is immediately north and north east of its nearest stretch of river The Thames curves around the town and then Kew in its course starting from Petersham it reverts to a more definitively west east axis The river is still tidal at Richmond so to allow major passenger and goods traffic to continue to operate during low tide a half tide lock was opened in 1894 and is used when the adjacent weir is in position This weir ensures that there is always a minimum depth of water of 5 ft 8in 1 72 m toward the middle of the river between Richmond and Teddington whatever the state of the tide Above the lock and weir there is a small footbridge Richmond is well endowed with green and open spaces accessible to the public At the heart of the town sits Richmond Green which is roughly square in shape and together with the Little Green a small supplementary green stretching from its southeast corner is 12 acres 0 05 km2 in size The Green is surrounded by well used metalled roads that provide for a fair amount of vehicle parking for both residents and visitors The south corner leads into the main shopping area of the town at the west corner is the old gate house which leads through to other remaining buildings of the palace at the north corner is pedestrian access to Old Deer Park plus vehicle access for municipal use The park is a 360 acre 1 5 km2 Crown Estate landscape extending from the town along the riverside as far as the boundary with the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew a UNESCO World Heritage Site This contains wide green lawns and sports facilities and the Grade I listed former King s Observatory erected for George III in 1769 The town s main shopping street George Street is also named after the king 21 22 Richmond Park is a national nature reserve Asgill House and Richmond Railway Bridge viewed from a houseboat The town centre lies just below 33 ft 10m above sea level South of the town centre rising from Richmond Bridge to an elevation of 165 ft 50m is Richmond Hill Just beyond the summit of Richmond Hill is Richmond Park an area of 2 360 acres 9 55 km2 3 7 sq mi of wild heath and woodland originally enclosed for hunting and now forming London s largest royal park 23 The park is a national nature reserve 24 a Site of Special Scientific Interest 25 26 and a Special Area of Conservation 27 and is included at Grade I on Historic England s Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England 28 It was created by Charles I in 1634 29 as a deer park and now has 630 red and fallow deer 30 that roam freely through much of the park The park has a number of traffic and pedestrian gates leading to the surrounding areas of Sheen Roehampton Putney Kingston and Ham Nearest places Edit Barnes Brentford East Sheen Ham Hampton Hounslow Isleworth Kew Kingston Mortlake Petersham Roehampton St Margarets Strawberry Hill Teddington Twickenham Whitton WimbledonEconomy EditThe London Borough of Richmond upon Thames of which Richmond North and South make up two of its wards has the least poverty in London 31 The town of Richmond has the largest commercial centre in the borough and is classified a major centre according to the London Plan It is an established up market shopping destination 32 Its compact centre has approximately 50 000m2 of retail floor space that is largely focused on George Street The Quadrant and Hill Street It comprises almost exclusively high street chains the largest of which are Marks amp Spencer Boots Tesco Metro and Waitrose A Whole Foods Market with 20 000 ft2 of floor space within a new development opened in 2013 33 The remaining town centre stores are largely single units Mostly independent businesses line the narrow alleyways running off George Street towards Richmond Green and up Richmond Hill and there is a farmers market in Heron Square on Saturdays Richmond has one large stand alone supermarket Sainsbury s with parking for 420 cars to the east of the town near North Sheen railway station A range of convenience shopping restaurants and cafes can be found on the crest of Richmond Hill lining Friars Stile Road as well as along Kew Road towards the Botanical Gardens and on Sheen Road Richmond also offers a wide variety of office accommodation and is the UK European headquarters of several multi national companies including eBay PayPal and The Securitas Group as well as the head offices of a number of national regional and local businesses London s Evening Standard has described Richmond as the beating heart of London s growing technology industry 34 Places of interest EditRichmond Riverside Edit The Thames is a major contributor to the interest that Richmond inspires in many people It has an extensive frontage around Richmond Bridge containing many bars and restaurants Richmond Riverside owes much of its neo Georgian style to the architect Quinlan Terry who was commissioned to restore the area 1984 87 Within the river itself at this point are the leafy Corporation Island and the two small Flowerpot Islands The Thames side walkway provides access to residences pubs and terraces and various greens lanes and footpaths through Richmond The stretch of the Thames below Richmond Hill is known as Horse Reach and includes Glover s Island There are towpaths and tracks along both sides of the river and they are much used by pedestrians joggers and cyclists Westminster Passenger Services Association boats licensed by London River Services sail daily between Kew and Hampton Court Palace calling at Richmond in each direction The Thames riverfront north of Richmond Bridge Click the image to access the full size 12MB panoramic version Richmond Green Edit Main article Richmond Green Wide angle view of the northern half of Richmond Green showing Pembroke Villas and Portland Terrace Old Palace Lane Maids of Honour Row Richmond Green which has been described as one of the most beautiful urban greens surviving anywhere in England 35 is essentially square in shape and its open grassland framed with broadleaf trees extends to roughly twelve acres On summer weekends and public holidays the Green attracts many residents and visitors It has a long history of hosting sporting events from the 16th century onwards tournaments and archery contests have taken place on the green while cricket matches have occurred since the mid 18th century 36 continuing to the present day Until recently the first recorded inter county cricket match was believed to have been played on Richmond Green in 1730 between Surrey and Middlesex It is now known however that an earlier match between Kent and Surrey took place in Dartford in 1709 37 To the west of the Green is Old Palace Lane running gently down to the river One of the oldest roads in Richmond it was originally a route from the river where goods were loaded and unloaded by crane to the tradesman s entrance to Richmond Palace 38 Adjoining to the left is the renowned terrace of well preserved three storey houses known as Maids of Honour Row These were built in 1724 for the maids of honour trusted royal wardrobe servants of Queen Caroline the queen consort of George II As a child the Victorian explorer Richard Burton lived at No 2 39 Today the northern western and southern sides of the Green are residential while the eastern side linking with George Street is largely retail and commercial Public buildings line the eastern side of the Little Green and pubs and cafes cluster in the corner by Paved Court and Golden Court two of a number of alleys that lead from the Green to the main commercial thoroughfare of George Street These alleys are lined with mostly privately owned boutiques Richmond Hill Edit Main article Richmond Hill London The famous south western view from Richmond Hill seen in early spring Riverside view from Twickenham bank The former Royal Star and Garter Home on Richmond Hill Partway up Richmond Hill is the Poppy Factory staffed mainly by disabled ex servicemen and women which produces the remembrance poppies sold each November for Remembrance Day The view from the top westward to Windsor has long been famous inspiring paintings by masters such as J M W Turner and Sir Joshua Reynolds 8 and also poetry 8 One particularly grand description of the view can be found in Sir Walter Scott s novel The Heart of Midlothian 1818 It is a common misconception that the folk song Lass of Richmond Hill relates to this hill but the young woman in the song lived in Hill House at Richmond in the Yorkshire Dales 40 Apart from the great rugby stadium at Twickenham and the aircraft landing and taking off from Heathrow the scene has changed little in two hundred years The view from Richmond Hill now forms part of the Thames Landscape Strategy which aims to protect and enhance this section of the river corridor into London 41 A broad gravelled walk runs along the crest of the hill and is set back off the road lined with benches allowing pedestrians an uninterrupted view across the Thames valley with visitors information boards describing points of interest Sloping down to the River Thames are the Terrace Gardens that were laid out in the 1880s and were extended to the river some 40 years later 42 A commanding feature on the hill is the former Royal Star and Garter Home in the 2010s it was sold for development and converted into residential apartments During World War I an old hotel on this site the Star and Garter which had been a popular place of entertainment in the 18th and 19th centuries but had closed in 1906 was taken over and used as a military hospital 43 After the war it was replaced by a new building providing accommodation and nursing facilities for 180 seriously injured servicemen This was sold in 2013 after the charitable trust running the home concluded that the building no longer met modern requirements and could not be easily or economically upgraded The trust opened an additional home in Solihull West Midlands and the remaining residents in Richmond moved in 2013 to a new purpose built building in Surbiton 44 Richmond Park Edit Main article Richmond Park Fallow deer in Richmond Park At the top of Richmond Hill opposite the former Royal Star and Garter Home sits the Richmond Gate entrance to Richmond Park The park is a national nature reserve a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a Special Area of Conservation The largest of London s Royal Parks it was created by Charles I in 1634 as a deer park and now has over 600 red and fallow deer Richmond Gate remains open to traffic between dawn and dusk King Henry s Mound a Grade II listed 45 Neolithic burial barrow 46 is the highest point within the park From the mound there is a protected view established in 1710 of St Paul s Cathedral in the City of London over 10 miles 16 km to the east At various times the mound s name has been connected with Henry VIII or with his father Henry VII 46 However there is no evidence to support the legend that Henry VIII stood on the mound to watch for the sign from St Paul s that Anne Boleyn had been executed at the Tower and that he was then free to marry Jane Seymour 46 King Henry s Mound is in the grounds of Pembroke Lodge which is Grade II listed 47 In 1847 this house became the home of the then Prime Minister Lord John Russell 48 who conducted much government business there and entertained Queen Victoria foreign royalty aristocrats writers Dickens Thackeray Longfellow Tennyson and other notable people of the time including Giuseppe Garibaldi It was later the childhood home of Lord John Russell s grandson the philosopher mathematician and social critic Bertrand Russell It is now a popular restaurant with views across the Thames Valley Also in the park and Grade II listed is Thatched House Lodge a royal residence Since 1963 it has been the home of Princess Alexandra The Honourable Lady Ogilvy a cousin of Queen Elizabeth II During the Second World War it was the home of General Dwight D Eisenhower who later became President of the United States 49 Museums and galleries Edit Richmond s Old Town Hall which now houses Richmond Reference Library the Museum of Richmond and the Riverside Gallery Main article Museum of Richmond The Museum of Richmond in Richmond s Old Town Hall close to Richmond Bridge has displays relating to the history of Richmond Ham Petersham and Kew Its rotating exhibitions 50 education activities and a programme of events cover the whole of the modern borough The museum s highlights include 16th century glass from Richmond Palace and a painting The Terrace and View from Richmond Hill Surrey by Dutch draughtsman and painter Leonard Knyff 1650 1722 which is part of the Richmond upon Thames Borough Art Collection 51 Admission to the museum is free The Riverside Gallery also at the Old Town Hall features temporary exhibitions by local artists including paintings prints and photographs Admission is free Theatres and cinemas Edit Richmond Lending Library and Richmond Theatre The Cricketers on Richmond Green Richmond has two theatres The Richmond Theatre on Little Green is a late Victorian structure designed by Frank Matcham and restored and extended by Carl Toms in 1990 The theatre has a weekly schedule of plays and musicals usually given by professional touring companies and pre West End shows can sometimes be seen There is a Christmas and New Year pantomime tradition and many of Britain s greatest music hall and pantomime performers have appeared here Close to Richmond railway station is the Orange Tree Theatre which was founded in 1971 in a room above the Orange Tree pub As audience numbers increased there was pressure to find a more accommodating space and in 1991 the company moved to its current premises within a converted primary school The 172 seat theatre was built specifically as a theatre in the round Exclusively presenting its own productions it has acquired a national reputation for the quality of its work for staging new plays and for discovering undeservedly forgotten old plays and neglected classics 52 The town has two cinemas the arthouse Curzon in Water Lane and an Odeon cinema with a total of seven screens in two locations the foyer of one having the accolade of being the only high street building visible from Richmond Bridge and the second set being situated nearby in Red Lion Street The Odeon on Hill Street built in 1930 is in Art Deco style and is Grade II listed 53 Pubs and bars Edit Numerous public houses and bars scattered throughout Richmond s town centre and along the river and up the hill with enough variety to cater to most tastes One of the oldest is The Cricketers serving beer since 1770 though the original building was burned down in 1844 It was soon replaced by the present building Samuel Whitbread founder of Whitbread Brewery part owned it with the Collins family who had a brewery in Water Lane close to the old palace 54 Grade II listed pubs include the White Cross 55 the Old Ship 56 and the Britannia 57 Restaurants and cafes Edit Many of the major restaurant chains can be found within 500 metres of Richmond Bridge There are also plenty of privately owned restaurants with culinary offerings from around the world including French German Indian Japanese Korean Russian Spanish and Thai The Bingham Riverhouse hotel 58 was awarded its first Michelin star in 2010 59 Overlooking the Thames it is in a Grade II listed building dating from about 1760 60 Societies EditThe Richmond Local History Society AbbreviationRLHSFormation1985 nb 2 FounderJohn CloakeLegal statusregistered charity number 292907 61 Region servedRichmond Kew Petersham and Ham 61 Membership400ChairmanRobert Smith 62 Main organRichmond History annual journal The Richmond Local History Society Newsletter three times a year Budget lt 11 000 63 StaffnoneWebsiterichmondhistory wbr org wbr ukThe Richmond Society Formation1957Typecivic society and conservation groupLegal statuscharitable incorporated organisation number 1169079 61 Region servedRichmond Kew Petersham and Ham 61 Membership1100ChairmanBarry MayMain organThe Richmond Society Quarterly Newsletter 64 Budget 67 746 65 StaffnoneWebsiterichmondsociety wbr org wbr uk The Richmond Local History Society explores the local history of Richmond Kew Petersham and Ham It organises a programme of talks on historical topics 66 and visits to buildings of historical interest 67 The Society publishes a newsletter three times a year an indexed annual journal Richmond History and other publications 68 The Richmond Society is a civic society and conservation group which was founded in 1957 by a group of local residents originally to fight against the proposal to install modern lamp posts around Richmond Green It acts as a pressure group concerned with preserving Richmond s natural and built environment monitoring and influencing development proposals and presenting annual awards 69 70 for buildings and other schemes which make a positive contribution to Richmond It also organises meetings on topics of local interest and a programme of guided walks and visits and publishes a quarterly newsletter 64 71 Anita Anand Professor Ian Bruce Peter Hendy Baron Hendy of Richmond Hill John Lord Lee of Trafford Sir Trevor McDonald Ronny Baroness van Dedem and Lord Watson of Richmond 72 are the Society s patrons Richmond Opera formerly Isleworth Baroque holds rehearsals in Richmond and gives performances in the local area 73 74 Leisure activities EditWith a third of the borough being green and open space Richmond has much to offer in the way of leisure activities Boating Edit Skiffs fixed seat boats can be hired by the hour from local boat builders close to the bridge with opportunities to row upstream towards the historic properties Ham House and Marble Hill House In addition Richmond Canoe Club 75 founded in 1944 and now Britain s biggest canoe club is also on the towpath south of Richmond Bridge Cycling Edit Richmond is part of the London Cycle Network offering on and off road cycle paths throughout the area including along the Thames towpath and in Richmond Park 76 Equestrian activities Edit Polo match at the Ham Polo Club Richmond Park also has bridle paths and horses can be rented from a number of stables around the perimeter of the park Ham Polo Club is on the Petersham Road at the bottom of Richmond Hill The club was established in 1926 and is now the only polo club in London it is popular with picnickers during the summer months 77 Field sports Edit Old Deer Park provides open recreation areas football rugby and other pitches and has a leisure centre Pools on the Park run by the borough council with 33m indoor and outdoor pools and a fitness centre The park also includes the Royal Mid Surrey Golf Club 78 with both golf and pitch and putt courses and the Richmond Athletic Ground home to Richmond F C and London Scottish rugby clubs An additional sports ground is home to both the Richmond Cricket Club and the London Welsh Rugby Union club as well as tennis courts and a bowling green The Prince s Head Cricket Club holds fixtures on Richmond Green throughout the summer 79 Running Edit 5K Parkrun events take place every Saturday morning at Old Deer Park 80 and Richmond Park 81 Education EditMain article List of schools and colleges in Richmond upon ThamesDemography and housing Edit2011 Census homes Ward Detached Semi detached Terraced Flats and apartments Caravans temporary mobile homes houseboats Shared between households 82 1 North Richmond 142 1 093 1 546 1 963 0 27South Richmond 384 653 1 092 2 995 0 442011 Census households Ward Population Households Owned outright Owned with a loan hectares 82 North Richmond 10 649 5 168 26 30 272South Richmond 10 820 4 047 28 24 266German residents Edit The town and the borough of Richmond have been popular destinations for German expatriates and German British since at least the 19th century Richmond resident Sir Max Waechter a German born businessman and advocate of a federal Europe donated Glover s Island to the local council in 1900 The German School London opened in nearby Petersham in 1971 continuing the popularity of Richmond for German families settling in London 83 Transport Edit A route 190 bus in Richmond The A316 road in Richmond near Old Deer Park Thirty per cent of Richmond households do not have a car or van This figure is well above the borough average of 24 which may be related to the excellent transport links in the area and the lower proportion of families as reported in the 2001 census A half of households have one car in line with the borough average 84 Tube trains Edit Richmond station District line towards Kew Gardens and Upminster London Overground towards Kew Gardens Willesden Junction and Stratford Waterloo to Reading line and three branch line services call at the station en route to Windsor and Weybridge One service calls at Richmond station on its return to the central London terminus via Kingston upon Thames North Sheen station Waterloo to Reading lineBuses Edit Richmond is served by a number of Transport for London bus routes 85 Roads Edit Richmond s main arterial road the A316 running between Chiswick and the M3 motorway bisects Old Deer Park and the town to its north The town s only dual carriageway it was built in the 1930s cutting off Richmond from Kew and entailing the construction of Twickenham Bridge This road expands into three lanes and motorway status three and five miles west respectively The town centre is on the A307 which used to be the main link between London and north west Surrey and was previously one of the main routes of the Portsmouth Road before that was diverted and on the A305 which runs from East Sheen and over Richmond Bridge to Twickenham Nearest hospitals EditRichmond Royal Hospital on Kew Foot Road in Richmond is a former mental health facility operated by South West London and St George s Mental Health NHS Trust The main part of the hospital is being converted into luxury apartments however the Rehabilitation Unit remains operational Queen Mary s Hospital Roehampton is a community hospital in Roehampton in the London Borough of Wandsworth It is run by St George s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust The nearest acute hospitals both of which include accident amp emergency units and maternity units are Kingston Hospital in Kingston upon Thames which is managed by the Kingston Hospital NHS Foundation Trust West Middlesex Hospital in Isleworth which is operated by the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Places of worship EditName Denomination Affiliation Address Website ImageBethlehem Chapel Richmond Independent Calvinist Church Terrace Richmond TW10 6SE website Christian Fellowship in Richmond Evangelical Alliance Halford House 27 Halford Road Richmond TW10 6AW websiteDuke Street Church Richmond Conservative Evangelicalism Duke Street Richmond TW9 1DH website Ebenezer Strict Baptist Chapel Richmond Strict Baptist 17 Jocelyn Road Richmond TW9 2TJ First Church of Christ Scientist Richmond Christian Science 35 Sheen Road Richmond TW9 1AD website Friends Meeting House Richmond Quakers 1 Retreat Road Richmond TW9 1NN websiteHoly Trinity Richmond Church of England Sheen Park Richmond TW9 1UP website Our Lady Queen of Peace Church Richmond Roman Catholic 222 Sheen Road Richmond TW10 5AN website Raleigh Road United Church Methodist amp United Reformed Raleigh Road Richmond TW9 2DX website Richmond amp Putney Unitarian Church Unitarian Ormond Road Richmond TW10 6TH website Richmond Synagogue Orthodox Judaism Lichfield Gardens Richmond TW9 1AP websiteSt Elizabeth of Portugal Church Roman Catholic The Vineyard Richmond TW10 6AQ website Chapel of St Francis Hickey s Almshouses Church of England Sheen Road Richmond TW9 1XB St John the Divine Richmond Church of England Kew Road Richmond TW9 2TN website St Mary Magdalene Richmond Church of England Red Lion Street Richmond TW9 1RE website St Matthias Church Richmond Church of England Friars Stile Road Richmond TW10 6PN website The Vineyard Life Church Richmond Evangelical Alliance The Vineyard Richmond TW10 6AQ website Almshouses EditRichmond has eight groups of almshouses They are all managed by Richmond Charities which also manages Candler Almshouses and Wright s Almshouses in Twickenham and Colston s Almshouses and Juxon s Almshouses in Mortlake Six are of historical interest and some were founded in the 16th century Name Location Number History ImageBishop Duppa s Almshouses The Vineyard 10 almshouses The original almshouses were founded in 1661 on Richmond Hill by Brian Duppa Bishop of Winchester They were rebuilt in 1851 on the present site and are Grade II listed Church Estate Almshouses Sheen Road 10 almshouses Most of the buildings designed by William Crawford Stow and now Grade II listed date from 1843 but the charity that built them is known to have existed in Queen Elizabeth I s time and may have much earlier origins Hickey s Almshouses Between Sheen Road and St Mary s Grove 50 almshouses William Hickey who died in 1727 left the income of several properties on Richmond Hill in trust to provide pensions for six men and ten women In 1822 the charity s funds were boosted by a major donation by Elizabeth Doughty Twenty almshouses designed by Lewis Vulliamy and a chapel and two gate lodge cottages were built in 1834 and are Grade II listed The property which includes another 29 buildings behind the almshouses now consists of 49 flats and cottages a laundry and a workshop Houblon s Almshouses Worple Way 11 almshouses Now Grade II listed these were founded in 1757 by Rebecca and Susanna Houblon who built nine almshouses A further two almshouses were added in 1857 Michel s Almshouses The Vineyard 17 almshouses These were founded in the 17th century by Humphrey Michel The original ten almshouses were built in 1696 and were rebuilt in 1811 Another six almshouses were added in 1858 They are Grade II listed Queen Elizabeth s Almshouses The Vineyard 4 almshouses These were founded by Sir George Wright in 1600 during Elizabeth I s reign to house eight poor aged women Known originally as the Lower almshouses they were built in Petersham Road a few hundred yards south of what is now Bridge Street By 1767 they were almost derelict In 1767 William Turner rebuilt the almshouses on land at the top end of his estate in The Vineyard Funds for the rebuilding were raised by public subscription The almshouses were rebuilt again in 1857 They were damaged during World War II and replaced with four newly built houses in 1955 A seventh set of almshouses Benn s Walk now with five almshouses was built in 1983 86 An eighth set of almshouses is 10 18 Manning Place with nine almshouses just off Queen s Road The property was built in 1993 and was purchased by The Richmond Charities in 2017 87 Local newspapers EditThe Richmond and Twickenham Times has been published since 1873 88 The Twickenham amp Richmond Tribune a weekly online newspaper has been published since 2016 89 Notable residents EditFor centuries Richmond was home to the country s royal family It also has a long list of famous residents both past and present List of current and former residents of Richmond upon ThamesFilm locations Edit White Lodge in Richmond Park home of the Royal Ballet School The south corner of Richmond Green Richmond is a popular filming location Richmond Park has featured in many films and TV series A locomotive runs through the park and crashes into a tree in the film The Titfield Thunderbolt 1955 90 In the 1968 film Performance James Fox crosses Richmond Park in a Rolls Royce car 90 The park was the backdrop for the classic historical film Anne of the Thousand Days 1969 91 with Richard Burton and Genevieve Bujold which looks back to Richmond Park in the 16th century The film tells the story of King Henry VIII s courtship of Anne Boleyn and their brief marriage An Indian dust storm was filmed in the park for the film Heat and Dust 1983 90 The Royal Ballet School in Richmond Park featured in the film Billy Elliot 2000 90 92 In 2010 director Guy Ritchie filmed parts of Sherlock Holmes A Game of Shadows 2011 in the park with Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law 93 Some of the scenes from Into the Woods 2014 the Disney fantasy film featuring Meryl Streep 94 were filmed in the park 95 96 As well as a location for films Richmond Park is regularly featured in television programmes corporate videos and fashion shoots It has made an appearance on Blue Peter Inside Out the BBC regional current affairs programme and BBC Springwatch 91 In 2014 it was featured in a video commissioned by The Hearsum Collection 97 and in 2017 in a television film featuring and narrated by David Attenborough which was produced by the Friends of Richmond Park 98 The village green divided into The Green and Little Green has Georgian splendour stately listed buildings and paved alleyways leading to the high street It is a magnet for film crews particularly when recreating a city square or row of townhouses of bygone years In 2011 The Crimson Petal and the White was filmed there 99 as was Downton Abbey in July 2014 100 Many other films and TV shows have featured The Green or Little Green including Agatha Christie s Poirot 101 Simon Schama s Power of Art Peter Rabbit 2 102 and the 2020 sports comedy TV series Ted Lasso 103 Richmond Theatre ranks as a major film location it has featured in The Naked Truth 1957 104 Bugsy Malone 1976 The Krays 1990 Evita 1996 Bedazzled 2000 The Hours 2002 Finding Neverland 2004 105 and The Wolfman 2010 106 See also EditPortal London List of people in Richmond town and Richmond ParkNotes Edit The London Government Act 1963 c 33 as amended categorises the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames as an Outer London borough Although it is on both sides of the River Thames the Boundary Commission for England defines it as being in South London or the South Thames sub region pairing it with Kingston upon Thames for the purposes of devising constituencies However for the purposes of the London Plan Richmond now lies within the West London region The Society originated as the History and Archaeology Section of The Richmond Society launched in April 1975 It became an independent society in 1985 Cloake John July 2014 Forty Years of Richmond History Richmond Local History Society Retrieved 9 September 2018 References Edit a b Census Information Scheme 2012 2011 Census Ward Population Estimates Greater London Authority Retrieved 30 January 2013 London Government Act 1963 c 33 as amended Office of Public Sector Information Retrieved 26 July 2017 London Initial proposals summary PDF Boundary Commission for England September 2016 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Fifth Periodical Report Cm 7032B PDF Boundary Commission for England March 2007 ISBN 9780101703222 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Mayor of London April 2009 A new plan for London Proposals for the Mayor s London Plan PDF Greater London Authority Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2011 Retrieved 14 July 2020 Conservation Areas PDF London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 12 December 2022 Richmond Hill Conservation Area 5 PDF London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Archived from the original PDF on 10 November 2013 Retrieved 31 January 2014 a b c Richmond Libraries Local Studies Collection 22 October 2020 The view from Richmond Hill London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 4 December 2022 a b c Great Britain Historical GIS University of Portsmouth Richmond MB historic map Retrieved accessdate Young K amp Garside P 1982 Metropolitan London Politics and Urban Change 1837 1981 London Edward Arnold ISBN 9780713163315 Richmond in Encyclopaedia Britannica 9th edition 1881 s v Gover J E B Mawer A Stenton F M 1934 The Place Names of Surrey English Place Name Society Vol 11 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 65 66 Goringe Marcus 12 July 2016 Richmond the lost palace The National Archives United Kingdom Retrieved 23 July 2018 a b Richmond Palace London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Local History notes Retrieved 30 August 2022 Black J B 1945 1936 The Reign of Elizabeth 1558 1603 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 410 411 OCLC 5077207 Listed Buildings Register PDF London Borough of Richmond upon Thames 14 October 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2023 Fowler Simon 2015 Richmond at War 1939 1945 Richmond Local History Society p 90 ISBN 978 0 9550717 8 2 Historic England 20 July 2017 Richmond upon Thames Borough War Memorial 1447856 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 31 July 2020 GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth History of Richmond in Richmond upon Thames and Surrey A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 15 December 2021 London Government Act 1963 legislation gov uk Retrieved 1 November 2020 Dunbar Janet 1977 1973 A Prospect of Richmond George G Harrap and Co pp 199 209 ISBN 9780856179952 The Streets of Richmond and Kew Fourth ed Richmond Local History Society 2022 p 47 Map of Richmond Park The Royal Parks Retrieved 16 November 2022 Greater London s National Nature Reserves Natural England 12 November 2021 Retrieved 12 December 2022 Richmond Park PDF Citation Natural England 1992 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Map of Richmond Park SSSI Natural England Retrieved 3 January 2018 Richmond Park Joint Nature Conservation Committee Retrieved 3 December 2012 Historic England 1 October 1987 Richmond Park 1000828 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 14 July 2020 Historic England 2015 Richmond Park 397979 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 18 May 2015 Deer in Richmond Park The Royal Parks Retrieved 20 May 2015 Department for Work and Pensions Archived 2 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2001 Census statistics Retrieved 25 September 2011 Richmond Business Property and sites London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Archived from the original on 23 June 2016 Retrieved 21 May 2016 Butler Sarah 27 February 2015 Whole Foods Market halves its UK losses The Guardian Retrieved 27 February 2018 Richmond revealed as new tech hotspot Evening Standard 21 October 2013 Retrieved 25 July 2017 Cherry Bridget and Pevsner Nikolaus 1983 The Buildings of England London 2 South London Penguin Books p 521 ISBN 978 0 14 0710 47 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Richmond Libraries Local Studies Collection 10 February 2020 Richmond Green properties London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 3 December 2020 CricketArchive Robinson Derek Fowler Simon 2020 Old Palace Lane Medieval to Modern Richmond 2nd ed Richmond Local History Society and Museum of Richmond ISBN 978 1 912 314027 Sir Richard and Lady Isabel Burton 1831 1896 Local history notes London Borough of Richmond upon Thames 20 September 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 The Lass of Richmond Hill I Anson International Retrieved 31 January 2014 Thames Landscape Strategy Retrieved 30 December 2017 Historic England 24 August 2002 Terrace and Buccleuch Gardens 1001551 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 22 July 2020 Royal Star and Garter Home Lost Hospitals of London Retrieved 14 May 2014 Sharman Jon 29 August 2013 Residents move into new Royal Star and Garter home in Surbiton Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 13 August 2015 Historic England 27 May 2020 King Henry VIII s Mound Richmond Park 1457267 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 September 2020 a b c Cloake John 2014 Sheene Chase and King Henry VIII s Mound two incorrect myths concerning Richmond Park Richmond History The Journal of Richmond History Society 35 38 40 Historic England 25 May 1983 Pembroke Lodge 1263437 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 January 2016 Fletcher Jones Pamela 1972 Richmond Park Portrait of a Royal Playground Phillimore amp Co Ltd p 41 ISBN 978 0 8503 3497 5 Weinreb Ben Hibbert Christopher Keay Julia Keay John 1983 Thatched House Lodge The London Encyclopaedia London Macmillan p 914 ISBN 978 1 4050 4924 5 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Farquharson Hannah 7 April 2006 Elizabeth I letter among museum gems Richmond and Twickenham Times London Retrieved 8 May 2023 The Terrace and View from Richmond Hill Surrey Art UK Retrieved 20 March 2016 About Us Orange Tree Theatre Retrieved 21 May 2016 Historic England 26 March 1990 Odeon Cinema Hill Street 1254263 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 1 January 2022 Richmond Green properties Brewers Lane to Paved Court Greenside Local history notes 22 October 2020 London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 3 December 2020 Historic England 25 May 1983 White Cross Hotel 1250279 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 May 2015 Historic England 25 June 1983 Old Ship public house 1286531 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 May 2015 Historic England 25 June 1983 Britannia public house 1358054 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 May 2015 Bingham Riverhouse The full list of 2010 Michelin star restaurants in the UK Design Restaurants 11 February 2010 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Historic England 10 January 1950 Bingham House Hotel 1065332 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 14 July 2020 a b c d Find charities Charity Commission Retrieved 6 November 2013 Merry Christmas to all Richmond and Twickenham Times readers Richmond and Twickenham Times 25 December 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Richmond Local History Society Charity Commission 31 December 2019 Retrieved 16 November 2020 a b Newsletter The Richmond Society Retrieved 16 August 2020 Trustees Report and Unaudited Financial Statements for the Year Ended 30 September 2020 PDF The Richmond Society 25 November 2020 Retrieved 16 February 2021 Cox Laura 8 March 2015 Richmond Local History Society jazzing things up for new talk Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 8 May 2023 Hebert Gail 15 January 2009 Richmond s Victorian Gothic gem Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 29 January 2018 Website home page Richmond Local History Society Retrieved 16 November 2022 Richmond Society hands out yearly good the bad and the ugly awards Richmond and Twickenham Times 31 October 2010 Retrieved 20 December 2012 Royal Park wins Richmond Society Award The Royal Parks 19 August 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2023 The Richmond Society The Richmond Society Retrieved 18 December 2020 New Richmond Society Patron Anita Anand PDF Twickenham and Richmond Tribune No 248 7 August 2021 p 9 Retrieved 8 August 2021 About Richmond Opera Richmond Opera 18 April 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2019 Isleworth Baroque Richmond Opera Retrieved 10 February 2019 Richmond Canoe Club Cycling in Richmond VisitRichmond London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 8 May 2023 Nostalgia Polo s glamorous survivor in Ham Richmond and Twickenham Times 4 September 2008 Retrieved 1 November 2020 Royal Mid Surrey Golf Club Prince s Head CC Play Cricket Retrieved 30 August 2022 Old Deer Park parkrun Parkrun UK Retrieved 4 December 2022 Richmond parkrun Parkrun UK Retrieved 30 August 2022 a b Neighbourhood statistics Office for National Statistics Moore Fiona 2012 The German School in London UK Fostering the Next Generation of National Cosmopolitans Chapter 4 in Coles Anne and Fechter Anne Meike editors Gender and Family Among Transnational Professionals Routledge International Studies of Women and Place Routledge ISBN 1134156200 ISBN 9781134156207 GLA Intelligence January 2014 2011 Census snapshot Car and Van Availability PDF Census Information Scheme 14 Bayley Sian 7 December 2020 Shake up of multiple bus routes in Richmond and beyond Richmond Nub News Retrieved 24 April 2021 Benn s Walk Almshouses Richmond Charities Retrieved 13 December 2018 Manning Place Richmond Charities Retrieved 3 January 2019 History of the Richmond amp Twickenham Times Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 8 December 2015 Twickenham amp Richmond Tribune Twickenham amp Richmond Tribune Retrieved 14 July 2020 a b c d Barber Sue Heath Phillippa 2009 Boyes Valerie ed Richmond on Screen Feature Films Shot in the Borough Museum of Richmond p 27 a b Richmond Park in film About Richmond Park The Royal Parks Retrieved 25 July 2017 Lydall Ross 3 February 2005 Billy Elliot v the badgers Evening Standard London Retrieved 18 October 2013 Richmond Park transformed into gypsy camp as Sherlock Holmes sequel starring Robert Downey Jr as Sherlock and Jude Law as Dr Watson is filmed Richmond and Twickenham Times 18 October 2010 Retrieved 25 September 2013 Vincent Alice 27 September 2013 Meryl Streep in Into The Woods first look The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 13 February 2014 Meryl Streep Oscar Isaac Sundance festival National Trust film locations The Film Programme BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 13 February 2014 Streep praises magical park Richmond and Twickenham Times 7 February 2014 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The Heritage Pavilion Video YouTube 11 November 2004 Retrieved 3 February 2015 Rutter Calum 26 April 2017 Sir David Attenborough s new film about Richmond Park asks its millions of visitors to tread lightly Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 4 May 2017 Lewis Sue Hillman Sarah October 2010 Richmond Stars PDF Filmrichmond 2 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 6 February 2016 Lewis Sue Hillman Sarah November 2014 Richmond Stars PDF Filmrichmond 2 Retrieved 13 December 2014 Richmond Green Film TV Location VisitRichmond London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Retrieved 8 December 2017 Krause Riley 29 March 2019 Peter Rabbit 2 will be filming in Richmond next week Richmond and Twickenham Times Retrieved 6 April 2019 Ted Lasso 2020 Official trailer 2020 Wilkinson Phil Tunstill John Naked Truth The Reel Streets Retrieved 29 January 2018 Wednesday 18th December Finding Neverland PDF Programme of Films Talks and Events September December 2013 Museum of Richmond Retrieved 4 October 2013 Lewis Sue Hillman Sarah Summer 2008 Richmond Stars PDF Filmrichmond 2 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 10 March 2015 Further reading EditCloake John 1982 The Growth of Richmond Richmond Society History Section ISBN 978 0950819808 Cloake John 1990 Richmond s Great Monastery The Charterhouse of Jesus of Bethlehem of Shene Richmond Local History Society ISBN 0 9508198 6 7 Cloake John 1991 Richmond Past A Visual History of Richmond Kew Petersham and Ham London Historical Publications ISBN 0 948667 14 1 Recounts the history of the Richmond area including Kew Petersham and Ham from 1501 and is illustrated with drawings paintings and photographs Cloake John 1995 The Palaces and Parks of Richmond and Kew vol I The Palaces of Shene and Richmond Chichester Phillimore amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 0 850339 76 5 OCLC 940979634 Cloake John 1996 The Palaces and Parks of Richmond and Kew vol II Richmond Lodge and the Kew Palaces Chichester Phillimore amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 1 860770 23 4 OCLC 36045530 OL 8627654M Cloake John 2001 Cottages and Common Fields of Richmond and Kew Chichester Phillimore amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 1 8607719 5 8 Cloake John 2001 Richmond Palace Its History and Its Plan Richmond Local History Society ISBN 978 0 9522099 6 6 Fowler Simon 2015 Richmond at War 1939 1945 Richmond Local History Society ISBN 978 0 9550717 8 2 Fowler Simon 2017 Poverty and Philanthropy in Victorian Richmond Richmond Local History Society ISBN 978 1 9123140 0 3 Richmond Local History Society Fourth edition 2022 The Streets of Richmond and Kew ISBN 978 1 9123140 3 4 Robinson Derek Fowler Simon Second edition 2020 Old Palace Lane Medieval to Modern Richmond Richmond Local History Society and Museum of Richmond ISBN 978 1 9123140 2 7 Walford Edward 1883 Richmond Greater London London Cassell amp Co OCLC 3009761 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Borough of Richmond upon Thames Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richmond London Wikivoyage has a travel guide for London Richmond Kew The Richmond Society Richmond Local History Society Royal Richmond timeline Richmond Surrey Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richmond London amp oldid 1153790927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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