RichmondRound

The day Richmond Park went to the people

On a drizzly Saturday in October 1987, more than 20,000 residents walked through the gates of Richmond Park. They were not there to admire the deer or walk the Pen Ponds. They were there to stop a motorway.

The park had been earmarked for a six-lane highway cutting from Kingston to Petersham. Plans showed slip roads and flyovers through ancient woodland. The outcry was immediate. Petitions circulated in pubs and post offices. School children wrote letters. Pensioners who had never protested anything before turned up with umbrellas and banners.

The march wound from Richmond Gate to Pembroke Lodge. There were prams, dogs, toddlers on shoulders. A local MP gave a short speech. No one remembers exactly what he said, but everyone remembers the rain and the sheer weight of numbers.

The motorway never happened. The plans were quietly shelved within months. Today, roses bloom along the park’s quiet paths. You can still walk from gate to gate without crossing tarmac wider than a country lane. Sometimes a place is worth standing in the rain for.

Do you remember that march, or another moment the borough came together?

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When George Street had room to breathe

Stand at the top of George Street in Richmond and you’re looking at tarmac. Rows of parked cars. A multi-storey. Nothing remarkable. Wind back a century and you’d be standing in a wide, open thoroughfare. No white lines. No ticket machines. Just cobbles, carts, and the occasional motor car still a novelty worth stopping to […]

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The places we keep coming back to

There’s a horse chestnut on Vineyard Passage that drops conkers every autumn. You might have climbed it once, or your children might climb it now. Either way, it’s still there. Richmond and its neighbourhoods hold these quiet anchors. The low wall outside the post office where you sat with a friend. The gap in the […]

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When the May Fair came to Richmond Green

Richmond Green once hosted a proper May Fair every spring. Stalls lined the edges. Coconut shies, sweet vendors, and a small carousel that squeaked as it turned. Children ran between the canvas tents while their parents queued for tea. The fair arrived the same week each year, usually when the hawthorn was in bloom. By […]

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The lights that never quite left

George Street dressed itself in strings of white bulbs last week, the kind that flicker just enough to feel generous without trying too hard. The switch-on happened on a Thursday evening, which meant you either caught it on your way home or you didn’t. Richmond’s Christmas lights have never been the sort that make headlines. […]

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When the street was our front room

The trestle tables came out of church halls and garages. Someone’s uncle knew someone with a van. The bunting appeared from attics, dusty tissue paper peeling away to reveal red, white and blue triangles that had seen Elizabeth’s coronation, possibly George’s before that. You remember the smell: squash in plastic jugs, egg sandwiches going warm […]

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The Bench

A different conversation about Richmond, every day.