Liverpool Park Estates: Their Legal Basis, Creation and Early ManagementThe rapid growth of nineteenth-century English cities produced leafy suburbs, and an occasional feature of these was the development of the estate park of modestly secluded Victorian villas. To preserve their valued amenities, such parks bound the middle-class owners of houses within them by restrictive legal covenants. The documents relating to such parks are often inaccessible, but for three of them in Liverpool, the available records enable their early history to be studied. The first part of this book deals with the legal basis and evolution of the restrictive covenant, a device still of considerable importance in housing development and amenity protection across England. The second part deals individually with the three Liverpool parks, the social reasons for their foundation and growth, and the problems that beset the entrepreneurs who established them in the mid-nineteenth century (and often then lived in them) during the early years of the parks’ existence. After more than a hundred years, all three of the parks studied continue not only as highly favored residential areas, but also as exemplars of the success of the deployment of the restrictive covenant. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 28
Page vi
... Fulwood , Grassendale and Cressington Parks 2. Plan of Fulwood Park 3. Plan of Grassendale and Cressington Parks 4. Early twentieth - century postcard view of Fulwood Park Lodge and gates 5. Modern view of Fulwood Park Lodge and gate ...
... Fulwood , Grassendale and Cressington Parks 2. Plan of Fulwood Park 3. Plan of Grassendale and Cressington Parks 4. Early twentieth - century postcard view of Fulwood Park Lodge and gates 5. Modern view of Fulwood Park Lodge and gate ...
Page 72
... Fulwood Lodge ' , later called ' Fulwood [ or Fullwood ] House'.35 Smith , who before moving to Toxteth Park had lived on St Anne Street in its early fashionable days , in 1839 , in association with his brother Alexander , purchased the ...
... Fulwood Lodge ' , later called ' Fulwood [ or Fullwood ] House'.35 Smith , who before moving to Toxteth Park had lived on St Anne Street in its early fashionable days , in 1839 , in association with his brother Alexander , purchased the ...
Page 74
... the second part ; and Charles Stewart Parker , merchant and Thomas Forsyth , broker of the third part , who 48 are the trustees of the deed . The road 74 Fulwood Park Fulwood Park established 71; Fulwood Park in operation.
... the second part ; and Charles Stewart Parker , merchant and Thomas Forsyth , broker of the third part , who 48 are the trustees of the deed . The road 74 Fulwood Park Fulwood Park established 71; Fulwood Park in operation.
Contents
1 | 19 |
The History of Restrictive Covenants | 27 |
Covenantbased Building Schemes | 47 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Liverpool Park Estates: Their Legal Basis, Creation and Early Management Susan George Limited preview - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
acres Aigburth Aigburth Land Company Alexander Smith amenity appointed builders building schemes built Charles Stewart Parker Colquhoun Jeffrey Commissioners contract conveyance courts Cressington Park deed of covenant deed of mutual dwelling-houses dwghses easements enforce erected freehold freehold land Fulwood Park Garston Grassendale Park heirs and assigns heirs or assigns Henry Summers History of Liverpool houses Hugh McNeile Ibid James Rowan Jones landlord landowner leases lodge London Lord lots Moxhay mutual covenant owners park estates Parker and Thomas persons parties thereto plot or plots plots of land promenade proprietors purchasers rent residential residents respive heirs resply restrictive covenants River Mersey sd persons parties sd plan sd plots sea wall Sefton sevl and respive sewers shareholders shld Smith and Alexander Smith their Heirs Street tenants Thomas Forsyth thrto town Toxteth Park Trustees or Trustee University of Liverpool vendor villas vote William Smith Woolwright yards