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Woodside Park is a public park in Wood Green. The site was originally part of the much larger Chitts Hill Estate which covered a large part of Wood Green and beyond. Most of what later became the park was developed as Earlham Grove House and grounds in 1865. [1]
It includes the Woodside Park Club. The eastern boundary of the Garden Suburb is the Dollis Brook and the southern boundary is the Folly Brook . To the south of this suburb is Woodside Park Garden Suburb proper, an area of 1920s and 1930s houses, where all but one of the roads (Linkside) are named after places in Sussex , where the developer ...
Woodside Urban Park is a 2.3-acre recreational park located on the southern edge of the neighborhood. The park was renovated and expanded in 2010 and contains picnic tables, a large children's play area, tennis courts, a bronze statue of a man on a unicycle, and a water fountain that provides a soothing counterpoint to busy Georgia Avenue.
Woodside Park is located just north of downtown of Silver Spring, one of the oldest suburbs of Washington, DC.Its boundaries are Georgia Avenue (State Route 97) on the west, Spring Street to the South, Colesville Road (US Route 29) to the east, and Dale Drive and Columbia Boulevard on the north.
Woodside Park may refer to: Woodside Park (Silver Spring, Maryland), a neighborhood of Silver Spring, Maryland, United States; Woodside Amusement Park, a former amusement park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, constructed in 1897 and operated until 1955; Woodside Park, Barnet, a suburban residential area in Barnet, London, England.
Until about 2000, there was a second car park. [citation needed] A block of flats has now been built on this area. The station is above ground. Both platforms are readily accessible from the street by wheelchair. The main entrance, with ticket office, is at the end of a cul-de-sac (Woodside Park Road), adjacent to the car park entrance. This ...
It is on the High Barnet branch of the Northern line, between High Barnet and Woodside Park stations, in Travelcard Zone 4. [7] It was first built in 1872. It is on the north side of Totteridge Lane , to the east of the Dollis Brook, the traditional boundary between Totteridge and Whetstone, so narrowly in the latter. [8]
The footballer William Ball was born at Woodside in 1886.. Duncan Edwards, who played for Manchester United and England, and died in the Munich air disaster of 1958, was born in a house on Malvern Crescent on 1 October 1936, but grew up two miles away on the Priory Estate.