91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

Fred Haines

Erection date: 20/4/2001

Inscription

This tree was planted in memory of Fred Haines by his colleagues on 20th April 2001.

Site: Friends’ Meeting House - Hammersmith (2 memorials)

W6, Furnivall Gardens

The tree-less plaque is in the lawn some distance to the right, outside our photo, which was taken from inside the garden.

Concerning Furnivall Gardens generally, a nearby information board informs: "The gardens are named after Dr Frederick James Furnivall, 1825 - 1910, a distinguished scholar of English literature and an important figure in the development of the sport of rowing. In 1896 he founded the Hammersmith Sculling Club for Girls and Men, now called the Furnivall Sculling Club, whose premises are in Lower Mall.

Furnivall Gardens cover the area which was formerly the mouth of the Hammersmith creek, an outlet into the Thames from Stamford Brook. In 1936 after the decline of the fishing industry in the creek harbour in the early 19th century, the creek was filled in and the water channelled through an underground culvert.

Many of the buildings in the creek area were destroyed by bombing during World War II and, in 1948, the council created an open space in this area, to be used during the Festival of Britain. A walled garden was constructed on the bombed site of what had, since 1765, been the Friends' Meeting House and burial ground.

Furnivall Gardens and Hammersmith Pier were opened on 5th May 1951."

The pier was built as a dock where festival-visitors could board a ferry to the Battersea and the South Bank.

The 1954 film Impulse has a scene at about 44 minutes where the characters arrive at Dove Pier and walk across Furnival Gardens. The camera briefly shows some of the large buildings on the other side of the Great West Road, and before that a windowed ruined wall which seems to stretch northwards from what is now River House, across the Gardens to the Great West Road.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Fred Haines

Subjects commemorated i

Fred Haines

We can find nothing about Haines, who died not long before 20th April 2001.

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Fred Haines

Also at this site i

Friends’ Meeting House - Hammersmith

Friends’ Meeting House - Hammersmith

Looks like something used to be mounted on the granite top of this pillar, bu...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

St Mary Somerset  - Ewan Christian

St Mary Somerset - Ewan Christian

EC4, Lambeth Hill, St Mary's Somerset Church

The dates given on the plaque are about the time that the church ceased functioning and was demolished but we can't explain the exact dates.

2 subjects commemorated
Leysian Mission - Strathcona

Leysian Mission - Strathcona

EC1, City Road

The building is also known as the Imperial Hall. Up the top, in an Art Nouveau swirl the building is dated 1903.  The plaques are, left t...

2 subjects commemorated
Westminster Fire Station

Westminster Fire Station

SW1, Greycoat Place, 4

Our photo was taken in 2014 when 'Boris' was of course the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson.

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Cromwell Road WW1 memorial

Cromwell Road WW1 memorial

N19, Holloway Road, Whittington Park

Geograph has a photo, "taken 7 years ago" (i.e. 2015) which shows the memorial in much better condition than now, 2022, and surrounded wi...

War dead | WW1
22 subjects commemorated
Tower Hamlets International Brigade

Tower Hamlets International Brigade

E1, Cable Street, 236, St George's Town Hall

'No Pasaran' translates from Spanish as 'they shall not pass'.

2 subjects commemorated