£30.00 GBP • Used
Handbill, 230 x 125 mm. printed in green. Built in a disused chalk pit in 1837, Rosherville Pleasure Gardens was one of the largest of the Victorian pleasure gardens and attracted many visitors fr...
Handbill, 230 x 125 mm. printed in green. Built in a disused chalk pit in 1837, Rosherville Pleasure Gardens was one of the largest of the Victorian pleasure gardens and attracted many visitors from London who would travel by steamboat along the Thames to a special pier built to serve the gardens. They went bankrupt and closed in 1901, then were briefly revived in 1903, lasting until just before the outbreak of World War One. Some traces of the original gardens remain: the bear pit, the specially designed entrance and the staircase that wound down into the quarry. It was a packed steamer from Rosherville Gardens, the ‘Princess Alice’ which, in 1878, collided with a collier off Woolwich leading to the death of 640 people, many of them children. The advent of railways led to its eventual demise as it became easier to reach coastal resorts such as Southend and Margate.
Product Info
Publisher: Gravesend: Burton’s Electric Press, 1905.
Type: Used
Binding: Softcover
Seller Info
MichaelKempBookseller
Address: 19 Adelaide Gardens Sheeness, Kent
Website: https://michaelkemp.co.uk
Country: United Kingdom