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EDEN PARK Cont'd..

Of the fourteen children of our William and his wife Eleanor Elliott, whom he married in 1776, only George and Frances appear in the local baptisms.  George was baptised at St George’s church in 1786 and Frances in 1800.  Several of the other children were born away from England because Eleanor accompanied her husband as his work demanded.  There were six boys and eight girls but of the boys only George and Robert John lived to a reasonably old age.  The parish church of St George’s burial records record the early deaths of Henry aged 7 and Charles aged 9.  In the churchyard beneath a yew tree is the box shaped pink marble vault of Mary Dulcibella, sixth daughter of William, First Lord of Auckland.  It bears the following inscription:
ROBERT DRUMMOND / died April 29 1881 / aged 58 / “I will lift up mine eyes unto / the hills from whence cometh my help.  ” Psalm CXXI verse 1
South face: CHARLES DRUMMOND Esq.  / of Stratton St London died 23 August 1858 aged 67 / “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee because he trusted in Thee” Isaiah XXVI.  / Also the Hon.  MARY DULCIBELLA his widow/ 6th daughter of WILLIAM 1st Lord AUCKLAND died 20 March 1862 aged 68/ “Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord, from henceforth yea saith the spirit/ that they may rest from their labours and their works do follow them”/    Revelation(s) Chapt.  XIV Verse 13.
North face: Also MARY DULCIBELLA / 3rd daughter of the late CHARLES & MARY DULCIBELLA DRUMMOND / and widow of RICHARD WELLESLEY Esq.  / born August 16th 1827 died August 5th 1874.

Another grave is that of her sister the Hon Emily who died in Eden Lodge, Kensington in 1869.  This has been wrongly thought in the past to be Eden Lodge in Beckenham but the family left for London in 1818.

When William died, George, his second son, became the Second Lord Auckland.  A marble memorial in St George’s church shows how enormously successful and well liked George was.  The eldest son, Frederick William Elliot, had drowned in the Thames in 1810.

It is not known when the elegant mansion, later called Eden Park, was built but in 1820 it was surrounded by parkland with many large trees.  If you look at Crease Park today, the mansion was on the flat ground at the top, the rest sweeping down to Wellhouse Rd below.  This is named after the housing of the well and Crease Park gained its name in memory of Alderman James Crease, freeman of Beckenham.

Fields of Eden farm were used for Groveland Rd   (Greater and Little Groveland Mead) and Broomfield Rd when the area was developed in 1932 by the firm of Clout and Tysoe.  Names of their sons were used for Derrick Rd, Gordon Rd, Ronald Close and Ernest Grove and tree planting named Birchwood Avenue and Cherry Tree Walk.  To see the pink cherry blossom against a blue sky in the spring is unforgettable.  Glanfield Rd was taken from Messrs Riley and Glanfield of the Eden Park Estate Co.

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