Daisy Nook is a country park in Failsworth, Greater Manchester, England, which runs through the Medlock Valley.
History
editThe name Daisy Nook came from a book by Benjamin Brierley titled 'A day out' or 'A Summer Ramble'. Brierley asked his friend Charles Potter, an Oldham Artist, to draw an imaginary place called Daisy Nook. Potter came to nearby Waterhouses to complete his drawing - and from then on the area was known as Daisy Nook.
Brierley's description of Daisy Nook was 'Two Banks seemed to have opened to receive a group of neat whitewashed cottages and after filling them with happiness, surrounded them with a curtain of trees, to shelter them from the outside world. Most of the cottages have gardens attached, growing flowers and vegetables, and there a small orchard displaying its ripening apples'.
Most of Daisy Nook now belongs to the National Trust after it was left to them by the late James Lublam, J.P. 'in order that the fields and woods be kept as a pleasure area'. The park is maintained by Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council.
Daisy Nook hosts an annual Easter Fair along Stannybrook Road - depicted by Lowry in one of his paintings.
Crime Lake
editCrime Lake is a small, shallow lake[1] halfway between Woodhouses and the Visitors' Centre and forms part of the Country Park. The lake was formed in 1794 as an unintended result of canal works. At the time of construction, a culvert was built under the canal to accommodate a brook that was severed by its course. A landslip blocked the culvert and the waters were impounded on the offside of the canal, eventually merging with the canal to form the lake. It was officially known as Crime Bank Reservoir, but it is far better known by its later name of Crime Lake.[citation needed]
In another painting, Crime Lake, L.S. Lowry depicted the lake as it was in 1942, with an industrial backdrop and many boaters on the water.[2] The lake still attracts visitors due to its scenery and wildlife.[citation needed]
The name 'Crime' may have come from a local word for "meadow" or a local name for a particular meadow, or after a sinister murder that took place along the canal many years ago.[citation needed]
Hollinwood Branch Canal
editDaisy Nook is centred on the disused Hollinwood Branch Canal. The canal ran from Fairfield in nearby Droylsden to Hollinwood and opened in 1797. It runs through Daisy Nook, Woodhouses and Failsworth before entering Hollinwood in Oldham. The canal also has a branch which ran to Bardsley in Oldham, known as the Fairbottom Branch Canal.
The canal and series of aqueducts are the centre of a campaign to restore the waterway by the Hollinwood Canal Society,[3] which is run by local residents and waterway enthusiasts.
Painting of the park by L. S. Lowry
editOn 8 June 2007 a 1946 work by L. S. Lowry entitled "Good Friday, Daisy Nook" was sold for £3,772,000, the highest price paid for one of his paintings at auction. The painting depicts the park in party mood a year after World War II.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Crime Lake". www.landscapebritain.co.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
- ^ "Crime Lake; signed limited edition print". www.lowry.co.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
- ^ Hollinwood Canal Society
- ^ "Lowry work fetches record £3.8M". BBC Online. 8 June 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2008.
External links
edit- Ashton-under-Lyne's website featuring photos and information on Daisy Nook.
- Website run by the local Labour Party with lots of interesting facts and historical information.
- Website of the Hollinwood Canal Society, a group dedicated to reopening and restoring the Hollinwood Branch Canal which runs through the park.
- Events and activities at Daisy Nook by Oldham Council, updated on a regular basis.