Cremorne and the later London gardens
Part 9
{83} Except in its last year (1877). A ball-room was built in 1850.
{84} Marked in a map, 1814 (_e.g._), as the Manor Farm Pond.
{86a}
1837. Mount Vesuvius. Danson. 1838. ,, ,, 1839. Mount Hecla. ,, 1840. ,, ,, 1841. City of Rome. ,, 1842. ,, ,, 1843. Temples of Elora. ,, 1844. Old London and the Great Fire. Danson and Telbin. 1845. Edinburgh. Danson. 1846. Naples and Vesuvius. Danson (the old view repainted). 1847. Gibraltar. Danson. 1848. Rome. Danson (the old view). 1849. Storming of Badajoz. Danson and Sons. 1850. Napoleon’s Passage of the Alps. Danson and Sons. 1851. Temple of Janus. Danson and Sons. 1852. Mount Etna. Danson and Sons. 1853. Chusan. Danson and Sons. 1855. Sebastopol. 1856. Constantinople and Scutari. Danson. 1862. Naples and Bay. 1872. Sultan’s Summer Palace on the Grieve and Sons. Bosphorus.
{86b} Cruikshank’s _Comic Almanack_, 1843.
{88a} _Cf. Cremorne_, p. 16, _supra_.
{88b} He died September, 1854. A portrait of him, after a painting by Agasse, is reproduced in Callow’s _Old London Taverns_, p. 303.
{89} Godfrey’s band also continued to perform in 1853, under C. and D. Godfrey. The orchestra was replaced by another structure in 1848. Jullien’s band was at the gardens 1845–1852, then 1856, 1857.
{90} J. Arban, musical director.
{91} SITE.—The Gardens were soon built over, but the site can be made out with little difficulty. There were three entrances: (1) (approached from the Walworth Road) in Manor Place; (2) and (3) (approached from the Kennington Park Road) in Penton Place and in New Street. The Manor Place entrance was about where that street is now crossed by Penton Place. The _continuation_ of Manor Place is now on the site or boundary of the gardens.
The Penton Place entrance was about where that street is met by Amelia Street.
The New Street entrance was at the end of the street where it meets the continuation of Manor Place.
Part of Delverton Road, Suffield Road, Tarver Road, and Berryfield Road are also on the site. The Surrey Gardens Hotel, at the corner of Delverton Road and Manor Place, alone commemorates the vanished Zoo.