Page updated 6 October 2008
This park is situated between Blackboy Road and
Belmont Road. It was one of the first of the late Victorian parks in
Exeter to be opened. The Public Health Act of 1875 gave local
authorities the power to make by-laws for the provision of public
pleasure
grounds. Exeter opened the 5 acre Belmont Park in 1886. The next year,
the park was the centre for a pageant of Olde Englishe Sportes to
celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
The 1897 Kelly's Directory, noted that John Lock was the keeper and
also remarked 'The neighbouring streams afford abundance of amusement
to the angler'. I bet there are no fish now! In 1902, the Coronation
Celebrations for Edward VII saw Belmont Pleasure Grounds used as a
venue for various sports including the egg and spoon race, sack race
and wheelbarrow race. The programme stated that spurs were 'not to be
used' in the donkey race!
Before the First World War, the park was a highly regarded
botanical
garden, and the guidebooks recommended that tourists visit the park to
appreciate its varied plants and trees.
In 1939, the first garden in England designed for the blind was
planted. Known as the Belmont Scent Garden, it is situated in the east
of
the park and contains many of the best fragrant plants that will grow
in the country. During the Second War, temporary wooden huts were
installed on the gravelled areas for the Army Pay Corps - the huts were
used by the technical college after the war. They are now used as
the Community Centre and Playtraining Resource Centre.
There is a children's play area in the park, a basketball court,
and a
bowling green on the Blackboy Road side, opposite the pub called,
the Bowling Green! During 2008, a new rose garden was planted, with 21
different varieties of rose bred by Gertrude Jekyll, an influential
garden designer who died in 1932, and William Lobb, a plant collector
for the Veitch nursery in the 19th Century.

Belmont Park from Blackboy
Road.
The Exeter Fire Brigade put on an exhibition in Belmont Park, circa
1920s.
│ Top of Page │