The Level is an
urban park
An urban park or metropolitan park, also known as a city park, municipal park (North America), public park, public open space, or municipal gardens (United Kingdom, UK), is a park or botanical garden in cities, densely populated suburbia and oth ...
in central
Brighton
Brighton ( ) is a seaside resort in the city status in the United Kingdom, city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England, south of London.
Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Bronze Age Britain, Bronze Age, R ...
, on the south coast of England. The park is a triangle of bounded by Union Road to the north, Richmond Terrace (A270) to the east, and Ditchling Road (
A23) to the west. In the past, the land has been used as a
cricket ground for the
Prince of Wales
Prince of Wales (, ; ) is a title traditionally given to the male heir apparent to the History of the English monarchy, English, and later, the British throne. The title originated with the Welsh rulers of Kingdom of Gwynedd, Gwynedd who, from ...
and as a setting for large-scale dinner parties to commemorate events such as the defeat of
Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon Bonaparte (born Napoleone di Buonaparte; 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821), later known by his regnal name Napoleon I, was a French general and statesman who rose to prominence during the French Revolution and led Military career ...
and the coronation of
Queen Victoria
Victoria (Alexandrina Victoria; 24 May 1819 – 22 January 1901) was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837 until Death and state funeral of Queen Victoria, her death in January 1901. Her reign of 63 year ...
.
The Level is often used for public meetings and gatherings. These have included
May Day events, a 1983 peace camp and the Brighton Urban Free Festival. Present day features of the park include a grassed area with
elm trees and outdoor seating, a
skatepark
A skatepark, or skate park, is a purpose-built recreational environment made for skateboarding, BMX, Freestyle scootering, scootering, and aggressive inline skating. A skatepark may contain half-pipes, handrails, funboxes, vert ramps, stairw ...
,
public toilets, a rose garden, a children's
playground and a water feature. The park was substantially redeveloped from 2009 onwards.
Overview
The Level is in central
Brighton
Brighton ( ) is a seaside resort in the city status in the United Kingdom, city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England, south of London.
Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Bronze Age Britain, Bronze Age, R ...
, about north of the seafront.
It now covers but was originally much bigger, encompassing the present-day Victoria Gardens and Valley Gardens to the south and the land now occupied by
Park Crescent to the north.
It forms a rough triangle enclosed by Union Street to the north, Ditchling Road (
A23) to the west and Richmond Terrace (originally the southernmost part of
Lewes Road) and Richmond Place (A270) to the east.
The park is surrounded by
elm trees and is laid out in three sections. The northern part of the
urban park
An urban park or metropolitan park, also known as a city park, municipal park (North America), public park, public open space, or municipal gardens (United Kingdom, UK), is a park or botanical garden in cities, densely populated suburbia and oth ...
is a grassed area. In the middle section is a
skatepark
A skatepark, or skate park, is a purpose-built recreational environment made for skateboarding, BMX, Freestyle scootering, scootering, and aggressive inline skating. A skatepark may contain half-pipes, handrails, funboxes, vert ramps, stairw ...
. The southern part of the park is a children's
playground and also includes a café,
public toilets, a pavilion which can be hired for community use, a water feature, a
sensory garden and a zone for
boccia and
pétanque
Pétanque (, ; ; ) is a sport that falls into the category of boules sports (along with Raffa (boules), raffa, bocce, boule lyonnaise, Bowls, lawn bowls, and Crown green bowls, crown green bowling). In these sports, players or teams play thei ...
.
Brighton and Hove City Council added the Level to their Local List of Heritage Assets in 2015. The council's assessment described it as a "well-designed municipal public playground, within an early public park ...
hichcontributes greatly to the character of the area".
The park lies on
National Cycle Route 20 and is served by buses 21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29 37, 37B, 46, 48, and 49.
Early history
London Road and Lewes Road, two major routes leading out of Brighton, were built along steep-sided valleys through which
winterbournes flowed intermittently. The valleys, and therefore the streams, met where the Level is now and flowed out to sea at the
Old Steine.
The land was always marshy and swampy and was never built upon.
Instead, it became a popular place for public recreation and entertainment as Brighton grew into a fashionable
seaside resort
A seaside resort is a city, resort town, town, village, or hotel that serves as a Resort, vacation resort and is located on a coast. Sometimes the concept includes an aspect of an official accreditation based on the satisfaction of certain requi ...
in the 18th century.
After the town's authorities banned ball games and other traditional entertainments on the Old Steine in 1787, the Level became the focus for the early resort's sporting activities:
The Prince of Wales (later
George IV of the United Kingdom) then laid out a
cricket ground on the northern side in 1791. The
Prince of Wales Ground hosted early
first-class matches and served as the home of
Brighton Cricket Club, later one of the principal founders of
Sussex County Cricket Club. In 1822, the cricket ground moved to a nearby site called the Hanover Ground; after another move to the
Royal Brunswick Ground on the
Brunswick estate, it was established on its present site on Eaton Road in Hove in 1872.
The Bat and Ball pub on Ditchling Road, facing the west side of the Level, commemorates the ground.
Other popular events included the town's annual bonfire celebrations on
Guy Fawkes Night
Guy Fawkes Night, also known as Guy Fawkes Day, Bonfire Night and Fireworks Night, is an annual commemoration list of minor secular observances#November, observed on 5 November, primarily in Great Britain, involving bonfires and firewor ...
, regular circuses and fairs, and traditional activities such as
bat and trap and skipping. Writing in 1883, a contributor to the ''
Sussex Archaeological Collections'' journal noted that the local
Good Friday
Good Friday, also known as Holy Friday, Great Friday, Great and Holy Friday, or Friday of the Passion of the Lord, is a solemn Christian holy day commemorating the crucifixion of Jesus and his death at Calvary (Golgotha). It is observed during ...
tradition of skipping was still maintained at the Level, where "scores of skippers" could be seen.
As well as these informal recreational events, the Level (especially the southern part, closest to the town centre) was used for formal, town-wide events and commemorations, such as the Prince's birthday celebrations.
The
Allied Powers' defeat of
Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon Bonaparte (born Napoleone di Buonaparte; 15 August 1769 – 5 May 1821), later known by his regnal name Napoleon I, was a French general and statesman who rose to prominence during the French Revolution and led Military career ...
was celebrated in Brighton by the Great Peace Festival of August 1814. A mass dinner of roast beef and plum puddings was served at 75 double rows of tables for more than 7,000 people,
and the town's authorities organised activities such as running races,
stoolball, dancing and
kiss-in-the-ring.
The coronations of King George IV and
Victoria, and the ends of both the
Napoleonic Wars
{{Infobox military conflict
, conflict = Napoleonic Wars
, partof = the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
, image = Napoleonic Wars (revision).jpg
, caption = Left to right, top to bottom:Battl ...
and the
Crimean War
The Crimean War was fought between the Russian Empire and an alliance of the Ottoman Empire, the Second French Empire, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Kingdom of Sardinia (1720–1861), Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont fro ...
were celebrated with similar large-scale public feasts.
On 22 April 1822, the 8.05 acres of land that today form the Level was given in trust to Brighton by
Thomas Read Kemp and other landowners.
Thereafter, apart from of
downland near
Brighton Racecourse, far out of town on top of Race Hill, The Level was the only area of common land available to the town's residents.
In the same year Union Road was built to connect the Ditchling and Lewes Roads, marking the northern edge of the Level, and the land to the north of it was sold. Local entrepreneur James Ireland established the Royal Gardens on this section, but the venture failed and the land was later sold again; Park Crescent was built on it from 1849.
Also in 1822, the Level itself was designed and laid out by architect
Amon Henry Wilds
Amon Henry Wilds (1784 or 1790 – 13 July 1857) was an English architect. He was part of a team of three architects and builders who—working together or independently at different times—were almost solely responsible for a surge in resi ...
and horticulturist
Henry Phillips.
The elm trees, a gift to the town from
Henry Pelham, 3rd Earl of Chichester, were planted in November 1844.
Many were uprooted in the
Great Storm of 1987,
although at the time Brighton Borough Council was considering felling many of them because of an outbreak of
Dutch elm disease.
By the time Victoria became Queen in 1837, the Level was an important part of the growing resort of Brighton: the town extended for northwards from the seafront, encompassing a "splendid boulevard" formed by the green spaces of the Old Steine, Valley Gardens (with
St Peter's Church as the centrepiece) and the Level itself.
Also at this time, when the success of
Britain's first inter-city railway encouraged investment and speculation in the new form of transport, six routes were suggested for a railway line between London and Brighton. The shortest and most direct, covering but requiring the most expensive construction work, would have terminated just north of the Level on the site of James Ireland's pleasure gardens.
After
a line was built slightly further west in 1841, Brighton's population grew rapidly and its character changed.
One feature of the mid- to late 19th century was a rapid growth in prostitution; it was common at the Level, when at night "the scenes ... were said to beggar all description".
A police station was established in a small building at the southern end of the park in 1865. In 1919 it became the headquarters of the Brighton Parks and Gardens Department, and was later converted into a café.
Political gatherings were also a feature of the Level. Among the regular events held there was the annual
May Day rally and demonstration by the Brighton Trades Council, which was formed in 1890. These events "became well known nationally"; members included
Margaret Bondfield, who was employed as a draper's assistant in Brighton at the time and who later became the first female
cabinet minister in the United Kingdom.
Later, local resident
Harry Cowley was an organiser of the barrow boys—many of whom had been in the armed forces during World War I—on nearby Oxford Street. In the early 1920s he negotiated permission for them to sell fruit and vegetables alongside the rose garden on the Level. This went on until the Open Market was built on the opposite side of Ditchling Road in 1926, when the boys moved there instead.
In the 1930s, Cowley and his associates broke up a meeting of the Fascist League at the Level.
There was again a clash with fascists in June 1948, when members of the
43 Group and Brighton locals prevented a meeting of
Oswald Mosley's
British Union of Fascists. What became known as the Battle of the Level ensured no fascists returned to Brighton until the 1960s.
The children's playground was first constructed in 1927 by Bertie Hubbard MacLaren (Superintendent of Parks and Gardens).
He added a boating pond and a
pergola. The pond has since been made smaller.
During World War II, the
Royal Engineers
The Corps of Royal Engineers, usually called the Royal Engineers (RE), and commonly known as the ''Sappers'', is the engineering arm of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces ...
requisitioned the
Chichester Diocesan Training College for Schoolmistresses at Ditchling Road;
they put up several
Nissen huts on the Level to give them more space, and these temporary buildings stayed until well into the 1950s.
Recent history
Peace camp
Brighton Women's Peace Camp was set up on the Level on 15 February 1983, in support of the
Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp. At
RAF Greenham Common
Royal Air Force Greenham Common or more simply RAF Greenham Common is a former Royal Air Force List of former Royal Air Force stations, station in the civil parishes of Greenham and Thatcham in the England, English county of Berkshire. The airfi ...
, women were protesting against
cruise missile
A cruise missile is an unmanned self-propelled guided missile that sustains flight through aerodynamic lift for most of its flight path. Cruise missiles are designed to deliver a large payload over long distances with high precision. Modern cru ...
s from the US being placed on British soil. The Brighton camp was one of many short-lived satellite camps that appeared around the United Kingdom in early 1983.
In contrast to the heavy-handed treatment of campers at Greenham by the authorities, Brighton participants said "The Brighton Corporation have been very good. And the police have been very good."
BUFF
The Brighton Urban Free Festival (BUFF) was held on the Level for the first time on 1 September 1984. It was a free music festival which aimed to promote local bands. It occurred again in 1985, then moved to
Preston Park in 1986, before returning to The Level in 1987, 1988, 1991 and 1992. Bands which played included
Peter and the Test Tube Babies,
These Animal Men and the
Levellers
The Levellers were a political movement active during the English Civil War who were committed to popular sovereignty, extended suffrage, equality before the law and religious tolerance. The hallmark of Leveller thought was its populism, as sh ...
.
Skatepark
The first
skatepark
A skatepark, or skate park, is a purpose-built recreational environment made for skateboarding, BMX, Freestyle scootering, scootering, and aggressive inline skating. A skatepark may contain half-pipes, handrails, funboxes, vert ramps, stairw ...
was designed by architects Murrin and Partners and built on the Level in 1978. There was a nearby skateshop called Pig City and in the 1990s there were regular skate competitions.
In the early 2000s, an elm tree next to the skatepark became famous for having many shoes thrown into its branches. It then had to be felled in 2018 after catching Dutch elm disease from elms on the other side of the cycle path.
The council received a lottery grant of £2.2 million to build a new park, which was designed by Freestyle. The new park opened in June 2013.
Redevelopment
Following a successful
National Lottery Heritage Fund grant request, the Level was substantially redeveloped from 2009 onwards, expanding MacLaren's original design: the skatepark was moved and rebuilt, taking up what had previously been a grassed area; the pavilions were regenerated; the model boating pond was restored with a fountain; the playground was reconfigured; a sensory garden was added; an area for boccia and pétanque was provided.
The park won a Sussex Heritage Trust award in 2016 and is now
Green Flag Award accredited.
It also won a
Civic Trust Award and National Landscape award.
References
Bibliography
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External links
BBC history of the Level in pictures
{{Brighton and Hove
Parks and open spaces in East Sussex
Brighton
1822 establishments in the United Kingdom