
Fassett Square | Hackney |
Fassett Square is on land once owned by the Lord of the Manor of Hackney, which appears to have been acquired in 1853 by Catherine Massie and Thomas White. In 1861 William Hodson was granted leases for house building, and evidently laid out the ornamental garden. Those living in Fassett Square did not have automatic right of access to the gardens despite the obligation to pay for its upkeep. It remains for the private use of residents of Fassett Square, an oblong garden enclosed by reproduction C19th style railings, which has been restored with new planting in 1999. Fassett Square and Fassett Street were used as the model for the fictitious Albert Square in 'East Enders'.
The information shown above was correct at the time of the last update 01/07/2012
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The information below is taken from the relevant Local Authority's planning legislation, which was correct at the time of research but may have been amended in the interim. Please check with the Local Authority for latest planning information.
Photo: Gavin Gardiner
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Fassett Square garden is on land once owned by the Lord of the Manor of Hackney, which appears to have been acquired in 1853 by Catherine Massie and Thomas White. The Massie family had plans for a development that incorporated the west end of Graham Road and west side of Fassett Square but this was not completed. In 1861 William Hodson was granted leases of the land for house building. The first mention of the garden is in the under leases that Hodson subsequently granted to various people, each of whom were covenanted to pay 'a fair proportion not exceeding 10s 6d per annum, in common with the other lessees, of the cost of maintenance of the ornamental ground formed or to be formed by William Hodson'. The lease for the garden itself was held from 1852 to 1951 by the Trustees of Miss Rose Kindred and Mrs Lavinia Foster, whose agent contracted with a firm of nurserymen to maintain the garden, which in 1928 is described as 'a narrow rectangular enclosure laid out with grass and shrubs and containing some pollarded trees'. It appears that those living in Fassett Square did not have automatic right of access to the gardens despite the obligation to pay for the upkeep. Today it is for the private use of residents of Fassett Square, an oblong garden enclosed by reproduction C19th style iron railings. It has been restored with new planting in 1999 through funds provided as part of the restoration of the adjacent German Hospital. Fassett Square and Fassett Street were used as the model for the fictitious Albert Square in 'East Enders'. The garden has roses and pollarded lime trees, the perimeter planted with holly, forsythia, rose beds and other shrubs.
Public Open Spaces in Hackney; Report of the Royal Commission on London Squares, 1928; David Mander, Strength in the Tower, an Illustrated History of Hackney (Sutton) 1998; LB Hackney, Graham Road and Mapledene Conservation Area Appraisal, 1997