Image:Mount_Street_Gardens_chapel_entrance.jpeg The '''Mount Street Gardens''' is a Public_garden off Mount_Street in the north of the Mayfair area of London, created in 1889. They were created out of the former burial ground of St._George's_church in Hanover Square, and named after the Mount Field, an area including a fortification dating from the English_Civil_War named Oliver's_Mount. == Burial ground and workhouse == Image:Mount_Street_Gardens_old_map.jpg).]] The land was originally sold by Sir Richard Grosvenor to the Commissioners_for_Fifty_New_Churches in 1723 as part of his development of the area around Mount Street, to serve as a burial ground for the Parish_church, St. George's, located in Hanover Square. Beside the burial ground, on South_Audley_Street, was planned the Grosvenor Chapel, but this was not built until 7 years after the burial ground was laid out, in 1730. To the north of the ground, the site of what is now 103 Mount Street, was the parish's workhouse, wherein the poor were given work, board, and lodgings, built in 1725 and then enlarged in the 1780s to provide room for the parish watchmen's watch-house and the parish office. In 1854, an Act_of_Parliament was passed by which burial grounds in central London, such as that of St. George's, were to be closed due to health risks. The parish's other burial ground, on Bayswater_Road, closed shortly afterwards, and the Hanwell_Cemetery in west London was used instead. As the population of London grew, so did the demand upon the workhouse, and it became so overcrowded that in 1871 the decision was taken to move the workhouse to a new site, spurred on also by plans to widen Mount Street. In 1883, some land for the new workhouse on Buckingham_Palace_Road was bought from the new Duke_of_Westminster, Hugh Grosvenor, thricely-great-grand-nephew of the Baronet who originally sold the site of the burial ground, and paupers were transferred both to there and the parish's other workhouse at Little Chelsea on the Fulham Road, with the workhouse finally being demolished in 1886 and converted into more parish offices. == Development as a public space == After the demolition of the workhouse, the whole area was somewhat redeveloped; Carlos_Place (then named Charles Street) was to be extended to the south of Mount Street over the site of the workhouse's chapel for access to the Church of the Immaculate Conception on Farm_Street. The church, built between 1844 and 1849, was in a decorated gothic-style, designed by J.J._Scoles, and with the alter by A.W.N._Pugin, and is now a Grade II* Listed_building. However, the new road planned through the disused burial ground was never built. The Gardens' footpaths are those originally created in 1889, and the bronze drinking fountain of a rearing horse was designed for the local estate agent Henry Lofts in 1891 by Harold_Peto and Sir Ernest George, who was also the designer of 104-111 Mount Street. As of 2005 the fountain is largely removed for restoration. The gravestones had been removed to the Gardens' tool shed, but when the shed itself was demolished in 1931 to make way for the Mayfair Telephone_exchange between the Gardens and Farm_Street, the City Engineer’s office made a copy of the inscriptions, now stored in City of Westminster Archives Centre, along with other records from the Parish. == Flora and fauna == The garden has a number of London Plane trees (''Platanus x hispanica''), the predominant tree throughout central London due to their ability to cope with the capital's formerly heavily-polluted air. Other trees, some able to grow only due to the Gardens' sheltered spot and warm climate, include an Australian Silver_Wattle (''Acacia dealbata'') and a Canary_Islands Date Palm (''Phoenix canariensis''), three Dawn_Redwood (''Metasequola glyptostroboides'') from South-East China, and a form of twisted Willow, ''Salix matsudana'' 'Tortuosa', from Northern China, as well as a Chusan_Palm (''Trachycarpus fortunei''), a common Palm in the United_Kingdom due to its hardiness. Underneath these trees are planted a number of shrubs, most noticeably Laurels (''Aucuba japonica'') and Hollies (such as ''Ilex aquifolium''), and several Camellias (''Camellia japonica'') and a ''Fatsia japonica''. The Gardens provides homes for a number of birds, including Great_Tits, Robins, Magpies, and Blackbirds. == References == Primary material as information sign in the Gardens by "A. Kenney" of the City_of_Westminster Archives Centre. Category:Grade_II*_listed_buildings_in_London Category:Parks_and_open_spaces_in_London