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Burnham Beeches
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No best answer has yet been selected by slimjim. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I hope this is pinned down, slimjim. I lived in the area for a while in the 50s. Although I went to Burnham Beeches a few times, and came across the green-painted fence/gates one time, it was closed, presumably because it was out of season. People talked about having gone there. Of course there was a lot of closures of public swimming pools at that time because of polio outbreaks. I'm so senior now that the memory blurs! Your question brought back the scene.I was about 12, and it was possible in those days for my friend and me to wander about unaccompanied, so long as we didn't go off with people.
If anybody is still interested, point your browsers at www.bing.com/maps (better for this than Google thanks to it's angled overhead views) and find Farnham Common. Follow Beeches Road away from the village. It will become Lord Mayors Drive and then end at Hawthorn Lane. Just over the road, you'll see a small housing development called Nightingale Park. This is built on the former fairground site, the boundary line of which is still very visible.
I moved to Farnham Common back in 79 at the tender age of 11 and remember passing the fairground well (largely as it was a mass of tall white posts/structures against all the green) but thought it was, if not disused, then pretty much on it's last legs by that point. (It was certainly never mentioned by any of the other kids I knew as being somewhere to go, hence my assumption).
The closest I ever got to it was actually during the Beeches half marathon of 85: the gate was open and the deserted interior looked ripe for investigation - but a group of intimidating looking fairground types (who were walking back in) said it was closed so that was that. The abandoned car by the roadside, half of which had ben reclaimed by vegetation certainly gave that impression. I left the area in early 88 and Nightingale Park was definitely occupied by then so I'm assuming that demolition started shortly after.
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