Highgate Wood

Highgate Wood

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The London Borough of Haringey contains no less than five distinct ancient woods. These are Highgate Wood, Queen's Wood, Coldfall Wood, Bluebell Wood and North Wood. Highgate Wood is shown on the Ordnance Survey map of Middlesex in 1886 more or less in its present formation, but known by the less salubrious name "Gravelpit Wood".

Flora and Fauna

The flora and fauna in the wood have been managed to varying degrees by humans through the ages.

Predominantly an oak, hornbeam and holly wood, Highgate Wood is also home to more than 50 other tree and shrub species which have self-seeded there. The Wild Service Tree, a rare deciduous tree with brown berries, can be found in Highgate Wood. Presence of the Wild Service Tree is commonly taken as an indicator of ancient woodland.

70 different species of bird have been recorded, alongside foxes, grey squirrels, at least four (Pipistrelle, Natterer's Bat, Common Noctule and the rare Leisler's Bat) and as many as seven species of bat, 180 species of moth, 12 species of butterfly and 80 species of spider.

Human artifacts

Prehistoric flints have been found in the wood. Excavations on the ridge at the northern end of the wood established that Romano-Britons were producing pottery from local materials between AD 50-100. An ancient earthwork runs across the wood. This may have formed part of an enclosure for deer during that period that the Bishop of London owned the wood. However it could also be a prehistoric boundary or defensive work.

Ownership

During the Medieval period, the wood was part of the Bishop of London’s hunting estate. Between the 16th and 18th centuries the wood, known then as "Brewer's Fell", was leased to various tenants who managed it by “coppicing with standards”. This involved regularly cutting down areas of Hornbeams to a stump (“coppicing”) to encourage new growth which could be used for fuel or fencing, whilst allowing oak and other tree species to grow to maturity (“standards”). Remnants of wood banks dividing these areas can still be seen. Many of these oaks were then used by the Crown to construct ships and by the Church to construct buildings.

In the 1880s the last tenant gave up his lease. In 1886 the City of London Corporation acquired what was by then known as Gravelpit Wood (so named in 1863 on account of a gravel pit used to source gravel for roads in the district) from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners at no charge on condition that it was "maintained in perpetuity for the benefit of Londoners". It was renamed Highgate Wood and has been owned and managed by the Corporation ever since.

Care and management

The City of London Corporation's maintenance of the wood was not always sympathetic to its historical origins. On acquisition, asphalt paths were laid, ornamental trees were planted and dead wood was assiduously removed and burned. Highgate Wood was managed more as an urban park than ancient woodland. In 1968 the Conservation Committee of the London Natural History Society expressed its concern at the planting of exotic conifers as being inappropriate for ancient woodland. As a consequence of this protest the planting programme was halted and has not been continued.

More recently management practices have been much more sympathetic to the Wood's indigenous flora and fauna. Certain areas have been fenced to allow the regeneration of the vegetation free of trampling, and dead wood is allowed to decay ‘’in situ’’ - to the great benefit of saprotrophic fungi and a wide range of invertebrates.

Metropolitan Importance

The historical and ecological significance of Highgate Wood was recognised in October 1990 when it was designated as a Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation. The wood is also listed as one of only eight Green Heritage Sites in London. [ [http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/server/show/nav.00100200800k00a006 English Heritage - Green Heritage Microsite] ]

Amenities

As well as football and cricket fields, Highgate Wood offers visitors a children’s playground, a café and an information centre.

Transport and Access

Highgate Wood can be reached easily from Highgate station on the Northern Line of the London Underground. It is adjacent to the A1 road and is situated approximately 6 miles (10km) north of Charing Cross, well inside London's metropolitan area.

References

ources

* [http://www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/Corporation/LGNL_Services/Environment_and_planning/Parks_and_open_spaces/highgate_wood.htm City of London website on Highgate Wood]
* [http://www.muswell-hill.com/muswell/history/woodland/ The Natural History of Haringey's Ancient Woodlands, by David Bevan]
* [http://www.british-trees.com/guide/wildservicetree.htm Wild Service Tree]
*"Distribution and Status of Bats in the London Area", Mickleburgh (1987)
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/mapsheet.asp?sheetid=5431&mapx=0&mapy=1455&mapzm=1 "Middlesex: 012" Ordnance Survey 1:10,560: Epoch 1]


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