The area now known as Bushy Park has been settled for at least the past 4,000 years: the earliest archaeological records that have been found on the site date back to the
Bronze Age. There is also evidence that the area was used in the
medieval period for
agricultural purposes. When
Henry VIII took over Hampton Court Palace from
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey in 1529, the King named three parks that make up modern-day Bushy Park and a small area beside: Hare Warren, Middle Park and Bushy Park. A keen hunter, he established them as deer-hunting grounds. Among those who served as ranger (an honorary position, long including residence at
Bushy House) was King
William IV, while Duke of Clarence (1797–1830). To ensure his consort
Queen Adelaide, could remain at their long-time home after his death, he immediately appointed her as his successor as ranger (1830–1849), after whose death the position was left vacant and fell into disuse. During
World War I, Bushy Park housed the King's Canadian Hospital in the modern "White Lodge", and between the wars it hosted a camp for undernourished children. During
World War II, General
Dwight D. Eisenhower planned the
D-Day landings from
Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) at
Camp Griffiss in the Park. A memorial by Carlos Rey dedicated to the Allied troops who fell on D-Day now marks the spot where General Eisenhower's tent stood. The nearby Eisenhower House is named in the General's honour, and Shaef Gate is named after the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force. From May 1942, a group of temporary buildings on the north-east of the park, codenamed
Widewing, hosted the
de facto headquarters of the US
Eighth Air Force under Generals
Carl Spaatz and, later,
Ira Eaker. Spaatz went on to command the
US Army Air Forces throughout the European Theatre of Operations (ETO) and in early 1944 became commander of the newly formed US Strategic Air Forces (
USSTAF) in Europe at
Widewing. Also known by its US Army code, AAF-586,
Camp Griffiss/
Widewing was often confused with the wartime headquarters of
VIII Fighter Command (part of
Eighth Air Force) at
Bushey Hall, near Watford, Hertfordshire. The park also had a runway for planes. ==The park today==